- Mercantile National Bank Building
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Mercantile National Bank Building
Mercantile National Bank Building shortly before opening. The distinctive clock tower and spire were added at a later date.General information Status Complete Type Residential, retail Location 1800 Main Street, Dallas, Texas, United States Coordinates 32°46′51″N 96°47′49″W / 32.780843°N 96.796808°WCoordinates: 32°46′51″N 96°47′49″W / 32.780843°N 96.796808°W Opening 1942 Height Antenna spire 522.9 ft (159.4 m) Roof 430.1 ft (131.1 m) Technical details Floor count 31 Design and construction Management Forest City Enterprises Architect Walter W. Ahlschlager, Donald Nelson The Mercantile National Bank Building (known colloquially as The Merc) is the former home of the Mercantile National Bank, later MCorp Bank, located at 1700 Main Street in downtown Dallas, Texas (USA). It is a contributing structure in the Main Street District. The design of the skyscraper features Moderne styling from the Art Deco era and was designed by Walter W. Ahlschlager. The building has a series of setbacks that is crowned by an ornamental four-sided clock along with a decorative weather spire. The Merc was the main element of a four-building complex that eventually spanned a full city block.
Contents
History
The site along Ervay Street between Main and Commerce previously housed the landmark Post Office Building (constructed in 1889) which featured a prominent clock tower and gingerbread architecture. After abandonment, it was the subject of rumors, plans, and schemes, but by 1936, it had been declared a liability by local business leaders and was razed.[1]
The Mercantile National Bank Building was completed in 1942 and was the only major skyscraper constructed during World War II. The U.S. government had called for a halt of private construction to fuel supply materials for the war effort. However, most of the tower's steel had been prefabricated and was given a special waiver from the government. The bank lobby Art Deco wood murals were the largest in the world at the time.[2] In addition to the bank and other offices, the federal government took 10 floors to hold offices for various war agencies. Mercantile Bank owner and founder Robert L. Thornton constructed his own penthouse level in the upper floors.
In 1947, an illuminated tower was constructed, which KERA used for radio broadcasts. In 1958, this tower was replaced by the current illumination tower and clock. In the 1960s, the original stone façade at the base of the building was covered by a modernist curtain wall facade.[3]
At its completion, the Merc was the tallest building west of the Mississippi River and it was the tallest building in Dallas until 1954, when Republic Bank Tower I surpassed it. The building has 31 stories, and when the 115 feet (35 m) foot ornamental clock tower is included, is 545 feet (166 m) feet tall; making it the 19th-tallest building in Dallas. It also contains 359,348 square feet (33,385 m2) of floor space.
Expansion
The Merc was the main element of a four building complex that eventually spanned a full city block. The Mercantile Securities Building was constructed immediately east of the main tower in 1949 and was 14 stories tall, including 213,270 square feet (19,813 m2) of space. The Mercantile Dallas Building was completed in 1954. It was 360 feet (110 m) and 22 stories tall with 347,037 square feet (32,241 m2) inside. It was built behind the southern half of the Securities building and ran along Commerce Street to St Paul Street. The final addition to the block was the Securities Annex in 1972. It initially was five stories, and designed for vertical expansion at a later date. Its 116,322 square feet (10,807 m2) of space was in the northeast corner of the block.
The bank also built and purchased other structures near the main tower. The Mercantile Continental Building was built in 1948 across Commerce Street to serve the growing bank's parking and office space needs. The bank later built the Jackson Street Garage, which contained the bank's large motor bank, behind the Continental Building. An underground tunnel was built to connect the garage and Continental Building to the main complex via the Dallas Building.
In 1976, the bank bought the neighboring Vaughn Tower across Commerce Street. Prather Street divides the Continental and Vaughn Tower. The bank renamed the building the Mercantile Commerce Building.
The final building to be built by MCorp Bank was Momentum Place, completed in 1987 across Main Street. MCorp occupied 600,000 square feet (60,000 m2) of the 1,500,000 square feet (100,000 m2) building. The building connected the original complex to the Dallas Pedestrian Network to the north with a new underground walkway to the Securities Annex.
