Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Johnston Building (Charlotte, North Carolina)

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Type
  
Office

Owner
  
The Dilweg Companies

Height
  
81 m

Floors
  
17

Completed
  
1924

Floor count
  
17

Opened
  
1924

Architect
  
William Lee Stoddart

Johnston Building (Charlotte, North Carolina) wwwtrinitypartnerscomwpcontentuploads20111

Location
  
212 South Tryon Street Charlotte, North Carolina, United States

Main contractor
  
Hunkin-Conkey Construction

Similar
  
112 Tryon Plaza, 121 West Trade, Hearst Tower, Latta Arcade, One Wells Fargo Center

The Johnston Building is a 17-story skyscraper in Charlotte, North Carolina with an approximate height of 81m. The building's official height has never been released. Originally 15 stories when completed in 1924, it was the tallest building in Charlotte until 1926.

History

Located at 212 South Tryon Street, the lot was home to the Trust Building, which burned in 1922. Anchor Mills Company bought the site for $100 in 1923 from the Textile Office Building Company. William Lee Stoddart, a New York City architect known for large hotels, had designed the Hotel Charlotte, which was under construction and had Charles Worth Johnston as an investor. The builder was Hunkin-Conkey Construction, and the cost was reported to be $600,000.

The Neo-classical steel frame building had limestone blocks for the facade, and buff-colored brick, but these were only for appearance and did not support the building.

Rental agent Thomas Griffith said the Johnston Building had tenants booked even before completion. Offices housed cotton brokers, insurance agents, attorneys, and realty companies. Among those located in the building when it opened: the E.C. Griffith Company, architect C.C. Hook, and Cameron Morrison. Southern Bell took over the entire fifteenth floor by 1926 and had all of three floors and parts of others by 1947.

A 1927 Chamber of Commerce report said the Johnston Building had 125,000 square feet (11,600 m2) of "first class" office space. Only the First National Bank Building, which superseded the Johnston Building as Charlotte's tallest in 1926, had more space with 160,000 square feet (15,000 m2).

Late in the 1920s, two more floors were added. The current building has a total of 172,382 square feet.

David R. Johnston, son of Charles Worth Johnston, took over the family business interests. Anchor Mills decided to sell the property in 1975 due to the younger Johnston's health problems. Johnston Building Inc. assumed a $2.1 million mortgage with New York Life Insurance Company, which took over the building in 1981 when payments could not be made. That same year, New York Life sold the Johnston Building to Howard, Howard and Barnard of California, after which renovations began. The appraised value of the building and lot in 1991 was nearly $17.2 million, $2 million of that for the lot.

The Dilweg Companies of Durham, North Carolina announced February 2, 2015 that the company bought the Johnston Building. County records showed the purchase price was $25.3 million.

References

Johnston Building (Charlotte, North Carolina) Wikipedia