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Bank Of America Building This is my personal favorite Rate Topic: -----

#1 User is offline   WestGrayGuy Icon

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Posted Friday, September 10, 2004 at 9:28 AM

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Everytime I return back to Houston from another city, I look for this building first. This is most distinctive building in our skyline.

To add to its lore, there is the unfortunate story of the woman in the basement during Allison.
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#2 User is offline   Talbot Icon

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Posted Friday, September 10, 2004 at 9:34 AM

yeah our good ole whataburger copy. :P
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#3 User is offline   SpaceCity Icon

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Posted Friday, September 10, 2004 at 10:09 AM

It is a beautiful building. Definitely my favorite too.
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#4 User is offline   Montrose1100 Icon

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Posted Friday, September 10, 2004 at 7:28 PM

Our skyline plays with our imaginations...

The contrast, and connection between the BOA and the JP Morgan Chase Tower, is awesome. I love our "Diverse" Skyline of colors, and shapes. Its all molds in so perfectly, like the song of the century. :) But we could fill up the space, around the JP Morgan Chase Tower, and from the Calpine to Chevron (tower) and from the Chevron to the Kellogg...
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#5 User is online   UrbaNerd Icon

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Posted Friday, September 10, 2004 at 11:04 PM

Also, the wells fargo..ooh.. AND, don't forget the former Enron buildings!
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#6 User is offline   J.A.S.O.N. Icon

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Posted Sunday, September 12, 2004 at 4:15 PM

I think this building is the most distinctive of the Houston skyline.
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#7 User is offline   DaTrain Icon

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Posted Sunday, October 17, 2004 at 3:45 PM

I like the BofA spires that stick out. The unique thing about is the three-level spire roof too.
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#8 User is offline   HoustoniaNYC Icon

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Posted Tuesday, December 14, 2004 at 1:18 AM

It's Republic Bank, just like it's Transco Tower, it's Texas Commerce, it's HOUSTON Intercontinental Airport etc., but I digress....

I'm no post-modernist, but I've always appreciated that building. Houston is definitely a "gothic" place in spirit. I think of our beloved downtown skyline as a composition of beautiful objects, and I've liked how the Republic Bank played off of it's decidedly modern counterparts.

What I've never understood though is why Johnson didn't equally stagger the 3 volumns of the building. The difference bewteen smallest(North) and the middle volume is greater than the difference between the middle and the tallest(South) volumns. Was it purely economical or programmical, or was Johnson trying to play with perspective? Impressive if he was since he apparently got away with it, except it doesn't really work in my opinion. It just looks wrong, like they meant to make the staggering equidistant but didn't.
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#9 User is offline   dbigtex56 Icon

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Posted Tuesday, December 14, 2004 at 2:44 PM

HoustoniaNYC, on Tuesday, December 14th, 2004 @ 1:18am, said:

What I've never understood though is why Johnson didn't equally stagger the 3 volumns of the building.  The difference bewteen smallest(North) and the middle volume is greater than the difference between the middle and the tallest(South) volumns.  Was it purely economical or programmical, or was Johnson trying to play with perspective?  Impressive if he was since he apparently got away with it, except it doesn't really work in my opinion.  It just looks wrong, like they meant to make the staggering equidistant but didn't.


Local legend has it that an influential person who had an office in Pennzoil Place didn't want his view obstructed, which partially influenced the shape of Republic Bank.

Another factor was the Western Union building. Due to the number of telegraph cables which would have had to be rerouted at great cost (in those pre-internet days), Western Union refused to sell. Instead, the banking hall portion of the building now completely engulfs this ugly little concrete block building, hidden in the northeast corner of the banking hall.

I worked across the street (at HL&P) and watched the construction of this building from start to finish. The amount of bracing that went into shoring up that corner of the building was quite an amazing engineering feat. That it works aesthetically as well is nearly miraculous.
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#10 User is offline   bachanon Icon

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Posted Tuesday, December 14, 2004 at 3:16 PM

i read somewhere that philip johnson did not want to obstruct views of the pennzoil building(s) which he also designed.
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#11 User is offline   Subdude Icon

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Posted Tuesday, December 14, 2004 at 5:14 PM

Quote

What I've never understood though is why Johnson didn't equally stagger the 3 volumns of the building. The difference bewteen smallest(North) and the middle volume is greater than the difference between the middle and the tallest(South) volumns. Was it purely economical or programmical, or was Johnson trying to play with perspective? Impressive if he was since he apparently got away with it, except it doesn't really work in my opinion. It just looks wrong, like they meant to make the staggering equidistant but didn't.


