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Docusign Tower
Skyscraper in Seattle
Skyscraper in Seattle
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Docusign Tower |
| image | Wells Fargo Center (Seattle).jpg |
| caption | Exterior of the Docusign Tower from the 73rd floor of the Columbia Center in 2012 |
| former_names | First Interstate Tower, Wells Fargo Center |
| location | 999 Third Avenue |
| Seattle, Washington, U.S. | |
| coordinates | |
| map_type | Seattle WA Downtown |
| map_caption | Location within downtown Seattle |
| completion_date | 1983 |
| building_type | Commercial offices |
| current_tenants | Docusign |
| roof | 174.96 m |
| floor_count | 47 |
| elevator_count | 24 |
| floor_area | 87,753 sqm |
| architect | McKinley Architects |
| main_contractor | Howard S. Wright Construction |
| website | |
| owner | EQ Office |
| management | EQ Office |
| references |
Seattle, Washington, U.S.
Docusign Tower, previously the Wells Fargo Center, is a skyscraper in Seattle, in the U.S. state of Washington. Originally named First Interstate Center when completed in 1983, the 47-story, 175 m tower is now the ninth-tallest building in the city, and has 24 elevators and 87,400 m² of rentable space. The design work was done by The McKinley Architects, and it is owned by Chicago-based EQ Office.
In 2013, the building was purchased by Canada's Ivanhoé Cambridge from Beacon Capital Partners of Boston. The building was renamed after First Interstate Bancorp was taken over by Wells Fargo in 1996. In 2019, the building was purchased by EQ Office. Docusign took over naming rights in 2020 after expanding their lease within the building, which began in 2015.
The exterior façade is composed of a six-sided, steel-framed tower that features a combination of tinted continuous double-glazed glass and polished spring rose granite panels. As is common with buildings in downtown Seattle, Docusign Tower rests on a slope. The eastern entrance facing Third Avenue is slightly more than two stories higher than the Western side facing Second Avenue. On the west side, the building has a public hill-climb on two flights of outdoor escalators that were encased in clear tubes until 2006 when they were updated with a simpler, yet more modern glass roof. The building has three levels of outdoor plazas. Several retail spaces face the west plaza.
The site was previously occupied by the 12-story Olympic National Life building, which was demolished by implosion on the morning of Sunday, February 28, 1982. It was the first demolition by implosion in downtown Seattle. One of the city's first steel skyscrapers, it was built in 1906 and was also known as the American Savings Bank and the Empire Building.
References
References
- "Emporis building ID 119378". [[Emporis]].
- {{SkyscraperPage. 2154
- {{Structurae. 20027200
- "Wells Fargo Center". CTBUH.
- Warren, James R.. (1986). "Where Mountains Meet the Sea: An Illustrated History of Puget Sound". Windsor Publications.
- "Ivanhoe Cambridge buys 47-story Wells Fargo Center in Seattle for US$390M".
- Stiles, Mark. (June 28, 2019). "EQ Office invests another $1.2B in Seattle, this time for two trophy towers".
- Stiles, Marc. (January 14, 2020). "Seattle's 999 Third Avenue tower to be renamed for expanding tech tenant". [[Puget Sound Business Journal]].
- Demmitt, Jacob. (December 8, 2015). "DocuSign moving Seattle headquarters to a different downtown office tower". [[GeekWire]].
- "999 Third Avenue Retail". [[JLL (company).
- Walker, Nick. (February 28, 1982). "Seattle building implosion: Olympic National Life Building implosion, Feb. 28, 1982". KIRO-TV.
- (March 1, 1982). "Imploded: 650 pounds of explosive jelly and six seconds". [[Spokane Chronicle]].
- (March 1, 1982). "Going, going, going...gone". [[Eugene Register-Guard]].
- Dorpat, Paul. (March 2, 2017). "Seattle has had two uppercase Big Snows — the most recent in 1916". The Seattle Times.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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