Brookfield Office Properties Buildings - 1625 Eye Street, 333 Bush Street, 7+fig Shopping Center, 75 State Street, Allen Center, Bankers Hall, Bank of (Paperback)


Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 38. Chapters: 1625 Eye Street, 333 Bush Street, 7+Fig Shopping Center, 75 State Street, Allen Center, Bankers Hall, Bank of America Center (Los Angeles), Bay Adelaide Centre, Bourke Place, Brookfield Office Properties, Brookfield Place, Continental Center I, Cullen Center, Denver World Trade Center, Devon Energy Tower (Houston), Ernst & Young Plaza, Exchange Place (Boston), Exchange Tower, Fifth Avenue Place (Calgary), Figueroa at Wilshire, First Canadian Place, Four World Financial Center, Hudson's Bay Centre, KBR Tower, Manhattan West, Newport Tower (Jersey City), Olympia and York, One Liberty Plaza, One World Financial Center, Place de Ville, Queen's Quay Terminal, Republic Plaza (Denver), Royal Centre (Vancouver), Suncor Energy Centre, Three World Financial Center, Total Plaza, Two World Financial Center, Zuccotti Park. Excerpt: 1600 Smith Street, (previously named Continental Center I, also known as Cullen Center Plaza) is a 51-story, 732-foot (223 m) office tower in Downtown Houston, Texas, United States. The building houses offices of United Airlines, and it was Continental's headquarters prior to its merger with United Airlines. At one point it also served as the headquarters of ExpressJet Airlines. It is a part of the Cullen Center complex. The 51 story building has about 1,098,399 square feet (102,044.6 m) of rentable Class "A" office space. The design architect was Morris Architects, the general contractor was Linbeck Construction Company, the mechanical engineer was I.A. Naman, and the structural engineer was CBM Engineers. The building was completed in 1984. The tower stands as a postmodern-style building. It is currently the 8th-tallest building in Houston. Continental operates a ticketing office on the ground level. Bruce Nichols of The Dallas Morning News said that in early 1984 1600 Smith Street "was so vacant it became a symbol for overexpansion in Houston." By 1987 the Canadian company Trizec Group bought debentures carrying an option to buy portions of the Cullen Center, including 1600 Smith Street. In 1997 subcommittees of the University of Houston System Board of Regents held meetings at 1600 Smith Street. In September 1997 Continental Airlines announced that it would consolidate its Houston headquarters in what would become Continental Center I. The airline scheduled to move around 3,200 employees in stages beginning in July 1998 and ending in January 1999. The airline consolidated the headquarters operation at the America Tower in Neartown and three other local operations into Continental Center I and Continental Center II in the Cullen Center. Continental anticipated taking 15 floors at Continental Center I. In addition it planned to add a company store, a credit union, and an employee service center in the street-level lobby of Continental Center I. The airline agreed

R429

Or split into 4x interest-free payments of 25% on orders over R50
Learn more

Discovery Miles4290
Delivery AdviceOut of stock

Toggle WishListAdd to wish list
Review this Item

Product Description

Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 38. Chapters: 1625 Eye Street, 333 Bush Street, 7+Fig Shopping Center, 75 State Street, Allen Center, Bankers Hall, Bank of America Center (Los Angeles), Bay Adelaide Centre, Bourke Place, Brookfield Office Properties, Brookfield Place, Continental Center I, Cullen Center, Denver World Trade Center, Devon Energy Tower (Houston), Ernst & Young Plaza, Exchange Place (Boston), Exchange Tower, Fifth Avenue Place (Calgary), Figueroa at Wilshire, First Canadian Place, Four World Financial Center, Hudson's Bay Centre, KBR Tower, Manhattan West, Newport Tower (Jersey City), Olympia and York, One Liberty Plaza, One World Financial Center, Place de Ville, Queen's Quay Terminal, Republic Plaza (Denver), Royal Centre (Vancouver), Suncor Energy Centre, Three World Financial Center, Total Plaza, Two World Financial Center, Zuccotti Park. Excerpt: 1600 Smith Street, (previously named Continental Center I, also known as Cullen Center Plaza) is a 51-story, 732-foot (223 m) office tower in Downtown Houston, Texas, United States. The building houses offices of United Airlines, and it was Continental's headquarters prior to its merger with United Airlines. At one point it also served as the headquarters of ExpressJet Airlines. It is a part of the Cullen Center complex. The 51 story building has about 1,098,399 square feet (102,044.6 m) of rentable Class "A" office space. The design architect was Morris Architects, the general contractor was Linbeck Construction Company, the mechanical engineer was I.A. Naman, and the structural engineer was CBM Engineers. The building was completed in 1984. The tower stands as a postmodern-style building. It is currently the 8th-tallest building in Houston. Continental operates a ticketing office on the ground level. Bruce Nichols of The Dallas Morning News said that in early 1984 1600 Smith Street "was so vacant it became a symbol for overexpansion in Houston." By 1987 the Canadian company Trizec Group bought debentures carrying an option to buy portions of the Cullen Center, including 1600 Smith Street. In 1997 subcommittees of the University of Houston System Board of Regents held meetings at 1600 Smith Street. In September 1997 Continental Airlines announced that it would consolidate its Houston headquarters in what would become Continental Center I. The airline scheduled to move around 3,200 employees in stages beginning in July 1998 and ending in January 1999. The airline consolidated the headquarters operation at the America Tower in Neartown and three other local operations into Continental Center I and Continental Center II in the Cullen Center. Continental anticipated taking 15 floors at Continental Center I. In addition it planned to add a company store, a credit union, and an employee service center in the street-level lobby of Continental Center I. The airline agreed

Customer Reviews

No reviews or ratings yet - be the first to create one!

Product Details

General

Imprint

Books LLC, Wiki Series

Country of origin

United States

Release date

December 2012

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

December 2012

Authors

Creators

Dimensions

246 x 189 x 2mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

242

ISBN-13

978-1-156-11214-4

Barcode

9781156112144

Categories

LSN

1-156-11214-1



Trending On Loot