- One SeaGate
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Fifth Third Center at One SeaGate
The Fifth Third Center at One SeaGate.General information Type office Location 1 Seagate, Toledo, Ohio Construction started 1979 Completed 1982 Cost $100 million[1] Height Roof 411 ft (125 m) Technical details Floor count 32[1] Floor area 707,000 sq ft (65,700 m2)[1] Design and construction Owner One SeaGate Partners, LLC Fifth Third Center at One SeaGate is the tallest building in Toledo, Ohio. Until 2006, the building served as the world headquarters for Owens-Illinois.[2] In 2007, Fifth Third Bank moved their Northwest Ohio headquarters to the building.
Contents
Building features
Costing $100 million,[1] One SeaGate was built as the centerpiece of the SeaGate project in downtown Toledo. Groundbreaking took place in May 1979, and was officially dedicated in June 1982. The architects were Abramovitz, Harris & Kingsland.
The building stands 432 feet (132 m) away from the Water Street riverfront. The tower is 411 feet (125 m) tall with 33 stories, with 29[citation needed] floors of office space and two floors for maintenance.<(not true) Each floor of the office tower has approximately 25,000 square feet (2,320 m2), with 707,000 square feet (65,700 m2) of total leasable space.[1] The building is made up of over 9,135 tons of steel, supported by 28 caissons, going 80 feet (24 m) down into the Earth, and over 36,000 cubic yards (28,000 m3) of concrete.[3] The exterior of the building is covered in 293,000 square feet (27,200 m2) of glass, with 4,400 vision panels and 4,200 spandrel units between floors, representing Toledo's history as the "Glass City," and O-I's presence in the glass industry.
A 294-seat auditorium is located in the tower complex with an executive parking garage immediately below it, and the building itself is connected to the CitiWalk system. Underground, there is a mini-mall, SeaGate Shops at CitiWalk, that was left primarily vacant after the departure of O-I. When the building opened, Edwin Dodd, then O-I's Chairman and CEO, exerted his considerable influence to fill the Promenade level shops with tenants. Damschroeder's and Ricardo's Restaurant were two large tenants who were convinced to move in. The mini-mall has a small eatery area that leads to Promenade Park and Fountain Square, which features the Dimitri Hadzi sculpture, Propylaea. The underground tunnels also connect the building to the Wyndham Hotel (formerly Hotel Sofitel) at Two SeaGate, Four SeaGate (the home of Fox Toledo), a parking structure across Summit Street, and Imagination Station. The top floor accessible to occupants, the 28th, formerly included a fine restaurant that was frequented by business professionals. When the building opened, the 28th floor restaurant was an executive dining room with boardroom and meeting room facilities adjacent, for O-I senior executives whose offices were immediately below on the 27th floor. The 29th floor was exclusively mechanical.[citation needed] When the building opened, the 28On the service level, there are loading docks for the convenience of tenants and the management of the building. The building is owned by One SeaGate Partners, LLC, an affiliate of Amtrust Realty.[4]
"The O-I Building"
Until 2006 the world headquarters for Owens-Illinois were at One Seagate. At that time the headquarters were moved to the Levis Commons complex in the nearby suburb of Perrysburg, Ohio, where the company already owned a large facility. The company stated they were not necessarily hurting the area's economy, as they were moving a short drive south. Fellow glassmaker Owens Corning still keeps its world headquarters in downtown Toledo. Toledoans often refer to One SeaGate as "the O-I building."
Fifth Third Bankcorp
On January 23, 2007, it was announced that the Northwest Ohio offices for Fifth Third Bank would be moving into OneSeaGate.[1] Under the new terms, the building would be renamed: "Fifth Third Center at One SeaGate."[1] Fifth Third signage will be put on the top of the skyscraper, as the company has done with their locations elsewhere. The move lets the company move all of its offices to one location, removing the need for the company's current Monroe Street offices. The company has said that it will not occupy the top floors, including the prestigious offices of the O-I executives because renovation would cost too much. Fifth Third will rent out at least six floors for about $20 per square foot,[1] as opposed to the $16 dollar charge at their current Madison Avenue location, the bank's Northwest Ohio home since 1931, at which they will keep a branch.
Tenants
Current tenants include:
- Fifth Third Bank, the building's prime tenant[1]
- CB Richard Ellis|Reichle Klein
- PricewaterhouseCoopers
- Ernst & Young
- Wachovia
- Arcadis, U.S.
- Eastman & Smith Ltd.
- Kingston Health Care
- Emch, Shaffer, Schaub
- Reminger & Reminger
- Gressley, Kaplan, & Parker
- Roetzel & Andres
- HCR Manorcare CBO
- Findley Davies
- Stockwell & Cooperman
- Learnshare
- Fahlgren
- Social Security Administration, Office of Disability Adjudication and Review[5]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i McKinnon, Julie (2007-01-24), "Fifth Third will move into O-I's old home; downtown tower to be renamed", The Blade, http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070124/BUSINESS03/701240376, retrieved 2008-02-18
- ^ University of Toledo - Owens Illinois, Today and Tomorrow
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ CBRE Press Release Regarding the sale of One SeaGate
- ^ http://www.ssa.gov/appeals/r5/chicago.html#toledo_ho
External links
- One SeaGate Website
- Article about signage at the top of the building
- Fifth Third announces move to One SeaGate
- Fifth Third Bank
- CB Richard Ellis|Reichle Klein
Categories:- Buildings and structures in Toledo, Ohio
- Skyscrapers in Ohio
- Skyscrapers between 100 and 149 meters
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