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Salesforce Tower, formerly known as Transbay Tower, is a 61-story supertall skyscraper at 415 Mission Street, between First and Fremont Street, in the South of Market district of downtown San Francisco. Its main tenant is Salesforce, a cloud-based software company. The building is 1,070 feet (326 m) tall, with a top roof height of 970 feet (296 m).
The developer's headquarters are in San Diego, although all its highrise projects over 14 stories are in the San Francisco Bay Area. [16] The Rincon Hill complex is the developer's second project in San Francisco, with the first being ONE Embarcadero South, a residential complex near One Rincon Hill and across from Oracle Park. [17]
That could be happening to the residents of the Millenium Tower in San Francisco, who are navigating fines of $10,000 per violation. ... The role of a homeowners' association is to govern the ...
MIRA (originally called Folsom Bay Tower) is a 39-story, 422-foot (129 m) residential skyscraper at 280 Spear Street in San Francisco, California. The tower is located on Block 1 of the San Francisco Transbay development plan at the northwest corner of Folsom and Spear Streets, near the Embarcadero . [ 5 ]
The Transamerica Pyramid was the tallest skyscraper in San Francisco from 1972 to 2017, when it was surpassed by the under-construction Salesforce Tower. [16] It is one of 39 San Francisco high rises reported by the U.S. Geological Survey as potentially vulnerable to a large earthquake, due to a flawed welding technique. [17]
Concrete buildings constructed before 1980 would account for half of the deaths in San Francisco if a magnitude 7.2 earthquake were to hit the nearby San Andreas fault, according to a 2010 study ...
555 Mission Street is a 33-story, 147 m (482 ft) office tower in the South of Market area of San Francisco, California. [1] Construction of the tower began in 2006 and the tower was finished on September 18, 2008. [4] [5] It was the tallest office building constructed in San Francisco in the 2000s, and is the 25th tallest building in San ...
As part of the Rincon Hill Plan adopted in August 2005, the parcels at 375 Fremont and 399 Fremont were zoned for either two 250-foot (76 m) residential towers, or one 400-foot (120 m) tower. [3] On June 15, 2006, the San Francisco Planning Commission approved the demolition of the existing buildings and the construction of a 400-foot (120 m ...