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One Union Square is an aluminum clad 456-foot (139 m) skyscraper consisting of 36 floors with 2 floors below ground. [11] Construction of this class A office building was completed 44 years ago in 1981. It is the first office building in Seattle to house all life-support systems in one location. [11] The architect of One Union Square was TRA.
Parking mandates or parking requirements are policy decisions, usually taken by municipal governments, which require new developments to provide a particular number of parking spaces. Parking minimums were first enacted in 1950s America during the post-war construction boom with the intention of preventing street parking from becoming overcrowded.
The Lincoln Building, also known as One Union Square West, is a Neo-Romanesque building at 1 Union Square West in the Union Square neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It is located at the northwest corner of Union Square West's intersection with 14th Street .
The Zeckendorf Towers, sometimes also called One Irving Place and One Union Square East, is a 345 ft-tall (105 m), 29-story, four-towered condominium complex on the eastern side of Union Square in Manhattan, New York City. Completed in 1987, the building is located on the former site of the bargain-priced department store S. Klein.
Metro approved the construction of a bus tunnel under 3rd Avenue in 1983, [20] and chose the intersection of 3rd Avenue and University Street as the site of one of the tunnel's five stations. [21] The station at University Street, replacing two separate stations at Union and Madison streets, would be excavated cut-and-cover and be completed by ...
The structure includes a two-story lobby as well as a five-story subterranean garage. Other amenities include 15,000 square feet (1,400 m 2) of ground-floor retail featuring a fitness center, a bank, some restaurants, a medical center, and a post office. [12] The building also has a rooftop helipad, one of twelve in the city. [13]
Union Park New York (East side), an 1892 illustration Prior to the area's settlement, the area around present-day Union Square was farmland. The western part of the site was owned by Elias Brevoort, [5]: 221 who later sold his land to John Smith in 1762; [12] by 1788 it had been sold again to Henry Spingler (or Springler).
From August 6 to 21, 2022, Union Square was served by C and D branch trains, as the E branch was closed for maintenance work. [102] The Union Square Branch was closed from August 22 to September 18, 2022; the closure allowed for final integration of the Medford Branch, elimination of a speed restriction on the Lechmere Viaduct, and other work ...