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Southeast Financial Center [4] is a two-acre development in Miami, Florida, United States. It consists of a 765 feet (233 m) tall office skyscraper and its 15-story parking garage. It was previously known as the Southeast Financial Center (1984–1992), the First Union Financial Center (1992–2003) and the Wachovia Financial Center (2003–2011).
Southeast Financial Center: 765 (233) 55 1984 Downtown: Tallest all-office building in the city and the state; tallest building built in Miami and Florida in the 1980s. [19] [20] 5 Brickell Flatiron: 736 (224) 65 2019 Brickell: Residential tower with 549 condominiums and 3,716 square meters of ground floor retail.
In 1969, the bank changed its name to Southeast Bank. At that time, the bank was led by Charles Zwick, former director of the Office of Management and Budget during the Presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson. [1] In 1983, it opened a signature 765-foot, 55-story tower in downtown Miami, the Southeast Financial Center.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wachovia_Financial_Center&oldid=417695673"
It surpassed Southeast Financial Center as the tallest building in Miami and Florida. The tower has 230,000 square feet (21,000 m 2) of Class A office space from floors 8 to 17. They are mostly occupied by HSBC Bank USA. [clarification needed] There are three lobbies. Two separate lobbies on the first floor and one on the seventh floor.
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One Tampa City Center is the third-tallest building in Tampa The building is among Tampa's tallest buildings, as well as among Florida's tallest. When it topped out in 1981, One Tampa City Center was the tallest building in Florida for four years, from 1981 to 1984, when it was surpassed by the Wachovia Financial Center, which today is the ...