BANK OF AMERICA CENTER (SAN FRANCISCO)
The 'Bank of America Center' is a 52-story, 779 ft (237.4 m) skyscraper at 555 California Street in San Francisco, the second tallest in the city and the focal point of the Financial District. Completed in 1969, it was the world headquarters of Bank of America prior to its merger with NationsBank, at which point the company moved its headquarters to Charlotte. The building is sometimes called 'Triple Five Cal' based on its street address.
On March 16, 2007, it was announced that Vornado Realty Trust had acquired a 70% interest from foreign investors with 30% in limited partnership interest still owned by Donald J. Trump. The building will continue to be managed by the Shorenstein Company.
The Bank of America Center was meant to be a deliberate and unmistakable display of Bank of America's wealth, power, and importance. To that end, the center was handled by top architecture firms Wurster, Benardi and Emmons and Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, with famed architect Pietro Belluschi consulting. The structural engineering was performed by the renowned San Francisco firm H. J. Brunnier Associates. The skyscraper incorporates thousands of bay windows thanks to its unique design, meant to improve the rental value. At the north foot of the skyscraper is a large plaza named in honor of Bank of America founder A.P. Giannini that is often shaded during the day, leading to it being criticized as cold and windswept by many. Within the plaza is a large black sculpture by Masayuki Nagare that is locally known as the "Banker's Heart." Nearly the entire block—the skyscraper, the banking hall, the plaza, the stairways, and the sidewalks—is clad in costly polished or rough carnelian granite. An exclusive restaurant, the Carnelian Room, is located on the 52nd floor.
A view of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge taken from the roof of the Bank of America Center in 1971, as shown in the film ''Dirty Harry''
In 1971 the building, then just two years old, was featured at the beginning of the film ''Dirty Harry''. It was from the roof of the building that the killer shoots his victim swimming in a pool located below on the roof of the current Holiday Inn Select Downtown building on Kearny Street. The film shows wide panoramic views of San Francisco taken from the roof of the building.
In 1974, the building was again used extensively for filming of a box-office hit, this time ''The Towering Inferno'', in which the outside plaza substituted for the film's fictional skyscraper, the infamous Glass Tower.
Together with the Transamerica Pyramid, the Bank of America Center is evidence of the direction San Francisco's downtown was moving during the 1960s before numerous campaigns against high-rise buildings in the 1970s and 1980s forced development to move south of Market Street.
| Contents |
| Major tenants |
| See also |
| External links |
Major tenants
★ Bank of America
★ Dodge & Cox
★ Goldman Sachs
★ Fenwick & West
★ Kirkland & Ellis
★ Lehman Brothers
★ McKinsey and Company
★ Morgan Stanley
★ Sidley Austin LLP
★ Shorenstein Company
★ Sutter Securities Incorporated
★ Tucker, Ellis & West
★ UBS PaineWebber
★ Cox, Castle, & Nicolson
See also
★ List of tallest buildings in San Francisco and the greater Bay Area
External links
★ 555 California Street Website
★ Profile at Emporis Building Database
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