225 Liberty Street | |
Location: | West Street between Liberty Street and Vesey Streets New York, NY 10007, United States |
Mapframe-Wikidata: | yes |
Coordinates: | 40.7125°N -74.0153°W |
Start Date: | 1985 |
Completion Date: | 1987 |
Roof: | 645feet |
Floor Count: | 44 |
Floor Area: | 2667222square feet[1] |
Cost: | $800 million (USD) |
Architect: | Haines Lundberg Waehler, Cesar Pelli & Associates |
Structural Engineer: | Thornton-Tomasetti Engineers |
Owner: | Brookfield Properties |
225 Liberty Street, formerly known as Two World Financial Center, is one of four towers that comprise the Brookfield Place complex in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan in New York City. Rising 44 floors and 645feet, it is situated between the Hudson River and the World Trade Center. Though the building has a nominal address on Liberty Street, its most prominent facade is on West Street between Liberty and Vesey Streets. The building opened in 1987 as part of the World Financial Center and was designed by Haines Lundberg Waehler and Cesar Pelli & Associates.
The building is home to Dotdash Meredith, BNY Mellon, Hudson's Bay Company, Commerzbank, Fiserv, Oppenheimer Funds, Inc., State Street Corporation, McElroy, Deutsch, Virtusa, Mulvaney & Carpenter, LLP, Thacher Proffitt & Wood, LLP, and several divisions of France Telecom, among other companies.[2] It is an example of postmodern architecture, as designed by Cesar Pelli & Associates, and contains over 2491000square feet of rentable office area. It connects to the rest of the World Financial Center complex through a courtyard leading to the Winter Garden, a dramatic glass-and-steel public space with a 120-foot vaulted ceiling under which there is an assortment of trees and plants, including sixteen 12-meter palm trees from the Mojave Desert.[3]
The building was renamed from Two World Financial Center when the rest of the complex was renamed Brookfield Place in 2014.[4]
225 Liberty Street and its neighbors had been severely damaged by the falling debris when the World Trade Center towers collapsed due to the September 11 attacks. The building had to be closed for repairs until May 2002 as a result of damage sustained in the terrorist attacks.[5]