Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
400 South Tryon, formerly called the Wachovia Center, is a skyscraper in Charlotte center city, North Carolina. When it was being built, there were rumors that the developer intended to add ten more floors to pass Bank of America Plaza , and become the tallest building in Charlotte.
Circuit Judge R. Ferrell Cothran of the Third Judicial Circuit in South Carolina, denied a motion to compel arbitration and a motion to dismiss the suit filed by the defendants — Palmetto Bluff ...
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. [ 3 ]
South Street Partners Vice President of Operations Rob Duckett declined immediate comment for this story. “I just never experienced anything like this and it’s a little unnerving,” Riddick said.
300 South Tryon is an office high rise in Charlotte, North Carolina. [3] With a height of 463 feet (141 m), [1] it is the 10th tallest building in Charlotte. [4] It was completed in 2017. [5] Ground breaking was on December 15, 2014, and construction was completed on November 16, 2017.
Charlotte Street Partners Limited [1] is a strategic communications consultancy, based in Edinburgh, that launched in January 2014. [2] The consultancy provides advice to businesses, organisations and individuals. [3]
Within the Uptown Charlotte street grid (which is skewed about 45 degrees from compass directions), Tryon forms the boundary between streets labeled "East" and "West". Many of the tallest buildings in Charlotte have a Tryon Street address including: Bank of America Corporate Center [10] One South at The Plaza [11] 550 South Tryon [12] Truist ...
South Tryon Square is a development consisting of two 14-story high-rises in Charlotte, North Carolina.The first building, at 201 South Tryon, was opened in 1961 as the American Credit Corporation building; from its second renovation, in 1999, the facade was changed to the current gray and green granite with green glass and ornamental metal.