Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Russ Building

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Alternative names
  
The Skyscraper

Status
  
Complete

Height
  
127 m

Opened
  
1927

Owner
  
The Swig Company, LLC

Surpassed by
  
Hartford Building

Type
  
Commercial offices

Floors
  
31

Floor area
  
5 ha

Architect
  
George W. Kelham

Russ Building httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Preceded by
  
Pacific Telephone Building

Location
  
235 Montgomery Street San Francisco, California

Similar
  
Shell Building, McKesson Plaza, 333 Market Building, Mills Building and Tower, 140 New Montgomery

Russ building inside


The Russ Building is a Neo-Gothic office tower located in the Financial District of San Francisco, California. The 133-metre (436 ft) building was completed in 1927 and had 32 floors as well as the city's first indoor parking garage. It was the tallest building in San Francisco from 1927 to 1964 and one of the most prominent, along with its 133-metre (436 ft) "twin", the PacBell Building to the south.

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Upon completion, the building was iconic enough that Architect and Engineer wrote, “In nearly every large city there is one building that because of its size, beauty of architectural design and character of its use and occupancy, has come to typify the city itself ... Today the Russ Building takes this place in San Francisco. By its size and location and by the character of its tenants the building becomes indeed—'The Center of Western Progress'.”

However, Manhattanization from 1960 to 1990 has shrouded the tower in a shell of skyscrapers, removing the tower's prominence.

The San Francisco Chronicle's architecture critic John King described the Russ Building as "the embodiment of Jazz Age romance, a full block of ornate Gothic-flavored masonry that ascends in jagged stages from Montgomery Street with a leap and then a scramble to a central crown". The tower is a California Historical Landmark.

Until the emergence of Sand Hill Road in the 1980s, many of the largest venture capital firms held offices in the Russ Building.

Russ building outside


References

Russ Building Wikipedia


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