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Deutsche Bank Center occupies the site of the New York Coliseum, [8] [9] which itself replaced two city blocks bounded by Columbus Circle, 60th Street, Ninth Avenue, and 58th Street. [10] [11] The Coliseum opened in 1956 as New York City's main convention center, [12] [13] being superseded by the Javits Center in the 1980s.
60 Wall Street (formerly the J.P. Morgan Bank Building or Deutsche Bank Building) is a 55-story, [a] 745-foot-tall (227 m) skyscraper on Wall Street in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan in New York City, New York. The tower was designed by Kevin Roche and John Dinkeloo of Roche-Dinkeloo and originally built for J.P. Morgan & Co.
The Deutsche Bank Building (formerly Bankers Trust Plaza) was a 39-story office building located at 130 Liberty Street in Manhattan, New York City, adjacent to the World Trade Center site. The building opened in 1974 and closed following the September 11 attacks in 2001, due to contamination that spread from the collapse of the South Tower .
Deutsche Bank Building was an office skyscraper located at 130 Liberty Street in Manhattan, New York City. Deutsche Bank Building may also refer to: Deutsche Bank Center, in New York City, the American headquarters of Deutsche Bank since 2021; 60 Wall Street, in New York City, the American headquarters of Deutsche Bank from 2001 to 2021
Deutsche’s move represents a turnaround on previously liberal work-from-home policies introduced by the bank during COVID-19, which allowed staff to spend 40-60% of their week working remotely.
277 Park Avenue is an office building in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. It stands on the east side of Park Avenue between East 47th and 48th Streets, and is 687 feet (209 m) tall, with 50 floors. [2] It is tied with two other buildings, 55 Water Street and 5 Beekman Street, as the 73rd tallest building in New York.
Deutsche Bank AG [a] (German pronunciation: [ˈdɔʏtʃə ˈbaŋk ʔaːˈɡeː] ⓘ, lit. ' German Bank ') is a German multinational investment bank and financial services company headquartered in Frankfurt, Germany, and dual-listed on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange.
By mid-2022, Open Society Foundations was still the only office tenant in the Argonaut Building. [65] Soros Fund Management moved to foreclose on the building's mortgage in April 2024. [66] [67] That June, the delinquent mortgages on the building were sold by Deutsche Bank and another German lender to the George Soros Family office. [68]