place

225 Bush Street

Emporis template using building IDFinancial District, San FranciscoOffice buildings completed in 1922Skyscraper office buildings in San Francisco
225 Bush Street
225 Bush Street

225 Bush Street, originally known as the Standard Oil Building, is a 328-foot (100 m), 25-floor office building in the financial district of San Francisco. The building includes 21 floors of office space, 1 floor of retail, 1 storage floor and 2 basement levels including the garage. It was the tallest building in the city from its completion in 1922 until 1925. It contains approximately 560,000 sq ft (52,000 m2) of rentable space. It is a historic building, serving as the headquarters for Standard Oil of California, now Chevron, for over half a century. Architect George W. Kelham designed the Standard Oil Building for John D. Rockefeller and modeled it on the Federal Reserve Bank of New York Building. Composed of two buildings, the old wing was built in the 1920s. The new wing was built in the 1950s.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article 225 Bush Street (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

225 Bush Street
Bush Street, San Francisco

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: 225 Bush StreetContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.79086 ° E -122.40147 °
placeShow on map

Address

225 Bush Street

Bush Street
90104 San Francisco
California, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q4631257)
linkOpenStreetMap (942665601)

225 Bush Street
225 Bush Street
Share experience

Nearby Places

Russ Building
Russ Building

The Russ Building is a Neo-Gothic office tower located in the Financial District of San Francisco, California. It was designed by architect George W. Kelham, who was responsible for many of San Francisco's other prominent high-rise buildings in the 1920s. The 133-metre (436 ft) building was completed in 1927 and had 32 floors as well as the city's first indoor parking garage. It was the tallest building in San Francisco from 1927 to 1964 and one of the most prominent, along with its 133-metre (436 ft) "twin", the PacBell Building to the south.Upon completion, the building was iconic enough that Architect and Engineer wrote, “In nearly every large city there is one building that because of its size, beauty of architectural design and character of its use and occupancy, has come to typify the city itself ... Today the Russ Building takes this place in San Francisco. By its size and location and by the character of its tenants the building becomes indeed—'The Center of Western Progress'.”However, Manhattanization from 1960 to 1990 has shrouded the tower in a shell of skyscrapers, removing the tower's prominence. The San Francisco Chronicle's architecture critic John King described the Russ Building as "the embodiment of Jazz Age romance, a full block of ornate Gothic-flavored masonry that ascends in jagged stages from Montgomery Street with a leap and then a scramble to a central crown". The tower is a California Historical Landmark.Until the emergence of Sand Hill Road in the 1980s, many of the largest venture capital firms held offices in the Russ Building.