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Fifth Street Towers

1987 establishments in MinnesotaBuildings and structures completed in 1987Minnesota building and structure stubsOffice buildings completed in 1988Skyscraper office buildings in Minneapolis
Twin towers
Fifth Street Towers Minneapolis 1
Fifth Street Towers Minneapolis 1

The Fifth Street Towers is a complex of two buildings in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Fifth Street Towers I was completed in 1987 and is 356 feet (109 m) tall and has 26 floors. Fifth Street Towers II was completed in 1988 and is 504 feet (154 m) tall and has 36 floors. At one time MAIR Holdings had its headquarters in Suite 1360 of Fifth Street Towers II.It was purchased in 2007 by a UK-based company, StratREAL for $294 million on behalf of an unnamed client but sold in May 2012 for $110 million following a mortgage default by the borrower. The borrower was Interventure Capital Group, acting on behalf of Prince Abdul Aziz bin Fahd, youngest son of the late King Fahd of Saudi Arabia

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Fifth Street Towers (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Fifth Street Towers
South 5th Street, Minneapolis

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 44.978055555556 ° E -93.268333333333 °
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Address

Fifth Street Towers

South 5th Street 100-150
55402 Minneapolis
Minnesota, United States
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Fifth Street Towers Minneapolis 1
Fifth Street Towers Minneapolis 1
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Canadian Pacific Plaza
Canadian Pacific Plaza

Canadian Pacific Plaza is a 383-ft (117 m) tall skyscraper in Minneapolis, Minnesota. It was completed in 1960 and has 28 floors. It is the 21st-tallest building in the city. It is the first major post-World War II skyscraper built in Minneapolis. It is also the city's tallest building completed in the 1960s. A skyway connects the building to the Rand Tower, Soo Line Building, and US Bank Plaza. The building's history began in 1955 when First Bank System of Minneapolis hired Holabird, Root & Burgee of Chicago to design a new headquarters. The project, assisted by Minneapolis firm Thorshov & Cerny, drew inspiration from the design principles of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and the recently completed Lever House in New York City. Construction commenced with demolition of the New York Life Insurance Building in 1957, followed by a January groundbreaking in 1958, and final occupancy in May of 1960. The building served as the headquarters for First Bank System (now U.S. Bancorp) until its move to the Capella Tower in 1992. The building subsequently took on the name One Financial Plaza. In August 2012, the building gained its current moniker when Canadian Pacific Railway moved its United States headquarters and 400 employees out of the nearby Soo Line Building, which was undergoing conversion into a residential building. The Soo Line Building is the namesake of the historic Soo Line Railroad, of which the Canadian Pacific become majority shareholder in 1890 and took full control in 1990, moving its own US headquarters into the former Soo Line offices.

Farmers and Mechanics Savings Bank (1942)
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Capella Tower
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