Mid-Continent Tower

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Mid-Continent Tower

Mid-Continent Tower (right) in 2005
General information
Type Office
Location 401 South Boston Ave., Tulsa, Oklahoma
Coordinates 36°09′09″N 95°59′20″W / 36.152603°N 95.989006°W / 36.152603; -95.989006Coordinates: 36°09′09″N 95°59′20″W / 36.152603°N 95.989006°W / 36.152603; -95.989006
Completed 1984
Height 513 ft (156 m)
Technical details
Floor count 36
Cosden Building
Built 1918
Architectural style Sullivanesque, Neo-Gothic[1]
NRHP Reference # 79002029[2]
Added to NRHP February 1, 1979

The Mid-Continent Tower is a 36-story skyscraper located at 401 South Boston Avenue in downtown Tulsa, Oklahoma. At 156 meters (513 ft) in height, it is the fourth-tallest building in Tulsa and in Oklahoma. Faced with bright white terra cotta and crowned with a distinctive copper roof, it is one of the city's most recognizable buildings.

History

Cosden Building

The Mid-Continent Tower started out as the 16-story Cosden Building, built for oil baron Joshua Cosden in 1918. The Cosden Building was built on the site of the first Tulsa schoolhouse, which was established as a mission in 1885 on Creek Indian land.[1] The Cosden Building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.[2]

Conversion to Mid-Continent Tower

The building was restored in 1980, and in 1984 a new 20-story tower was cantilevered over it, bringing the total number of floors to 36. The tower appears to rest on the Cosden Building, but it is actually supported by an addition built onto the east side of the older structure. The entire project was designed to resemble the style of the Cosden Building as closely as possible, giving the impression of a unified whole even though the two sections of the building were constructed 66 years apart.

The building was the home of energy company Reading & Bates until it moved to Houston in 1989. The company's departure led the building into foreclosure, receivership, and an extended legal dispute that was resolved only in 2011, when the building was sold to Tulsa real estate investors John and Chris Bumgarner.[3][4]

Although it is sometimes mentioned in connection with Tulsa's extensive inventory of Art Deco buildings, the Mid-Continent Tower is actually built in a modern version of the Gothic style that was popular before the advent of Art Deco.[5]

Images
Mid-Continent Tower
The Mid-Continent Tower in 2006 

References

External links

Preceded by
Petroleum Building
Tallest Building in Tulsa
19181925
56m
Succeeded by
Mayo Hotel
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