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Icon Norfolk

Bank of America buildingsBuildings and structures in Norfolk, VirginiaDowntown Norfolk, VirginiaOffice buildings completed in 1967Office buildings in Norfolk, Virginia
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill buildingsSkyscraper office buildings in Norfolk, VirginiaVague or ambiguous time from February 2023Virginia building and structure stubs
BankOfAmericaNorfolk
BankOfAmericaNorfolk

Icon Norfolk (formerly Bank of America Center) in Downtown Norfolk, Virginia, United States, was the tallest building in Virginia from 1967-1971, when it was surpassed in height by Richmond City Hall. Constructed as a bank building, it was converted in the late 2010s to apartments and given its current name.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Icon Norfolk (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Icon Norfolk
Waterside Drive, Norfolk Berkley

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 36.843194444444 ° E -76.287777777778 °
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Address

Dominion Tower Parking Garage

Waterside Drive 999
23510 Norfolk, Berkley
Virginia, United States
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Waterside (Norfolk, Virginia)
Waterside (Norfolk, Virginia)

The Waterside, is a festival marketplace on the Elizabeth River in downtown Norfolk, Virginia, opened June 1, 1983. While the Waterside Annex was demolished May 16, 2016, the main portion was renovated and reopened as Waterside District in May 2017.Beginning in the late 1970s, mall-developer James W. Rouse and the Rouse Company had conceived the festival marketplace (e.g., Norfolk's Waterside) as an important component to redeveloping a declining downtown, a seminal catalyst to further development. The concept combined to varying degrees major restaurants, specialty retail shops, food courts and nightlife activities. Like other shopping centers, malls and marketplaces, the Waterside has evolved through numerous business cycles. Originally, Waterside featured mostly restaurants like The Baitshack on the first floor. There were small nautically themed stores as well as an arcade. The balconied second floor featured more niche stores and kiosks. A second phase was added to the complex in the 1980s, while the mid-1990s saw a decline in business, mitigated by the opening of nearby MacArthur Center. In the early-2000s, the upstairs stores were replaced by entertainment venues, such as Jillian's arcade. The Norfolk Redevelopment and Housing Authority purchased the Waterside from its private owner, Enterprise Real Estate Services, in 1999, at the time considered a temporary arrangement. The Waterside delivered approximately $2.2 million in tax revenue in 2007, down $300,000 since 2004. Norfolk will subsidize the facility with $1 million in 2008 and currently is studying the next phase of the marketplace's repositioning.