The economic downturn of the late 1980s along with the savings and loan crisis would signal the end of MCorp Bank. It was dissolved by Bank One in the summer of 1989 after numerous quarters of earnings losses. The complex was still used occasionally until the building became vacant on February 5, 1993.
Adaptive Reuse
In 1985, Cadillac Fairview, developer of Toronto's Eaton Centre, proposed renovating the complex into a 140,000-square-foot (13,000 m2) retail center, connecting adjacent anchors Neiman Marcus and Joske's. The plan included demolition of the various additions and preservation of the main tower, but the project was later abandoned.[4]
With the increased demand in urban living downtown, there was interest in converting the structure to residential uses. However, the complex was awash with asbestos, which would need to be removed before any remodeling could begin. The complex was also poorly configured for residential, as it had a lot of floor space without windows, requiring demolition of some buildings. The two combinations made for an expensive reconversion.
Three different proposals fell through before Cleveland-based Forest City Enterprises was able to make the financial numbers work. FCE announced a deal with the City of Dallas in June 2005 to receive US$60.5 million dollars from the city to redo the building. The main tower was converted to 225 apartments with ground floor retail. The three additions, not considered historically significant, were demolished. The modernist curtain wall on the base was removed, revealing its original exterior and balconies were added to the east façade, although most of the interior design elements were lost during years of renovation.
On the site of the Securities Annex is a new fifteen-story apartment building, the Element, with parking constructed beneath. A pool and plaza were added for the residents of Mercantile Place, which also includes the historic Wilson Building in an adjacent block. The grand opening was held in April 2009.
Retail tenants have been slow to materialize due to economic conditions at the time of opening. Jean Michel’s, an upscale French restaurant, was scheduled to open in the base of the Element building, overlooking Main Street Garden Park, which lies across St. Paul Street.[5] These plans, however, fell through.[6]
In June 2010, the yogurt chain Yogen Früz opened a location in the building. They share the space with the Mercantile Coffee House. http://mchdallas.com that brought to the downtown area the Chicago based Intelligentsia coffee[7]
Forest City Enterprises will receive US$5 million from the city to convert the neighboring Continental Building into 150 additional residential units. Also, in the deal between the City of Dallas and Forest City, FCE was to convert another complex of historic buildings that Atmos Energy donated to the City for residential use. This project has since been transferred to Hamilton Properties.
Tower clock
The clock tower and 115-foot (35 m)-tall ornamental spire is a local landmark and reference point in downtown Dallas. There are (4) 20 ft (9.4meter) diameter tower clocks. New tower clock movements and hands were manufactured in 2007 by Electric Time Company. The Clock hands are lighted with LEDs which replaced the original neon. Above the clock a series of LED (originally neon) lights display weather information. White light rings flash upward when temperatures will rise and downward when they fall. A star-shaped light at the spire's top glows green when weather forecast is fair and red when it's inclement.[8]
Artwork
During the 1950s building expansions, substantial mosaics by artist Millard Sheets were fabricated in Venice and installed throughout the lobbies, stairways, and executive offices. During the demolition and renovation process, historical preservationists called for the removal of dozens of mosaics, stained glass pieces, and enamel artwork.[9] Dallas investor and developer Tim Headington stepped up with the estimated $270,000 needed to preserve and store the artwork. A local company, Studio van Enter, cut the mosaics free of the travertine and removed the artwork in 2006.[10] Smaller decorative elements have been redisplayed in public areas of the renovated building while the larger pieces remain in storage. A similar mosaic exists on the exterior of the neighboring Mercantile Continental Building.
Pop culture
- Local radio host Mike Rhyner from Sportsradio 1310 The Ticket opens the Hardline show with a time check "according to the Tower of the Friendly Mercan-teel."
Zoned schools
The Mercantile National Bank Building is within the Dallas Independent School District.
