Safeco Plaza (Seattle)


Safeco Plaza, previously 1001 Fourth Avenue Plaza and the Seattle-First National Bank Building, is a 50-story, skyscraper in Downtown Seattle, Washington, United States.
The building is occasionally referred to by locals as "The Box the Space Needle Came In", in reference to the city landmark nearby. Safeco Plaza was completed in 1969 by the Howard S. Wright Construction Company for Seattle First National Bank. It dwarfed Smith Tower, which had been the tallest building in the Downtown area since 1914, and edged out the Space Needle in Seattle Center by. It remained the tallest structure in the city for sixteen years, until the Columbia Center was completed in 1985.

Design and amenities

The bronze-colored aluminum and glass structure was the first modern class-A office building in Seattle and is the first skyscraper in the world to feature a Vierendeel space frame. The structure includes a two-story lobby as well as a five-story subterranean garage. Other amenities include of ground-floor retail featuring a fitness center, a bank, some restaurants, a medical center, and a post office. The property also houses a sculpture titled by Henry Moore which is owned by the Seattle Art Museum.

History

Originally the headquarters of Seafirst Bank, it was sold fourteen years later in 1983. Safeco Insurance Company of America leased of the building on May 23, 2006, to be its headquarters, moving from its former building in the University District and Redmond, and renamed it Safeco Plaza. The company announced in 2015 that it would consolidate its offices into the tower, increasing its lease from 17 to 26 floors.
On July 6, 2016, it was reported that German firm GLL Real Estate Partners GmbH agreed to buy the building for $387 million. The tower had previously been sold in 2005 to CalPERS and Hines for $163 million; the sale in 1983 was for $123 million.

Major tenants