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One Wells Fargo Center is a 588-foot (179 m) skyscraper in Charlotte, North Carolina [1] and is the headquarters for Wells Fargo's east coast division [4] [6] but will leave the building by the end of 2023. [7]
44 Montgomery is a 43-story, 172 m (564 ft) office skyscraper in the heart of San Francisco's Financial District. [5] Groundbreaking was in the spring of 1964. [6] When completed in 1967, it was the tallest building west of Dallas, surpassed by 555 California Street (built as the world headquarters of Bank of America) in 1969.
Zip Codes: 28202, 28204, 28206, 28208. ... Several Fortune 500 companies have their headquarters in the district, ... Wells Fargo, whose Charlotte ...
The bank's corporate headquarters will continue to be in San Francisco and it has no plans to move out of the city, the bank said in an emailed statement to Reuters. Wells Fargo also said that it ...
The Wells Fargo Building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 27, 1978. [1] The skyscraper was listed because it was an excellent example of commercial Beaux-Arts architecture and because it stands "as a glossary of modern skyscraper design, synthesizing the primary features of three phases of skyscraper development ...
Wells Fargo has 12 branches in El Paso, including the soon-to-close Downtown branch. Downtown customers will be able to use the Wells Fargo branch at 2340 N. Mesa St., about one mile from the ...
It is home to the city's largest concentration of corporate headquarters, law firms, insurance companies, real estate firms, savings and loan banks, and other financial institutions. Multiple Fortune 500 companies headquartered in San Francisco have their offices in the Financial District, including Wells Fargo, Salesforce, and Gap. [6]
Wells Fargo Tower (Tower I), at 220 m (720 ft) it is the tallest building of the complex. It has 54 floors and it is the 8th tallest building in Los Angeles, and the 92nd-tallest building in the United States. When it opened in 1983, it was known as the Crocker Tower, named after San Francisco-based Crocker National Bank.