San Jacinto Center
Four Seasons Hotel: 1987
Four Seasons Residences: 2010
21
10
WZMH Architects
Michael Graves (Four Seasons Residences)
San Jacinto Center is a three-building real estate development in Downtown Austin, Texas. The complex, which overlooks Lady Bird Lake, contains a 21-story office tower, a 10-story Four Seasons Hotel, and the 32-story Four Seasons Residences, a condo skyscraper. The postmodern office tower and hotel are clad in Texas creme limestone and Llano rose granite.
In addition to the towers, the complex is home to numerous restaurants and street-level retail stores. The office tower is home to the headquarters of The Zebra and The Chive.[1]
History
The San Jacinto Center's office tower and hotel component opened on January 14, 1987, with a ribbon cutting ceremony heralded by Austin mayor Frank C. Cooksey and Four Seasons Hotels founder Isadore Sharp.[2] There was originally supposed to be twin office towers; the eastern office building was canceled during the economic downturn of the early 1990s.[3] In 1996, a Houston-based firm planned to buy the parcel of the unbuilt tower. Two San Jacinto Center was to be built to the exact specifications of the existing office tower as originally planned, however, plans fell through and the tower was never built. In 2000, a residential tower was planned for the site of the unbuilt twin tower, but the plans were eventually shelved.[4]
In 2007, construction commenced on the Four Seasons Residences, the 166-unit condominium component of the complex, the second such proposal for a residential tower at the site. Designed by architect Michael Graves, the postmodern tower opened in 2010 and features a brick and glass facade with a rooftop pool and amenity deck.[4]
Gallery
- San Jacinto Center viewed from the Congress Avenue Bridge
- The Four Seasons Hotel
- Four Seasons Hotel and One San Jacinto Center from Lady Bird Lake
- The Four Seasons Residences
References
- ^ "Take a Tour of theCHIVE's Awesome Austin Headquarters". Officelovin'. June 19, 2015. Retrieved August 5, 2018.
- ^ Tyson, Kim (January 15, 1987). "Southland checks in to Austin". Austin American-Statesman. Retrieved August 5, 2018.
- ^ Rambin, James (May 8, 2018). "Looking Back at the Ads of Downtown Austin's 1980s Tower Boom". Austin TOWERS. Retrieved August 5, 2018.
- ^ a b Novak, Shonda (March 31, 2007). "Hotel's condos set to rise". Austin American-Statesman. Retrieved August 5, 2018.
External links
- San Jacinto Center - Cousins Properties
- v
- t
- e
- Bremond Block Historic District
- Congress Avenue Historic District
- Rainey Street Historic District
- Red River Cultural District
- Sixth Street
- Austin Central Fire Station 1
- Austin City Hall
- Austin Convention Center
- O. Henry Hall
- Texas Governor's Mansion
- Texas State Capitol
- Travis County Courthouse
- United States Courthouse (1936)
- United States Courthouse (2012)
- William P. Hobby, Jr. State Office Building
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Colleges and universities |
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and complexes
- 360 Condominiums
- The Ashton
- Austin Centre
- The Austonian
- Bank of America Center
- Block 21
- Block 185
- Fairmont Austin
- Fifth & West
- Frost Bank Tower
- Hilton Austin Hotel
- Indeed Tower
- The Independent
- Norwood Tower
- The Northshore
- One American Center
- One Eleven Congress
- San Jacinto Center
- Scarbrough Building
- Sixth and Guadalupe
- Spring
- Westgate Tower
- Buford Tower
- Cathedral of Saint Mary
- The Contemporary Austin
- Driskill Hotel
- Gethsemane Lutheran Church
- Lundberg Bakery
- Paramount Theatre
- Liberty Lunch (closed)
- William Sidney Porter House
- Ann W. Richards Congress Avenue Bridge
- Seaholm Power Plant
- Downtown