Neha Patil (Editor)

First Canadian Place

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Former names
  
First Bank Building

Type
  
Commercial offices

Height
  
290 m, 355 m to tip

Opened
  
1975

Architect
  
Edward Durell Stone

Alternative names
  
FCP

Completed
  
5 June 1975

Floors
  
72

Province
  
Ontario

First Canadian Place httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
100 King Street West Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Management
  
Brookfield Office Properties

Owner
  
Brookfield Office Properties

Similar
  
Brookfield Place, Exchange Tower, Toronto‑Dominion Centre, Scotia Plaza, Commerce Court

First canadian place fcp toronto


First Canadian Place (originally First Bank Building) is a skyscraper in the financial district of Toronto, Ontario, at the northwest corner of King and Bay streets, and is the location of the Toronto operational head office of the Bank of Montreal. At 298 m (978 ft), it is Canada's tallest skyscraper and the 15th tallest building in North America to structural top (spires) and 9th highest to the roof top, and the 105th tallest in the world. It is the third tallest free-standing structure in Canada, after CN Tower (also in Toronto) and the Inco Superstack chimney in Sudbury, Ontario. The building is owned by Brookfield Office Properties, putting it in co-ownership with the neighbouring Exchange Tower and Bay Adelaide Centre as well as various other office spaces across Downtown Toronto.

Contents

Map of First Canadian Place, Toronto, ON, Canada

Otis high speed double deck elevators at first canadian place toronto upper deck


History and architecture

First Canadian Place is named for Canada's first bank, the Bank of Montreal. Designed by Bregman + Hamann Architects with Edward Durell Stone as design consultant, First Canadian Place was constructed in 1975, originally named First Bank Building, on the site of the Old Toronto Star Building and the Old Globe and Mail Building. The site was the last of corners of King and Bay to be redeveloped in the 1960s and 1970s, and a major bidding war began over the property. The then little known firm of Olympia and York eventually obtained nearly the whole city block, though the election of reformist mayor David Crombie led to new rules banning skyscrapers and it took three years of lobbying before permission for First Canadian Place was granted. When completed, the building was nearly identical in appearance to Stone's Aon Center in Chicago, Illinois; completed two years previous as the Standard Oil Building, the Chicago tower is of the same floor plan and clad in the same marble, the only overtly visible difference being the vertical orientation of the windows, as opposed to the horizontal run of those on First Canadian Place.

First Canadian Place was the 6th tallest building in the world to structural top (currently 103rd) and the tallest building overall outside of Chicago and New York when built in 1975. It was also the tallest building in the Commonwealth of Nations until the completion of the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in 1998. The Bank of Montreal "M-bar" logo at the top of the building was the highest sign in the world from 1975 until overtaken by the sign atop CITIC Plaza in 1997. The roof is still the location of a number of antennas used for radio and television broadcasting. The structure contains 29 elevators, and is one of only a few buildings in the world that uses the double-decked variety, and is connected to the underground PATH system.

The building was pictured on the front and rear cover of the 1981 album This Is the Ice Age by Canadian New Wave band Martha And The Muffins & also their 7" single Women Around The World At Work . The album featured two photos which were taken from the same place but at different times by Muffins guitarist Mark Gane using a time lapse camera and features the building at midday & dusk. The 7" cover again features the same photo but has 9 small images taken at various times of the day & night.

Cladding

The same white Carrara marble used on Aon Center was employed as an exterior cladding and interior finish for First Canadian Place, with approximately 45,000 marble panels weighing around 200 to 300 lb (91 to 136 kg) each. Foreshadowing what would take place with First Canadian Place in 2007, one of the marble slabs of Aon Center, when it was named the Standard Oil Building, detached in 1974, falling and penetrating the roof of a neighbouring building, resulting in an eventual recladding of the entire Aon Center in white granite between 1992 and 1994. This problem would surface at First Canadian Place as well, during an intense storm on the evening of 15 May 2007, a 1 by 1.2 m (3 ft 3 in by 3 ft 11 in), 140 kg (310 lb) white marble panel fell from the 60th storey of the tower's southern face onto the 3rd floor mezzanine roof below, causing authorities to close surrounding streets as a precaution.

In late 2009, owner Brookfield Properties announced it would follow the example of Aon Center and, over three years, replace the tower's 45,000 marble panels with new ones in glass, those on the main expanses with a white ceramic frit and the corners in a bronze tint. Brookfield and the co-owners also launched a multi-faceted rejuvenation program, including "upgrades to the building's mechanical, electrical, and lighting systems that will redefine the standard for enhanced performance, comfort, and greening". FCP's common areas including upper and lower level entrance and elevator lobbies, the retail concourse and Market Place were to also undergo renovation, with new natural stone flooring, fritted glass accents, brushed metal handrails, landscaping, and water features. The rejuvenation program design architects were Moed de Armas & Shannon Architects and Bregman + Hamann Architects were the architects of record. The entire project, completed in 2012, cost was in excess of CA$100 million, paid by the owner. This extensive capital improvement project was intended to provide a new exterior for FCP and eliminate the maintenance costs associated with marble upkeep.

Tenants

  • Bank of Montreal
  • Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt
  • DLA Piper
  • Broadcasting

    The following Toronto-area broadcasters have their transmitters atop First Canadian Place:

    FM stations

  • CIND-FM 88.1 (Indie 88)
  • CKLN-FM 88.1 (The first radio station to use this transmitter tower. Now defunct.)
  • CIRV-FM 88.9
  • CIUT-FM 89.5
  • CJBC-FM 90.3 (Radio-Canada Espace Musique)
  • CKIS-FM 92.5 (Kiss 92.5)
  • CFXJ-FM 93.5 (93.5 The Move)
  • CJKX-FM-2 95.9 (KX96) +
  • CFMZ-FM 96.3 (Classical 96)
  • CFZM-1-FM 96.7 (AM740) *
  • CKFG-FM 98.7 (G 98.7)
  • CBLA-FM 99.1 (CBC Radio One)
  • CJSA-FM 101.3 (CMR Diversity FM)
  • CFNY-FM 102.1 (102.1 The Edge) #
  • CKAV-FM 106.5 (Aboriginal Voices Radio)
  • CILQ-FM 107.1 (Q107) #
  • # backup transmitter; main transmitter on CN Tower
    + synchronous transmitter; provides supplementary coverage to primary transmitter in Ajax
    * fill-in transmitter; serves downtown core and surrounding inner-city neighbourhoods

    TV stations

  • CKXT-DT (Sun News Network) UHF channel 52 (defunct)
  • CJMT-DT (Omni.2) UHF channel 69
  • Shopping Mall

    According to the First Canadian Place website, the lower floors of the building feature:

  • 120 stores in three floors of Carrara marble
  • 6 restaurants
  • over 30 eateries
  • medical centre, featuring an optometrist`s office and dental clinics
  • spas, beauty salons, and a barber shop
  • banking and financial planning services from the Bank of Montreal
  • dry cleaning and shoe repair
  • post office
  • FedEx and UPS dropbox
  • a parkette on King Street, between the FCP and the Exchange Tower
  • References

    First Canadian Place Wikipedia