Residents are zoned to City Park Elementary School,[11] Dade Middle School,[12] and Madison High School.[13]
See also
- List of buildings and structures in Dallas, Texas
References
- ^ Rootsweb.ancestry.com
- ^ DallasLibrary.org
- ^ DallasLibrary.org
- ^ Steve Brown. (1985, October 18). Cadillac Fairview Designing Project. The Dallas Morning News Home Final ed., 1d. Retrieved December, 15 2009 from NewsBank on-line database (America's Newspapers)
- ^ DMagazine.com
- ^ DallasNews.com
- ^ <http://blogs.dallasobserver.com/cityofate/2010/07/mercantile_coffee_house_brings.php]
- ^ DallasNews.com
- ^ WFAA.com
- ^ DavidKirkatrick.wordpress.com Mercantile.aspx
- ^ "Fall 2009 City Park Elementary Attendance Zone Grades PK-5." Dallas Independent School District. Retrieved on August 25, 2009.
- ^ "Fall 2009 Billy E. Dade Middle Attendance Zone Grades 6-8." Dallas Independent School District. Retrieved on August 25, 2009.
- ^ "Fall 2009 James Madison High School Attendance Zone, Grades 9 through 12, and Grades 11-12 to Madison from Spruce." Dallas Independent School District. Retrieved on August 25, 2009.
External links
- Mercantile Place Apartments
- [1]
- Dallasarchitecture.info Mercantile Complex
- Forest City Enterprises
- Pre-renovation interior/exterior views, The Nostalgic Glass
- Emporis
- Dallas Public Library
- Artwork conservation process, Conservation Arts
Preceded by
Magnolia Hotel (Dallas, Texas)Tallest Building in Dallas
1942—1954
166 mSucceeded by
Republic Center Tower IPreceded by
JPMorgan Chase Building (Houston 1929)Tallest building in Texas
1942—1954
166 mSucceeded by
Republic Center Tower ITimeline of the tallest buildings west of the Mississippi Central Tower (91 m) (1898) · Key Bank Center (71 m) (1911) · Smith Tower (141 m) (1914) · Kansas City Power and Light Building (145.1 m) (1931) · Mercantile National Bank Building (166 m) (1942) · Republic Center (183 m) (1954) · Sheraton Dallas Hotel (183 m) (1959) · ExxonMobil Building (185 m) (1963) · Elm Place (191 m) (1965) · 555 California Street (237 m) (1969) · Transamerica Pyramid (260 m) (1972) · Aon Center (262 m) (1973) · JPMorgan Chase Tower (305 m) (1982) · U.S. Bank Tower (310 m) (1990)
Skyscrapers in Dallas Current Bank of America Plaza · Renaissance Tower · Comerica Bank Tower · Chase Tower · Fountain Place · Trammell Crow Center · 1700 Pacific Avenue · Thanksgiving Tower · Energy Plaza · Elm Place · Gables Republic Tower · Republic Center Tower II · Whitacre Tower · Lincoln Plaza · Tower at Cityplace · Reunion Tower · Sheraton Dallas Hotel · Mercantile National Bank Building · Bryan Tower · Magnolia Hotel · Harwood Center · KPMG Centre · 2100 Ross Avenue · Renaissance Hotel · Patriot Tower · Sheraton Dallas Hotel North Tower · One Main Place · W Dallas Victory Hotel & Residences · 1600 Pacific Tower · Omni Dallas Hotel · The Mondrian · Adolphus Hotel · Davis Building · Kirby Building · Tower Petroleum Building · Corrigan Tower · Praetorian Building · Plaza of the Americas
Under construction See also Categories:- Buildings and structures completed in 1942
- Art Deco architecture in Texas
- Bank company headquarters in the United States
- Clock towers in the United States
- Forest City Enterprises
- Skyscrapers in Dallas, Texas
- Skyscrapers between 150 and 199 meters
- Buildings and structures in Dallas, Texas
- Residential buildings in Dallas, Texas
- Apartment buildings in Cincinnati, Ohio
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