- Tower at Cityplace
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The Tower at Cityplace General information Type Office Location 2711 North Haskell Avenue, Dallas, Texas Coordinates 32°48′20″N 96°47′33″W / 32.805513°N 96.792482°WCoordinates: 32°48′20″N 96°47′33″W / 32.805513°N 96.792482°W Construction started December 1984 Completed 1988 Height Roof 560 feet (171 m)[1] Technical details Floor count 42[1] Floor area 1,400,000 square feet (130,000 m2)[2] Design and construction Owner Ashkenazy & Agus Ventures Main contractor HCB Contractors[1] Architect Cossutta & Associates[1] Developer Southland Corporation The Tower at Cityplace is a 42-story building located at 2711 North Haskell Avenue at North Central Expressway (US 75) in the Cityplace district of Uptown Dallas, Texas (USA). The building is 560 feet (171 m) tall and has 1,400,000 square feet (130,000 m2) of office space.[2]
Contents
History
The building was designed by Cossutta & Associates of New York to be the corporate headquarters for Southland Corporation (now 7-Eleven). Formerly named CityPlace East, it was conceived as the first phase of the 130 acre (526,000 m²) Cityplace development. A twin tower (CityPlace West), later canceled, was planned across North Central Expressway with a skybridge connection over the highway.[1] Several mid-rise buildings were also planned around the base of both towers. Construction began in December 1984 and the tower opened in 1988 after one year of delays. During this time and as a result of Southland's buyout in 1987, the need for headquarters space was reduced by 50%, leaving the lower 19 floors vacant. Because of the building's unique floorplate (Design), converting the space to speculative office space was a challenge. Despite opening during the Savings and Loan crisis and resulting real estate crash in Dallas, the building was eventually filled. Cityplace East was renamed Cityplace Tower and was the last major skyscraper built in Dallas during the 1980s.[3]
Although neighborhood blocks were demolished in the mid-80's to make way future phases of Cityplace, additional plans were put on hold. In 1989, Southland sold land on the west side of North Central Expressway (including the CityPlace West site). Today this area is home to the West Village development.[2]. Enough Brazilian red granite was ordered and cut for the twin tower and office buildings; it remains for sale in a south Dallas County storage yard.[4]
In 2000, DART's Cityplace Station, after years of planning, opened beneath North Central Expressway with entrances on both sides of the highway, the east side being in the bottom of the tower, the west in an aluminum and glass hut above the elevator shaft to the station's upper level under the expressway.
7-Eleven moved to One Arts Plaza in 2007, leaving half of the building vacant. Ashkenazy & Agus Ventures bought the property for $125 million and spent $7 million in upgrades.[5] There were plans to turn the top of the tower into luxury apartments, but an influx of new office tenants changed this plan. The building was renamed Tower at Cityplace. In 2008 UCR Urban proposed new retail development on the ground sites previously reserved for mid rise office towers.[6]
Design
At almost $300 million for construction and improvements, the 42-story Cityplace skyscraper was the most expensive office project ever built in Dallas.[3]
Constructed as an elaborate corporate headquarters, the lower floors were devoted to facilities not commonly found in multitenant buildings. The ground floor contains a 38,000-square-foot (3,500 m2) conference center with a 175-seat auditorium, a large cafeteria and a fitness center.
There are seven, 5-story atrium lobbies spaced throughout the tower with glass windows at each end. This unique design provides clear views of downtown and East Dallas, but limits floor space on each level. The second and third floors, along with a basement-level concourse, were built with space for retail tenants. Below the tower is a 3,400-car underground parking garage, one of the largest in the region.[5]
The façade of the building is of Brazilian red granite, and the first four floors are finished in pink and white marble, imported wood paneling and decorative tile. Elevators are lined with brass, polished wood and stone, and cut mirrors.[3]
Tenants
On June 8, 2009 Fortune 500 company Dean Foods announced plans to move into approximately 240,000 square feet (22,000 m2) in the Cityplace Tower in first quarter of 2010.[7]
See also
- List of buildings and structures in Dallas, Texas
References
- ^ a b c d e Cityplace Center from Skyscrapers.com. Retrieved on 30 April 2007.
- ^ a b c Dallas Business Journal - 17 September 2003. "7-Eleven exploring sale of Cityplace tower." By Christine Perez. Retrieved on 10 October 2006.
- ^ a b c Steve Brown. (1988, December 2). CITYPLACE NOW IN THE MARKETPLACE - Marketers tout `unique' building. The Dallas Morning News HOME FINAL ed., 1D. Retrieved December, 15 2009 from NewsBank on-line database (America's Newspapers)
- ^ STEVE BROWN. (2008, August 22). UNCOMMON PROPERTY: CITYPLACE TOWER - Skyscraper's unbuilt twin awaits a buyer. Dallas Morning News, The (TX) FIRST ed., 8DD. Retrieved December, 15 2009 from NewsBank on-line database (America's Newspapers)
- ^ a b STEVE BROWN. (2009, July 24). Cityplace's Plan B - Scrapping residential redo in favor of offices proves smart. Dallas Morning News, The (TX) FIRST ed., 1D. Retrieved December, 15 2009 from NewsBank on-line database (America's Newspapers)
- ^ http://www.ucrurban.com/property_uploads/200807081102580.cityplace_tower.pdf
- ^ Hethcock, Bill. "Dean Foods to relocate corporate office." Dallas Business Journal. Monday June 8, 2009. Retrieved on August 2, 2009.
External links
Skyscrapers in Dallas Current Bank of America Plaza · Renaissance Tower · Comerica Bank Tower · Chase Tower · Fountain Place · Trammell Crow Center · 1700 Pacific Avenue · Thanksgiving Tower · Energy Plaza · Elm Place · Gables Republic Tower · Republic Center Tower II · Whitacre Tower · Lincoln Plaza · Tower at Cityplace · Reunion Tower · Sheraton Dallas Hotel · Mercantile National Bank Building · Bryan Tower · Magnolia Hotel · Harwood Center · KPMG Centre · 2100 Ross Avenue · Renaissance Hotel · Patriot Tower · Sheraton Dallas Hotel North Tower · One Main Place · W Dallas Victory Hotel & Residences · 1600 Pacific Tower · Omni Dallas Hotel · The Mondrian · Adolphus Hotel · Davis Building · Kirby Building · Tower Petroleum Building · Corrigan Tower · Praetorian Building · Plaza of the Americas
Under construction See also Categories:- Skyscrapers in Dallas, Texas
- Skyscrapers between 150 and 199 meters
- Buildings and structures completed in 1988
- Office buildings in Dallas, Texas
- Headquarters in the United States
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