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Wells Fargo Center (Los Angeles)

Wells Fargo Center is a twin tower skyscraper complex in Downtown Los Angeles on Bunker Hill, in Los Angeles, California. It comprises South and North towers, which are joined by a three-story glass atrium.

Wells Fargo Center

Crocker Center
Crocker Center North & South
Wells Fargo Center I & II
IBM Tower

Commercial offices

333 S. Grand Avenue
Los Angeles, California

1980-1981

1983

Tower I: 220.37 m (723.0 ft)
Tower II: 170.69 m (560.0 ft)

Tower I: 54
Tower II: 45

Tower I: 1,391,000 sq ft (129,200 m2)
Tower II: 1,140,000 sq ft (106,000 m2)

Tower I: 29
Tower II: 26

The project received the 1986–1987 and 2003–2004 Building Owners and Managers Association (BOMA) Office Building of the Year Award, and numerous others. A branch of the Wells Fargo History Museum is located at the center.[10]

(Floors 1,5,7,9,11,12)

Wells Fargo Bank

(Floors 31–32)

Payden & Rygel

(Floors 44–54)

Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher

(Floors 23–25, 27–30, 34)[11]

Oaktree Capital Management

Wells Fargo Tower (Tower I), at 220 m (720 ft) it is the tallest building of the complex. It has 54 floors and it is the 8th tallest building in Los Angeles, and the 92nd-tallest building in the United States. When it opened in 1983, it was known as the Crocker Tower, named after San Francisco-based Crocker National Bank. Crocker merged with Wells Fargo in 1986.


During initial construction it was featured in the 1983 film, Blue Thunder. The top upper floors were not completed at the time of filming, so Roy Scheider's character shot a helicopter chasing him and the pilot ejects and drifts by the Crocker Center under construction and lands in the street. It was actually the base jumper Carl Boenish (1941–1984), off the Crocker Tower that performed the jump without permission on November 9, 1981, and it was front page news in the Los Angeles Times with photography from several angles.

(Floors 1–9)

Latham & Watkins

(Floors 28-29)

Reed Smith

South Tower (Tower II) is 171 m (561 ft), and was completed in 1983 with 45 floors. It is the 17th tallest building in the city.

List of tallest buildings in Los Angeles

List of tallest buildings in the United States

Cameron, Robert (1990). Above Los Angeles. San Francisco: Cameron & Company.  0-918684-48-X.

ISBN