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The house at 1254–1256 Montgomery Street is a historic house located in the Telegraph Hill neighborhood of San Francisco.Construction commenced in the early 1860s [partial first floor] and sits on a secondary summit of the hill, which was also the site of a windmill that burned in 1861.
The Transamerica Pyramid was the tallest skyscraper in San Francisco from 1972 to 2017, when it was surpassed by the under-construction Salesforce Tower. [16] It is one of 39 San Francisco high rises reported by the U.S. Geological Survey as potentially vulnerable to a large earthquake, due to a flawed welding technique. [17]
Since 2017, the Wikimedia Foundation has been headquartered on the sixteenth floor. [9] A consulate general of the Netherlands [10] The San Francisco office of the law firm Shook, Hardy, & Bacon [11] Stitch Fix [12] One of the first cashierless Amazon Go stores opened on the ground floor of One Montgomery Tower in January 2019. [13]
Post Montgomery Street Garage; Located in: Crocker Galleria (adjacent to One Montgomery Tower) Address: 173 Sutter Street Phone: (415) 393-1545 Rates: $6 per half hour (valet only) Distance: 1-minute walk. One Sansome Parking; Address: 255 Sutter Street (near Grant Street) Phone: Rates: Distance: 2-minute walk. The White House Garage
The Montgomery in 2012. The Montgomery is a residential highrise located at 74 New Montgomery Street in San Francisco, California.The building was designed by the Reid Brothers architects in 1914 and served as headquarters and the offices of the newspaper The San Francisco Call after its building, The Call Building, was damaged in the great fire.
The Malloch Building is a private residential apartment building on Telegraph Hill in San Francisco designed in the Streamline Moderne style and built in 1937. The building, one of the best examples of its type in San Francisco, is also known as Malloch Apartments, Malloch Apartment Building, and simply by its address: 1360 Montgomery Street.
The Admission Day Monument is an 1897 sculpture by Douglas Tilden, located at the intersection of Market Street and Montgomery Street in San Francisco, California, United States. [1] It commemorates California Admission Day (September 9, 1850), the date on which the state became part of the Union, following the Mexican–American War of 1848.
It is located in the Civic Center neighborhood near the San Francisco City Hall on Van Ness Avenue. The building, completed in 1974, stands 400 feet (122 m) and has 29 floors of former office space that housed the California State Automobile Association (CSAA).