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Central Tower (San Francisco)

Central Tower
Central Tower And Flag.jpg
Former names Call Building
Spreckels Building
Record height
Preceded by Chronicle Building
Surpassed by Standard Oil Building
General information
Type Commercial offices
Location 703 Market Street
San Francisco, California
Coordinates 37°47′14″N 122°24′14″W / 37.787181°N 122.403861°W / 37.787181; -122.403861Coordinates: 37°47′14″N 122°24′14″W / 37.787181°N 122.403861°W / 37.787181; -122.403861
Completed 1898
1938 (art deco/art moderne renovations)
Owner RKI 703 Investors LLC
Height
Roof 91 m (299 ft)
Technical details
Floor count 21
Design and construction
Architect Reid & Reid
Albert Roller (renovations)
References

Central Tower is a 91 m (299 ft) 21-story office building at Market and Third Streets in San Francisco, California. The building has undergone numerous renovations since its completion in 1898 as the Call Building and later, the Spreckels Building.

In 1890, M. H. de Young, owner of the San Francisco Chronicle, built San Francisco's first skyscraper, the 218-foot (66 m) Chronicle Building, to house his newspaper. In response, John D. Spreckels and his father Claus Spreckels purchased the San Francisco Call in 1895 and commissioned a tower of their own that would dwarf the Chronicle Building. In September 1895, The Call wrote:

The San Francisco Call is to have the finest building ever erected for a newspaper office. It is to be built on the corner of Market and Third streets, of granite and white marble, and will be fifteen stories — 310 feet high, the highest building this side of Chicago. Unlike the Chronicle building it will be a beautiful building and a credit to its owner, Claus Spreckels, and worthy of the great paper to be printed within its walls. A light granite will be used for the first three stories, but above the third story white marble will be used. The main entrance or rotunda will be finished in some polished California marble, the very choicest obtainable, and the floor will be mosaic.

The building eventually stood 315 feet (96 m) tall with an ornate baroque dome—which housed the offices of Reid & Reid, the building's architects—and four corner cupolas when construction finished in 1898. It was the tallest building west of the Mississippi River for many years. The structure was badly burned and damaged by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, although the building did not collapse.


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