Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Two Wells Fargo Center

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Status
  
Complete

Completed
  
1971

Antenna spire
  
433 ft (132 m)

Floors
  
32

Construction started
  
1968

Type
  
Office

Opening
  
1971

Height
  
132 m

Opened
  
1971

Two Wells Fargo Center httpswwwemporiscomimagesshow908390Larget

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

Similar
  
Three Wells Fargo Ce, One Wells Fargo Center, Charlotte Plaza, Carillon Tower, 101 Independence Center

Two Wells Fargo Center is a 433 feet (132 m) skyscraper in Charlotte, North Carolina. It was completed in 1971 and has 32 floors. It surpassed the Winston Tower in Winston-Salem as the tallest building in North Carolina, and in 1974 was passed by Bank of America Plaza. It is currently the 9th tallest building in Charlotte. In May 2006, it was repainted from beige to gray to complement the renovated color scheme at the neighboring Wachovia Main.

Map of Two Wells Fargo Center, Charlotte, NC 28282, USA

When completed, this building was called Jefferson First Union Tower. Later, it was called First Union Plaza. First Union still owned the 12-story building on Tryon Street that Union National Bank (later First Union) built as a 9-story headquarters in 1954. In 1985, First Union bought the Masonic Temple and several other buildings, giving the bank the entire block. Later in the decade, the bank demolished the buildings that it bought but saved the temple façade. A park went on the site. When First Union employees began moving into the new headquarters in February 1988, that building was called One First Union Center. The name Two First Union Center referred to the 32-story tower, while the term "Two First Union complex" also included the shorter building, which was known for its Charlotte Hornets murals. The Tryon Street site was considered in the late 1990s for a new First Union building that would have reached 70 to 80 stories. The proposed name was Four First Union. After the First Union-Wachovia Merger the complex was called Two Wachovia Center.

Wachovia planned to move out of the shorter building in 2003 and 2004 but decided to renovate it instead. The last renovation had taken place in the 1970s. The new project involved moving some employees temporarily to the BellSouth building and other locations, the bank returned to the building in Spring 2006. On October 12, 2006, the bank's new flagship branch opened on the ground floor. It replaced branches in One and Three Wachovia Center and at 8500 square feet, was one of the bank's largest, using the style of branches in New York City and Dallas.

In December 2010, as a result of Wells Fargo's 2008 purchase of Wachovia, the larger building was renamed Two Wells Fargo Center.

References

Two Wells Fargo Center Wikipedia