City Hall Plaza (Manchester)

City Hall Plaza
Map
General information
TypeClass-A Office Space
Location900 Elm St (U.S. Route 3), Manchester, New Hampshire, United States
Coordinates42°59′26″N 71°27′49″W / 42.99056°N 71.46361°W / 42.99056; -71.46361
Completed1992
Height
Roof275 ft (84 m)
Technical details
Floor count20
Floor area209,896 sq ft (19,500.0 m2)
Design and construction
Architect(s)Lavallee Brensinger Architects
DeveloperCity of Manchester
References
[1]

City Hall Plaza, City Hall Plaza Tower or 900 Elm Street (U.S. Route 3), is a prominent 274-foot (84 m)[2] office tower in Manchester, New Hampshire. Since its completion in 1992, City Hall Plaza has been the tallest building in the city of Manchester, the state of New Hampshire, and northern New England (the states of New Hampshire, Maine, and Vermont). It is shorter than most of the tallest buildings in Boston, Hartford, New Haven, and Providence. The tower is used as office space for private businesses and for the Manchester city government.

City Hall Plaza as seen from Rock Rimmon

The building is recognizable as one of the main features of the Manchester skyline, along with the Brady Sullivan Plaza, SNHU Arena, the DoubleTree Hotel, the Center of New Hampshire, and the Citizens Bank building. The facade is brick and limestone, with a four-gabled green roof. The building was built in the early 1990s (construction was completed in 1992) by Nynex Properties at a cost of $22 million.[3] Ownership of the building changed hands several times until it was purchased by its present owner, Brady Sullivan Properties (also the owner of the nearby Brady Sullivan Plaza, New Hampshire's second-tallest building) in September 2014.[3]

References

  1. ^ "City Hall Plaza". Skyscraper Center. CTBUH. Retrieved 2017-06-12.
  2. ^ City Hall Plaza, Manchester - Emporis.com[usurped]
  3. ^ a b Cousineau, Michael (September 17, 2014). "Brady Sullivan corners Manchester skyline with its $19.74m purchase of City Hall Plaza". insurancenewsnet.com. InsuranceNewsNet. Retrieved October 30, 2019.

See also

Preceded by Tallest building in New Hampshire
1992—Present
84m
Succeeded by
None