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125 West 55th Street, also known as Avenue of the Americas Plaza, is a 23-story, office building located on 55th Street between the Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue) and Seventh Avenue in Midtown Manhattan, New York City. The building also has an entrance at 120 West 56th Street,〔"(125 West 55 Street Fact Sheet )." Macklowe Properties. February 26, 2007. Retrieved on February 24, 2011.〕 across the street from the Le Parker Meridien Hotel.〔 The facility, with of rentable office space,〔 was developed by The Macklowe Organization.〔"(Air France leases 29,500 sf at Avenue of the Americas Plaza )." ''Real Estate Weekly''. July 10, 1991. Retrieved on February 24, 2011.〕 The building, designed by Edward Larrabee Barnes,〔"(125 West 55th Street )." Boston Properties. Retrieved on February 25, 2011.〕 has floorplates.〔Deutsch, Claudia H. "Commercial Property: Avenue of the Americas; From Corporate Corridor to Boulevard of Barristers." ''The New York Times''. April 4, 1993. (1 ). Retrieved on February 24, 2011.〕 The second floor of the building houses Air France's United States executive offices.〔"(Air France in the United States )." Air France. June 11, 2007. 15 (15/16). Retrieved on February 13, 2010. "The Air France “United States” regional management is located in New York: 125 West 55th Street, New York, NY 10019"〕〔"(Week of Romance Facebook Contest )." Air France. Retrieved on March 2, 2011. "Sponsor: Air France USA Executive Office, 125 West 55th Street, 2nd Floor, New York, NY 10019."〕 Macquarie Bank houses its New York representative office in the building. Boston Properties currently owns and manages the building.〔"(Contact directory United States )." Macquarie Bank. Retrieved on February 24, 2011. "125 West 55th Street New York, NY 10019."〕 The building also houses offices of Katz Media, a division of Clear Channel Communications.〔〔"(Boston Properties scores 200,000 sf lease renewal at 125 West 55th Street )." ''The Real Deal''. Retrieved on February 25, 2011.〕 ==History== The building had a cost of $60 million in 1988 dollars. The Saint Thomas Choir School previously occupied the site, before the construction of the skyscraper.〔Waite, Thomas L. "(POSTING: Choir School Site; Offices by Macklowe )." ''The New York Times''. March 13, 1988. Retrieved on February 23, 2011.〕 The choir school moved into a new building as the previous one was replaced. Fisher Brothers constructed the building.〔Foderaro, Lisa. "A Trade-Up for St. Thomas Choir School." ''The New York Times''. August 23, 1987. (1 ). Retrieved on February 24, 2011.〕 Construction on 125 West 55th Street began in 1988.〔 In order to capitalize on a City of New York zoning bonus, the developers planned to have the building's foundation installed by May 13, 1988; buildings in the area installed before a deadline in the northern hemisphere spring of 1988 received a 20% increase in size in order to spur development of western Midtown Manhattan.〔 The developers planned to have tenants begin occupying the building in May 1989.〔 The building was completed in 1990.〔 In 1991 Air France leased of space in the building, including of office space on the building's second floor and of retail space on the first floor.〔 Air France, which had its previous ticket office at 666 Fifth Avenue and its previous reservation department at 888 Seventh Avenue, wanted a larger ticket office facility and overhauled reservation department offices, so it moved both departments into 125 West 55th Street.〔Dunlap, David W. "Commercial Property: 125 West 55th Street; The Anatomy of a Macklowe Tower Leasing Coup." ''The New York Times''. November 24, 1991. (2 ). Retrieved on February 25, 2011.〕 Air France opted to move into 125 West 55th Street instead of spending $2.5 million to upgrade the telecommunications systems and remove asbestos at 888 7th Avenue; 125 West 55th Street came with the latest fiber optics systems and did not have any asbestos. Harry Macklowe, the owner of the building, paid for Air France's new fiber optics system. Frederick A. Smith, a Cushman & Wakefield broker who represented Air France, said that the new fiber optics and reservations systems "made the deal."〔Deutsch, Claudia H. "(Commercial Property: Upgraded Services; Using Fiber Optics to Attract -- or Keep -- Tenants )." ''The New York Times''. October 31, 1993. Retrieved on March 2, 2011.〕 Air France has since closed the street-level retail ticket office. Beginning in 1992,〔Dunlap, David W. "Commercial Property: 125 West 55th Street; The Anatomy of a Macklowe Tower Leasing Coup." ''The New York Times''. November 24, 1991. (1 ). Retrieved on February 25, 2011.〕 the airline planned to move its Northeast United States headquarters, its U.S. reservation center, and its New York City ticket office to the building. Around that time Katz Communications signed a lease for of space in 125 West 55th Street, as of July 10, 1991, it was the largest lease in Manhattan in the year 1991.〔 As of November 24 of that year, the Katz lease was the fourth largest lease in New York City in 1991.〔 During that year the National Bank of Canada and Credietbank were tenants in the building.〔 In the summer of 1992, LeBoeuf, Lamb, Leiby & MacRae moved 1,200 employees into the building. The firm had consolidated from several previous locations, and occupied eight floors and the concourse level.〔 The 20-year lease was for of space. The LeBouef deal, signed in 1991, was that year's second largest lease in New York City as of November 24, 1991.〔 Boston Properties acquired the building in 2008.〔 The company spent $444 million to buy the building. In 2010 Katz Media Group renewed its lease until 2027; its renewal gave the company over one third of the building to Katz. Katz, which already occupied floors three through seven, began to occupy floors 11 and 12 and some basement space. Since the lease renewal, Katz has about of space in the building.〔 In 2010 MetLife refinanced a portion of the debt of the building. As of 2011 the building was worth $345 million.〔Weil, Dan. "(Awash with insurance cash )." ''The Real Deal''. February 1, 2011. Retrieved on February 24, 2011.〕 In 2011 a former deputy of Harry Macklowe, former head of the Macklowe Group, filed a lawsuit against Macklowe, saying that Macklowe did not share the proceeds of the sale of 125 West 55th Street.〔Jones, David. "(Ex-Macklowe exec alleges proceeds withheld from West 55th Street building sale )." ''The Real Deal''. February 24, 2011. Retrieved on February 24, 2011.〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「125 West 55th Street」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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