Neha Patil (Editor)

Great Southwest Building

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Status
  
Complete

Roof
  
291 ft (89 m)

Opened
  
1927

Floor area
  
2 ha

Architectural style
  
Art Deco

Type
  
Office

Height
  
89 m

Floors
  
22

Phone
  
+1 713-237-8366

Location
  
1314 Texas Avenue Houston, Texas, United States

Completed
  
1926; 91 years ago (1926)

Opening
  
1927; 90 years ago (1927)

Address
  
1314 Texas St # 708, Houston, TX 77002, USA

Similar
  
Bob Lanier Public Works Bu, Marathon Oil Tower, KBR Tower, El Paso Energy Building, The Spires

Historic otis traction elevators at great southwest building in downtown houston tx


The Great Southwest Building, formerly the Petroleum Building, is a skyscraper located at 1314 Texas Avenue in Downtown Houston, Texas in the United States.

Contents

Vintage otis traction elevators at great southwest building in downtown houston tx


History

The structure was originally commissioned by Joseph S. Cullinan founder of The Texas Company to house the offices of his growing oil and gas business. Designed by New York Architect Alfred Bossom, the building features Art Deco styling with unusual Mayan touches including reliefs and a stepped back style on upper floors to mimic a Mayan pyramid. This Mayan influenced design would be re-imagined 50 years later with the similarly styled Heritage Plaza building finished in 1987.

Tenants

After Texaco relocated to larger offices, the building continued to serve smaller oil and gas companies on upper floors and retail outlets on the ground floor. In 2015, a Dallas based developer Todd Interests purchased the structure with plans to renovate the building and create 150 luxury apartment units. The project will receive a 15,000 tax credit per unit from the Houston Downtown Living Initiative, a program designed to encourage residential development in the city center.

References

Great Southwest Building Wikipedia