United Steelworkers Building

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Former namesIBM Building
Alternative namesI.W. Abel Building, Five Gateway Center
TypeOffice
United Steelworkers Building
The building in 2019
Interactive map of the United Steelworkers Building area
Former namesIBM Building
Alternative namesI.W. Abel Building, Five Gateway Center
General information
TypeOffice
Location60 Boulevard of the Allies, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Coordinates40°26′22″N 80°00′20″W / 40.4394°N 80.0055°W / 40.4394; -80.0055
GroundbreakingDecember 5, 1961[1]
Topped-outNovember 8, 1962[2]
OpeningMarch 19, 1964[3]
Cost$5 million[4]
OwnerUnited Steelworkers
Height
Height172 feet (52 m) (estimated)[5]
Technical details
Floor count13
Design and construction
ArchitectCurtis and Davis
DeveloperEquitable Life Assurance Society
Structural engineerWorthington, Skilling, Helle & Jackson
Main contractorGeorge A. Fuller Co.
IBM Building
Part ofPittsburgh Renaissance Historic District[6] (ID13000252)
Significant dates
Designated CPMay 2, 2013
Designated PHLF2014[7]

The United Steelworkers Building, originally named the IBM Building and also known as the I.W. Abel Building or Five Gateway Center,[8] is a highrise office building in Downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It was built by the Equitable Life Assurance Society in 1961–64 as part of the Gateway Center project which redeveloped a large portion of the area known as the Point. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a contributing property in the Pittsburgh Renaissance Historic District[6] and has been designated as a Pittsburgh landmark by the Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation.[7]

The building was designed by Curtis and Davis, a New Orleans–based architecture firm, with structural engineers Worthington, Skilling, Helle & Jackson. The design of the building, featuring a load-bearing steel diagrid exoskeleton, was highly unusual at the time and helped pioneer the use of diagrids and framed tube construction.

The building was developed by the Equitable Life Assurance Society as part of the Gateway Center project, which transformed an area consisting primarily of old warehouses into a modernist office park. The IBM Building was built on the site of the former Wabash Terminal train shed, which had been demolished in 1953. Workers had to remove 104 large concrete piers from the former station during construction.[9] Ground was broken on December 5, 1961[1] and the completed building was dedicated on March 19, 1964.[3]

The building's original tenants were IBM, occupying floors 1–4, and U.S. Steel on floors 5–13.[4] The building was purchased in 1973 by the United Steelworkers labor union,[10] which has continued to own and occupy it since. In 1989 it was officially renamed for former USW president I.W. Abel.[11]

Architecture

References

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