One Prudential Plaza

One Prudential Plaza

One Prudential Plaza with Two Prudential Plaza towering behind
Former names Prudential Building
General information
Status Complete
Location 130 E. Randolph St.
Chicago, Illinois
United States
Coordinates
Completed 1955
Height
Antenna spire 912 ft (278 m)
Roof 601 ft (183 m)
Technical details
Floor count 41

One Prudential Plaza (formerly known as the Prudential Building) is a 41-story structure in Chicago completed in 1955 as the headquarters for Prudential's Mid-America company. At the time, the skyscraper was significant as the first new downtown skyscraper built in Chicago in 21 years (the last such building was the Field Building, now headquarters of LaSalle Bank, completed in 1934). It was the last building ever connected to the Chicago Tunnel Company's tunnel network.

When the Prudential was finished it had the highest roof in Chicago with only the statue of Ceres on the Chicago Board of Trade higher. Its mast served as a broadcasting antenna for Chicago's WGN-TV.

The architect was Naess & Murphy, a precursor to C.F. Murphy & Associates and later Murphy/Jahn Architects.

One Prudential Plaza, along with its sister property, Two Prudential Plaza, was sold in May 2006 for $470 million to BentleyForbes, a Los Angeles-based real estate investment firm, run by C. Frederick Wehba and his family.

Contents

Tenants

See also

Position in Chicago's skyline

Sources

References

  1. ^ "Chicago." SkyTeam. Retrieved on January 31, 2009.

External links