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Clapp is the great-grand son of Weyerhaeuser Co. co-founder Matthew Norton. [4] Bill began his career in Alaska in the 1960s, working as a bush pilot and businessman. He returned to Seattle in 1975, where he helped found the Matthew G. Norton Company, a real estate and property management firm. He served as CEO and chairman until 2002. [5]
The campus was sold by Weyerhaeuser in 2016 when the company moved to a new office in Seattle's Pioneer Square. [2] The property was purchased by Industrial Realty Group and renamed to Woodbridge Corporate Park.
William Clapp may refer to: William J. Clapp (1857–1934), American attorney and educator; William H. Clapp (1879–1954), American painter and art curator; William F. Clapp (1880–1951), specialist in mollusks at Harvard University's Museum of Comparative Zoology; Bill Clapp, social entrepreneur, philanthropist and business executive; Will ...
William Clapp House, headquarters of the Dorchester Historical Society. The Dorchester Historical Society is a non-profit historical society devoted to telling the history of Dorchester, Massachusetts since it was founded in 1630. [1] The Dorchester Historical Society was "founded in 1843 and incorporated in 1891."
Madison Centre (formerly known as M5 Commerce Centre and 505 Madison) is a 530-foot-tall (160 m) skyscraper in Downtown Seattle, Washington. It was completed in October 2017 and has 37 floors of office space totaling 746,000 square feet (69,300 m 2) of gross leasable area. [6] It is the thirteenth-tallest building in Seattle.
1201 Third Avenue (formerly Washington Mutual Tower) is a 235.31-meter (772.0 ft), 55-story skyscraper in Downtown Seattle, in the U.S. state of Washington.It is the third-tallest building in the city, the eighth-tallest on the West Coast of the United States, and the 97th-tallest in the United States.
The "Seattle First National Bank Building" in 1969. [17] Originally the headquarters of Seafirst Bank, it was sold fourteen years later to JMB Realty in 1983 for $123 million, a record for a Seattle building. [8] [18] The building was purchased by Seafo Inc., a company affiliated with the New York State Common Retirement Fund, in 1993. [19]
The King County Administration Building is a nine-story office building in Seattle, the seat of King County, Washington, United States. Completed in 1971, the building is located at 500 Fourth Avenue, in between Jefferson Street and James Street, and parking is available in parking garages on all surrounding streets.