909 Chestnut Street

Skyscraper in St. Louis, Missouri From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

909 Chestnut (formerly One SBC Center, One Bell Center, One AT&T Center, and 909 Chestnut) is a 44-story building in downtown St. Louis, Missouri at 909 Chestnut Street on the Gateway Mall. It is Missouri's largest building by area with 1,400,000 square feet (130,000 m2).[5] The building is currently vacant.[6]

Former namesOne AT&T Center
One Bell Center
SBC Building
Southwestern Bell Telephone Building
StatusCompleted
TypeCommercial offices
Location909 Chestnut Street
St. Louis, Missouri
Quick facts Former names, General information ...
909 Chestnut
AT&T Center, St- Louis, MO- 2014-04-21 13-26
Interactive map of the 909 Chestnut area
Former namesOne AT&T Center
One Bell Center
SBC Building
Southwestern Bell Telephone Building
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeCommercial offices
Location909 Chestnut Street
St. Louis, Missouri
Coordinates38.6277°N 90.1946°W / 38.6277; -90.1946
Completed1986; 40 years ago (1986)
CostUS$150 million
OwnerThe Goldman Group
Height
Roof179 m (587 ft)
Technical details
Floor count44 [1]
Floor area1,400,000 sq ft (130,000 m2)
Lifts/elevators24
Design and construction
ArchitectHellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum
Main contractorMcCarthy Construction, St. Louis, MO
Other information
Public transit accessBus interchange MCT
Bus interchange MetroBus
Light rail interchange  Red   Blue 
At 8th & Pine station
One Bell Center
NRHP reference No.100008205
Added to NRHPSeptember 26, 2022
References
[2][3][4]
Close

The building was built to replace the Southwestern Bell Building as the Southwestern Bell world headquarters. However, in a series of mergers, the headquarters moved to San Antonio, Texas and was later renamed AT&T.

In 2006 Inland American Real Estate Trust bought the building for $205 million. AT&T then signed a 10-year lease to be the sole tenant.[7]

When AT&T announced, in 2013, that they would be vacating the building in 12 months and that they would be not be renewing the lease when it expired in 2017, the number of employees in that building had fallen from a high of 4,800 to 2,000 through layoffs, outsourcing and remote work.[8] The building was nominated for inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places in 2022,[9] being listed that September.[10]

The building was ultimately foreclosed by US Bank after AT&T's departure and, on April 25, 2022, the building was sold for $4.05 million to SomeraRoad, a New York–based developer.[6] SomeraRoad later held an auction for the building in December 2023. It was sold to an entity tied to the Boston-based Goldman Group for $3.6 million in early April 2024[11] with the intent to convert it into apartments.[12] In May 2025, Goldman Group announced that the renovation would be placed on hold due to the tabling of a state tax credit bill. [13]

See also

References

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