| Images | Title | Height | Floors | Year » |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Image Not Available | 201 Folsom Street | n/a | 43 | n/a |
201 Folsom Street is the second phase of Tishman Speyer's massive two block development in South of Market, San Francisco. It is located one block to the southwest of the project's first phase: The Infinity. 201 Folsom I will stand 43 stories tall and 201 Folsom II will stand 38 stories tall. The entire complex will contain 820 units. |
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| Image Not Available | Harbor Village Resort | 650 ft. | 61 | n/a |
The Harbor Village Resort was a proposed complex of three skyscrapers intended for San Francisco's India Basin in the Bayview-Hunters Point district. To be located on Hudson Street, the mixed-use complex would have consisted of a 250-boat marina and three 61 story skyscrapers towering 650 feet (198 m) over the marina. The three towers, to be named Harbor Village Resort I, II & III, would be spaced 300 ft (91 m) apart. |
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| Image Not Available | 509 Howard Street | 200 ft. | n/a | n/a |
509 Howard Street (also called Foundry Square III) is a proposed skyscraper set to rise in San Francisco's South of Market district. It will be one of four high-rise towers at an integrated site called Foundry Square. The tower will stand 500 feet (152 m) above street level. The skyscraper project is notable for exceeding the local 200 foot (61 m) height limit by a wide margin. The building, when built, will soar significantly taller than most buildings in the surrounding area. |
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| Image Not Available | 350 Mission Street | 300 ft. | 27 | n/a |
350 Mission Street is a proposed skyscraper located in San Francisco's South of Market district. The current design is 375 feet (114 m) above street level, with 27 stories. Upon completion, the building plans to attain LEED Gold status. |
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| Image Not Available | 181 Fremont Street | 350 ft. | 66 | n/a |
181 Fremont Street is a proposed skyscraper for the South of Market District of San Francisco, California. The building, designed by Heller Manus Architects, will be located adjacent to the Transbay Terminal and 199 Fremont Street projects. The slender mixed-use tower, developed by SKS Investments, is set to rise 213.5 m (700 ft) with 54 floors of offices and residential condominiums. The tower will contain 420,300 sq ft (39,050 m) of office space and 80 condominiums. |
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| Image Not Available | Sheraton Palace Hotel Residential Tower | 669 ft. | 60 | n/a |
The Palace Hotel Residential Tower is a proposed residential skyscraper at the corner of Jessie & Annie Streets in the South of Market district of San Francisco, California. If constructed as proposed, at 204 m (669 ft) and 60 storeys, the tower will also replace an annex of the Palace Hotel, will be the tallest residential building in the city, and the tallest South of Market. |
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Central Tower | 315 ft. | 21 | 1898 |
Central Tower is a 91 m (299 ft) 21 floor of 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. The building first housed the San Francisco Call and was named accordingly until the newspaper's merger in 1913. It was then called the Spreckles Building after the newspaper's owner John D. Spreckels, and his father Claus Spreckels. |
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San Francisco City Hall | 308 ft. | 4 | 1915 |
San Francisco City Hall re-opened in 1915, in its open space area in the city's Civic Center, is a Beaux-Arts monument to the City Beautiful movement that epitomized the high-minded American Renaissance of the 1880s to 1917. The structure's dome is the fifth largest in the world. The present building is actually a replacement for an earlier City Hall that was completely destroyed during the 1906 earthquake. |
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| Image Not Available | Commercial Union Assurance Building | 308 ft. | 16 | 1921 |
The Commercial Union Assurance Building is an 16-story office building located in San Francisco's financial district. The building, completed in 1921, stands 308 feet (94 m) tall, equaling the height of the San Francisco City Hall. Both the San Francisco City Hall and the Commercial Union Assurance Building were San Francisco's tallest building(s) until 1922. The much taller 555 California Street stands to the west of this Renaissance-revival styled building. |
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| Image Not Available | 225 Bush Street | 330 ft. | 25 | 1922 |
225 Bush Street is a 25 floor building, including 21 floors of office space, 1 floor of retail, 1 storage floor and 2 basement levels including the garage in San Francisco. It was the tallest building in the city from its completion in 1922 to 1925. It is currently owned by SEB Investment out of Germany. It contains approx 560,000 sq ft of rentable space. It is an historic building, being the head quarters for Standard Oil of California, now Chevron, for over half a century. |
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