100 Federal Street Explained

100 Federal Street
First National Bank Building
Location:100 Federal Street
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Coordinates:42.355°N -71.0562°W
Roof:591feet
Floor Count:37
Floor Area:1174988square feet
Start Date:1968
Completion Date:1971
Building Type:Office
Website:https://www.100federaloffice.com/

100 Federal Street, formerly known as the First National Bank Building and nicknamed the Pregnant Building,[1] [2] is a skyscraper located in the Financial District of Boston, Massachusetts. The skyscraper, rising 591feet and 37 floors,[3] is Boston's 10th-tallest building. The building was completed in 1971, and formerly served as the world headquarters of Bank of Boston/BankBoston. When Fleet Financial Group of Providence, Rhode Island merged with BankBoston to form FleetBoston Financial, it became the merged company's headquarters until Bank of America acquired it in 2004. The building is now the center of Bank of America's New England operations.

The building was purchased by Boston Properties, Inc. in March 2012 for $615 million (USD). As part of the sale, Bank of America will continue to occupy office space in the building with a long-term lease. The name of the building was also officially changed to its street address, 100 Federal Street.[2]

Design

The design of the First National Bank Building is unusual, as it has a bulge of several stories near its base. These protruding floors are the origin of the building's nickname, the "Pregnant Building."[1] The architect of the skyscraper, Campbell, Aldrich & Nulty, designed the building alongside LeMessurier with the bulge in order to give pedestrians a wider view of the street but at the same time provide the building with more floor space at higher levels. The skyscraper is considered to have an Art Moderne style.[1]

Tenants

See also

References

  1. Web site: Pregnant Building. 2012-08-20. CelebrateBoston.com.
  2. Web site: Boston Properties Acquires 'Pregnant Building' in Boston for $615M. Nelson, John. 2012-08-20. 2012-03-14. France Publications. REBusiness Online.
  3. Web site: First National Bank. 2012-08-20. SkyscraperPage.com.
  4. Web site: Contact Thomas H. Lee Partners . 2012-12-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121120053225/http://thl.com/contactThl/index.html . 2012-11-20 . dead .

External links