Neha Patil (Editor)

Market Post Tower

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Former names
  
Gold Building

Roof
  
216.44 ft (65.97 m)

Height
  
66 m

Floors
  
15

Architectural style
  
Modern architecture

Completed
  
1984

Floor count
  
15

Opened
  
1984

Floor area
  
3 ha

Market Post Tower httpswwwemporiscomimagesshow450524Largee

Type
  
Commercial offices Data center

Location
  
55 South Market Street San Jose, California

Similar
  
Downtown San Jose, One Main Place, Fairmont Plaza, One Wilshire, Bank of Italy Building

Market Post Tower, also known as the Gold Building, or simply 55 South Market, is a 15-story building at the corner of South Market Street and Post Street in downtown San Jose, California. Built in 1985, Market Post Tower was designed to provide a mix of office and retail space. When first built, the building was controversial due to its gold-colored glass exterior, which produced high light and heat reflection. In its early years, the owners struggled financially with the property and were forced to put it up for sale in 1987. While the intended tenants did not materialize, the building proved popular with telecom carriers as an Internet exchange center, with MAE-West on the 13th floor, one of the oldest and most well known Internet exchanges. Many carriers maintain collocation space in the building to support their interconnections through MAE-West (so-called "public peering") as well as direct interconnections ("private peering").

Map of Market Post Tower, San Jose, CA 95113, USA

Market Post Tower remains mixed-use, comprising office, telecom, and retail space, but it is perhaps most well known for its use by internet network service, peering, and colocation providers. The building was purchased in 2000 by The Carlyle Group, which further enhanced the building's network infrastructure, and now advertises it as a "multi-tenant carrier neutral telecom facility." CoreSite, a Denver-based wholesale provider of data centers, colocation and peering, currently handles tenant leases within the building.

San Jose's first public nude sculpture was located at the Market Post Building, but this was removed during building renovations in 2012. The federal Internal Revenue Service (IRS) occupies one entire floor of the building as a regional office.

References

Market Post Tower Wikipedia