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Eaton_Center_(Cleveland) Latitude and Longitude:

41°30′13″N 81°41′12″W / 41.503562°N 81.686764°W / 41.503562; -81.686764
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eaton Center
Eaton Center is located in Ohio
Eaton Center
Eaton Center
Alternative namesSuperior Square
General information
StatusCompleted
Type Skyscraper
Architectural style Modernism
Classification Office
Location Nine-Twelve District
Address1111 Superior Avenue
Eaton Square
Town or city Cleveland, Ohio
CountryUnited States
Coordinates 41°30′13″N 81°41′12″W / 41.503562°N 81.686764°W / 41.503562; -81.686764
Current tenants Eaton Corporation
Construction started1981 (1981)
Completed1983 (1983)
Renovated1995 (1995)
2014 (2014)
ClientCatholic Diocese of Cleveland
OwnerAmerican Landmark Properties
Height
Architectural356 feet (109 m)
Tip356 feet (109 m)
Roof356 feet (109 m)
Technical details
Floor count28
Lifts/elevators16
Grounds615,000 square feet (57,100 m2)
Design and construction
Architecture firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP
DeveloperOliver Tyrone Corporation
Structural engineerSkidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP
Main contractorTurner Construction
Other information
ParkingAdjacent parking garage

The Eaton Center is a skyscraper in downtown Cleveland, Ohio. The building has 28 stories and rises to a height of 356 feet (109 m). [1] The structure was one of the structures that expanded Cleveland's central business district eastward in the early-1980s building boom in the city.

History

Eaton Center sits on the former site of a local college. St. John's College established in 1928 by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cleveland and had begun to experience a downturn in enrollment. The college built a dormitory in 1964 to boost enrollment, but when numbers still didn't increase, the dormitory became offices for the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland. St. John's College ultimately closed in 1975, and the facilities merged with the adjacent St. John's Cathedral.

After reading and hearing that Cleveland's corporate community needed office space, Bishop James Hickey offered the St. John's College land for office space development. In October 1980 as papers were signed, Pope John Paul II appointed Bishop James Hickey as Archbishop of Washington, D.C., so Hickey's successor Bishop Anthony Pilla continued with the deal. St. John's College would be demolished, but the land would be owned by the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland. The proceeds of the land lease would be used by the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland for seminaries and educational ministries.

Developer Oliver Tyrone Corporation studied St. Peter's Evangelical Lutheran Church's similar land deal in New York City with Citigroup when its famed Citigroup Center tower was built in 1977.

Construction

Demolition of the St. John's College began in January 1981, due to the installation of Bishop Anthony Pilla. There was mass of deconsecration of the St. John's College building. After the mass, the demolition would begin. By February 1981, plans were shown for the Superior Square Center, the construction name for the Eaton Center while it was being built. Turner Construction was announced as the general contractor of the Superior Square building.

In July 1981, concrete forms and cranes were present at the site. Superior Square became Cleveland's second tallest building built with concrete, with the first tallest building being the National City Center 1978-80. Superior Square became Cleveland's tallest glass-skinned building. Superior Square is octagonal in shape. One section is 25 stories and another rises 28 stories.

In 1983, Superior Square opened for business, but in July 1983, Cleveland-based Eaton Corporation moved from Erieview Tower to Superior Square. The Superior Square Tower was renamed Eaton Center soon after. Eaton relocated to its new 580,000-square-foot facility, also named Eaton Center, in Beachwood, Ohio in early 2013. The reincorporation in Ireland as part of the Cooper merger involved establishing a registered head office in Dublin, Ireland, but operational headquarters remain in Ohio.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Tallest Buildings In Cleveland". WorldAtlas. 2017-04-25. Retrieved 2023-10-12.

External links