One Bush Plaza

      One Bush Plaza
      OneBushStreet.JPG
      The Crown-Zellerbach Building (left) standing alongside the Shell Building from Market Street
      Alternative names Crown-Zellerbach Building
      General information
      Type Commercial offices
      Location 1 Bush Street
      San Francisco, California
      Coordinates 37°47′27″N 122°24′00″W / 37.790833°N 122.4°W / 37.790833; -122.4Coordinates: 37°47′27″N 122°24′00″W / 37.790833°N 122.4°W / 37.790833; -122.4
      Completed 1959
      Height
      Roof 94 m (308 ft)
      Technical details
      Floor count 20
      Floor area 439,000 sq ft (40,800 m2)
      Design and construction
      Owner Prime Plus Investments Inc
      Architect Skidmore, Owings, & Merrill
      Hertzka & Knowles
      Structural engineer H.J. Brunnier Associates
      Designated: 1987[1]
      Reference No. 183
      References
      [2][3][4]

      One Bush Plaza also known as the Crown-Zellerbach Building is an office building on Bush Street and Battery Street at Market Street in the Financial District of San Francisco, California. The 20 storey 94 metres (308 ft) building was completed in 1959.

      The building was once the headquarters of the Crown-Zellerbach, a Fortune 500 forestry and paper products conglomerate acquired in 1986 by the James River Company, which in turn became a part of Georgia-Pacific in 2000. Later it was the headquarters of Hambrecht & Quist. The building was the first significant downtown San Francisco structure erected in the 30 years following the start of the Great Depression, and as such was the first International Style glass curtain wall building in San Francisco and one of the first International Style buildings in the United States, being completed shortly after the Lever House and Seagram Building.

      It is controversial due to the decision for the building to face Bush St. instead of Market St., Market St. being in decline during the time it was built. It is notable for taking up an entire city block and being freestanding. It is directly facing the Shell Building, an iconic Art Deco skyscraper in San Francisco.

      The architectural firm of this building was Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill.

      Awards

      • 1959 Administrative Management Magazine – Office of the Year Award: Award of Merit
      • 1960 American Institute of Steel Construction – Award of Excellence
      • 1961 American Institute of Architects – Award of Merit
      • 1997 American Institute of Architects - California Council 25 Year Award
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      References

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      External links


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      Last modified on 10 April 2013, at 04:53