505 Montgomery Street

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TypeCommercial offices
Location505 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, California
Coordinates37°47′38″N 122°24′12″W / 37.793963°N 122.403409°W / 37.793963; -122.403409
Completed1988
505 Montgomery Street
From one corner (2021)
505 Montgomery Street is located in San Francisco
505 Montgomery Street
Location within central San Francisco
505 Montgomery Street is located in California
505 Montgomery Street
505 Montgomery Street (California)
General information
TypeCommercial offices
Location505 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, California
Coordinates37°47′38″N 122°24′12″W / 37.793963°N 122.403409°W / 37.793963; -122.403409
Completed1988
OwnerRREEF
Height
Roof100 m (330 ft)
Technical details
Floor count24
Floor area333,000 sq ft (30,900 m2)
Design and construction
ArchitectSkidmore, Owings & Merrill
Main contractorDinwiddie Construction
References
[1][2]

505 Montgomery Street is a 24-story, 330 ft (100 m) class-A office building in the Financial District of San Francisco, California. The 98-foot (30 m) spire[3] perched atop the building is thought to be a replica of the Empire State Building, but that association is mainly due to the publicity stunt during the opening of the building, which involved an inflatable 40-foot (12 m) gorilla perched on the spire.[3][4]

505 Montgomery was developed by the Empire Group of San Francisco. Empire assembled ten contiguous parcels in 1978,[5] and filed their initial design study on January 7, 1983 with the San Francisco Department of City Planning.[6] The initial design called for a 28-story building, 416 feet (127 m) high including a 16-foot (4.9 m) mechanical penthouse and ground-floor commercial space. The design was revised to a 24-story building based on floor area ratio calculations, and the final conditional use authorization was granted in June 1984.[5] During construction, Mitsui Fudosan acquired a controlling interest in the unfinished building from The Empire Group and development was completed under the management of AMB.[3][7]

Retrofitting projects, including a 1994 lighting retrofit, earned the building an Energy Star label.[8] National Office Partners (NOP), a partnership between Hines Interests LP and CalPERS, acquired 505 Montgomery from Mitsui Fudosan and The Empire Group in 1999.[9] The building was subsequently sold by NOP to RREEF in 2005.[10]

Design

Empire Park

References

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