Interesting point. My guess is that the massing of the volumes was driven by all of the above. Economics in maximizing net rentable area by having the tallest section (to the south) also be the deepest. But I think it was also an aesthetic decision to not make the three sections equally deep. Varying the relative height and depth arguably lends itself to a more visually interesting composition.
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#12 User is offline   bruce_oneal Icon

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Posted Sunday, January 16, 2005 at 9:32 PM

HoustoniaNYC, on Tuesday, December 14th, 2004 @ 1:18am, said:

It's Republic Bank, just like it's Transco Tower, it's Texas Commerce, it's HOUSTON Intercontinental Airport etc., but I digress....

I'm no post-modernist, but I've always appreciated that building.  Houston is definitely a "gothic" place in spirit.  I think of our beloved downtown skyline as a composition of beautiful objects, and I've liked how the Republic Bank played off of it's decidedly modern counterparts. 

What I've never understood though is why Johnson didn't equally stagger the 3 volumns of the building.  The difference bewteen smallest(North) and the middle volume is greater than the difference between the middle and the tallest(South) volumns.  Was it purely economical or programmical, or was Johnson trying to play with perspective?  Impressive if he was since he apparently got away with it, except it doesn't really work in my opinion.  It just looks wrong, like they meant to make the staggering equidistant but didn't.


if i'm not mistaken, the republic bank tower was built on top of another building. in fact, i think the lobby is that of the older building. could that have had something to do with it?
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#13 User is offline   luvarch Icon

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Posted Sunday, April 10, 2005 at 11:16 PM

This one is my favourite building. The gothic arches give the skyline a european feel. I love the lobby..it reminds me of something. If I remember, I will post.
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#14 User is offline   longcat Icon

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Posted Monday, October 6, 2008 at 3:59 PM

I've got a question that has bugged me for some time. How many floors of the top of each arch segment are actually usable? The very top portion of each segment is too narrow to do anything with (unless you wanted a single long thin office I guess). Even a few floors down from the top of each segment would still be a very much narrower space than is typical of office building layouts.
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#15 User is offline   Montrose1100 Icon

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Posted Monday, October 6, 2008 at 4:17 PM

View Postlongcat, on Monday, October 6th, 2008 @ 3:59pm, said:

I've got a question that has bugged me for some time. How many floors of the top of each arch segment are actually usable? The very top portion of each segment is too narrow to do anything with (unless you wanted a single long thin office I guess). Even a few floors down from the top of each segment would still be a very much narrower space than is typical of office building layouts.

I think the top 2 are not used, you can kinda tell from the Observation Deck.
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#16 User is offline   Subdude Icon

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Posted Monday, October 6, 2008 at 11:35 PM

View Postlongcat, on Monday, October 6th, 2008 @ 2:59pm, said:

I've got a question that has bugged me for some time. How many floors of the top of each arch segment are actually usable? The very top portion of each segment is too narrow to do anything with (unless you wanted a single long thin office I guess). Even a few floors down from the top of each segment would still be a very much narrower space than is typical of office building layouts.


One of the top peaks is indeed a long thin room, like a conference room. I have no idea what, if anything, it is used for.
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#17 User is offline   infinite_jim Icon

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Posted Monday, October 6, 2008 at 11:58 PM

Ah, the edge conditioning aesthetic of downtown.

All the above reasons would fly for Johnson, that was his legend, anything goes...
I find a strange kinship of this bldg to the lipstick building in NY. Either way, we find a state of modernism that wears a mask harkening back to the dutch gothic aesthetic for ethereal reinforcement. How does this mask play into the imaginations of Houstonians? or could this building be anywhere?

Sadly this building's statement is cynical and merely a hallmark card to market a decontextualized image of Houston, not it's authenticity or character. You are fooling yourself otherwise.

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#18 User is offline   Northwood Icon

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Posted Tuesday, October 7, 2008 at 8:37 AM

The top two floors (55 & 56) are actually the building's cooling tower. Below that (54) is a mechanical space which contains elevator and HVAC equipment. Level 53 is the highest occupiable floor and it does indeed have offices.
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#19 User is offline   longcat Icon

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Posted Tuesday, October 7, 2008 at 9:39 AM

View PostNorthwood, on Tuesday, October 7th, 2008 @ 8:37am, said:

The top two floors (55 & 56) are actually the building's cooling tower. Below that (54) is a mechanical space which contains elevator and HVAC equipment. Level 53 is the highest occupiable floor and it does indeed have offices.


Thanks. Does the same hold true for the 2 lower peaks as well? Or are there floors that are part normal layout, part one long thin room?
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#20 User is offline   Subdude Icon

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Posted Tuesday, October 7, 2008 at 2:21 PM

View Postinfinite_jim, on Monday, October 6th, 2008 @ 11:58pm, said:

Sadly this building's statement is cynical and merely a hallmark card to market a decontextualized image of Houston, not it's authenticity or character. You are fooling yourself otherwise.


Fair enough, but that decontextualization (how's that for a word?) was part and parcel of postmodernism. It was about the rediscovery and reuse of historical design references that had been lost during the high modern period. Cynical it frequently was, but I think it was a necessary reaction to the generation of soulless buildings that came before it.
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