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The JPMorgan Chase Building, formerly the Gulf Building, is a 37-story 130 m (430 ft) Art Deco skyscraper in downtown Houston, Texas.Completed in 1929, it remained the tallest building in Houston until 1963, when the Exxon Building surpassed it in height. [5]
The JPMorgan Chase Tower, formerly Texas Commerce Tower, is a 305.4-meter ... 75-story skyscraper at 600 Travis Street in Downtown Houston, Texas, United States.
The downtown skyline of Houston The tallest skyscrapers in Texas. This list of tallest buildings in Texas ranks skyscrapers in the U.S. state of Texas by height. The tallest structure in the state, excluding radio towers, is the JP Morgan Chase Tower, in Houston, which contains 75 floors and is 1,002 ft (305 m) tall.
Houston, the largest city in Texas, is the site of 58 completed skyscrapers over 427 feet (130 m), 50 of which stand taller than 492 feet (150 m). [1] [2] [3] The tallest building in the city is the JPMorgan Chase Tower, which rises 1,002 feet (305 m) in Downtown Houston and was completed in 1982.
Texas Commerce Bancshares, Inc. Logo JPMorgan Chase Building (formerly Gulf Building), the headquarters of the bank. The Texas Commerce Bank (officially Texas Commerce Bank N.A. [1], with its parent bank holding company known as Texas Commerce Bancshares, Inc.) was a Texas-based bank acquired by Chemical Banking Corporation of New York in May 1987.
BlackRock Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co and other top financial firms have told a Texas official they are not boycotting energy companies, responding to a request for information that could determine ...
Texas National Bank of Commerce Houston (Later, Texas Commerce Bank) JPMorgan Chase: 1964 Chemical Bank New York Trust Co. First National Bank of Mount Vernon Chemical Bank New York Trust Co. JPMorgan Chase: 1964 Chemical Bank New York Trust Co. Bensonhurst National Bank of Brooklyn Chemical Bank New York Trust Co. JPMorgan Chase: 1964
JPMorgan Chase Tower in Houston, Texas is the tallest composite building in the world. Houston's building boom of the 1970s and 1980s ceased in the mid-1980s, due to the 1980s oil glut. Building of skyscrapers resumed by 2003, but the new buildings were more modest and not as tall.