My sister Vicki and I are
going to visit the Columbia
Tower to check out the
view from there. I need to do it within
the next couple of weeks before heading to California
for a memorial service, going to a business meeting with my husband in St Louis and then having
knee replacement surgery.
Because we are going to
check out the view from this building, I went online to find out what I could
about the building.
Columbia Tower as seen from Smith Tower |
Looking up at Columbia Tower from the ground |
The base of the building
is clad in Rosa Purino Carnelian granite. The building's structure is composed
of three geometric concave facades with two setbacks, causing the building to
appear like three towers standing side by side.
There is an observation deck on the 73rd floor which offers views of Seattle and environs. The
top two floors of the building (75th and 76th) are occupied by the private
Columbia Tower Club, which houses a restaurant, bar, library, and meeting rooms.
An underground concourse connects the building to the nearby Seattle Municipal
Tower and Bank of America
Fifth Avenue Plaza.
Looking north from Columbia Tower |
The tower, originally proposed as Columbia Center ,
opened under the name Columbia
Seafirst Center
after its largest tenant and financier, Seafirst Bank, and then changed to the Bank
of America Tower, when Seafirst, which had been owned by Bank of America since
1983, was fully integrated into Bank of America. That name gave it the nickname
"BOAT" (Bank of America Tower). In
November 2005, the building's name was changed back to Columbia Center
after the bank reduced its presence in the building. Bank of America still
maintains office space within the building, including a bank branch.
On June 16, 2004, the 9/11 Commission reported that the original plan for the September 11, 2001, attacks called for the hijacking of ten planes, to be crashed into targets including the "tallest buildings in