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The Bank of America Corporate Center is an 871 ft (265 m) skyscraper in Uptown Charlotte, North Carolina. [1] Designed by Argentine architect César Pelli and HKS Architects, and best known as the headquarters of the namesake Bank of America, it has been the tallest building in North Carolina since its 1992 construction, the 51st-tallest building in the United States, and the 174th-tallest ...
The Bank of America principal executive offices are located in the Bank of America Corporate Center, Charlotte, North Carolina. The skyscraper is located at 100 North Tryon Street, and stands at 871 ft (265 m), having been completed in 1992.
One South at The Plaza (formerly the Bank of America Plaza) is a 503 feet (153 m), 40-story skyscraper in Charlotte, North Carolina. [1] It is the 7th tallest in the city. It contains 891,000 square feet (82,777 m 2) of rentable area of which 75,000 sq ft (7,000 m 2) of retail space, and the rest office space.
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Legacy Union, formerly known as 620 South Tryon, is a multi-building development currently finished in Uptown Charlotte, North Carolina. It broke ground on August 4, 2017, and finished in 2021. The development includes the world headquarters of Honeywell and major corporate offices for Deloitte, JLL, Bank of America, and Robinson Bradshaw. [1]
Bank of America Center (Norfolk, Virginia) Bank of America Center (Orlando, Florida) Bank of America Center (Portland, Oregon) Bank of America Corporate Center, Charlotte, North Carolina; Arvest Tower, Tulsa, Oklahoma, formerly known as the Bank of America Center; 555 California Street, San Francisco, California, formerly known as the Bank of ...
The Charlotte City Council on Monday approved terms of a deal to spend $650 million in public funding on Bank of America stadium renovations. Tepper Sports & Entertainment, which owns both the ...
It was the oldest surviving commercial building in the central business district of Charlotte [2] until it was demolished in 1989. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. [1] The building was demolished in 1989 to make room for construction of the new corporate headquarter of NCNB, which later became Bank of America. [3]