101 Second Street

  • Client Myers Development Company
  • Expertise Commercial, Graphics + Brand
  • Region North America
  • Location San Francisco, California, United States

Project Facts
  • Completion Year 1999
  • Design Finish Year 1998
  • Size Site Area: 497,000 Building Height: 353.50 feet Number of Stories: 26 Building Gross Area: 440,000 square feet
  • Sustainability Certifications LEED O+M Gold, O+M, Gold
  • Collaborators
    Michael Painter & Associates Middlebrook & Louie Martin Ron Associates Ajmani & Pamidi Fisher Marantz Stone Flack + Kurtz, Inc. Edgett Williams Consulting Group Dinwiddie Construction Co.
Project Facts
  • Completion Year 1999
  • Design Finish Year 1998
  • Size Site Area: 497,000 Building Height: 353.50 feet Number of Stories: 26 Building Gross Area: 440,000 square feet
  • Sustainability Certifications LEED O+M Gold, O+M, Gold
  • Collaborators
    Michael Painter & Associates Middlebrook & Louie Martin Ron Associates Ajmani & Pamidi Fisher Marantz Stone Flack + Kurtz, Inc. Edgett Williams Consulting Group Dinwiddie Construction Co.

This 26-story office tower in San Francisco’s South of Market district responds to the modest scale and local characteristics of its neighborhood. The building achieves a slender profile by breaking the overall mass into a series of vertical volumes, each with discrete functional and structural roles.

Vertical circulation and building services are housed in the limestone-clad central shaft, which has punched windows and a glass veil at the top enclosing the mechanical equipment. This core provides lateral seismic and wind bracing for the adjacent glass and steel volumes, which contain the office space; their minimal frames maximize glazed areas to give tenants ample city views.

At ground level, a glass art pavilion serves as the building entry, as well as a naturally lit atrium. The space blurs the boundaries between public and private, bringing them together in a protected, four-season urban room. At night, the atrium and the crown are illuminated, calling attention to the building’s presence on both the street and skyline.

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