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The Frost Tower is a 23-story skyscraper in San Antonio, Texas, USA. It was opened in 2019 at a cost of $142 million and is the first new office tower built in downtown San Antonio since 1989 when Weston Centre was built. [3] [4] Frost Tower replaced the old Frost Bank Tower as the headquarters of the eponymously named Frost Bank when it opened ...
The 22-story building previously served as the headquarters for Frost Bank from 1975 to 2019 until Frost Bank moved into the eponymously named Frost Tower. In 2015 the city of San Antonio acquired the building for $52.9 million and has allotted $88 million for renovations to the building.
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The Frost Bank Tower is one of the tallest buildings in Austin, Texas. Frost Bank Plaza in Corpus Christi, Texas. Frost Bank is an American bank based in San Antonio that is chartered in Texas, with 155 branches and 1,700 automated teller machines in the state. It is the primary subsidiary of Cullen/Frost Bankers, Inc., a bank holding company.
Frost Bank Center (formerly AT&T Center and SBC Center) is a multi-purpose indoor arena on the east side of San Antonio, Texas, United States.It is the home of the San Antonio Spurs of the National Basketball Association (NBA).
Post Office and Federal Building (San Antonio, Texas), 615 East Houston. The Post Office is a four-story limestone Renaissance Revival building located in the prominent position at the north end of the Alamo Plaza. The building was designed by Ralph Cameron and built in 1937 by the Works Progress Administration. The ground floor is rusticated ...
The building was originally called NBC Bank Plaza, and is faced with precast concrete containing Texas granite and limestone. The city's riverwalk passes directly to the east of the building. The building and adjacent garages were completed at a cost of $80.9 million, at the time the most expensive commercial project San Antonio had ever seen. [1]
1932: Congress appropriates funds for the U.S. Post Office and Courthouse. 1935-36: The building is constructed. 1937: The building is ceremonially opened. 1937-39: Howard Cook designs and executes the fresco mural, "San Antonio's Importance in Texas History." 1999: Cook's mural is restored.