Ernst & Young Tower (Cleveland)

The Ernst & Young Tower (EYTC) is a skyscraper in downtown Cleveland, Ohio that stands on the east bank of the Flats completed in 2013.[2] It is an example of post-modern glass curtain and steel studded construction. The building rises 23 stories to a height of 330 feet (100 m) and offers 480,000 square feet (45,000 m2) of office space.[3] The major tenant is the London-based accounting firm of Ernst & Young which moved from its offices in the iconic Huntington Bank Building at East 9th Street and Euclid Avenue (Cleveland) to its new namesake tower in 2013.[4] Ernst & Ernst was established in 1903 in Cleveland. Young & Co. was founded in Chicago in 1906. These two giant accounting firms merged in 1989 to create Ernst & Young, which still dominates the field.

Ernst & Young Tower
Former namesFlats East Bank Tower
General information
TypeOffice
Location950 Main Street Cleveland, Ohio 44113 United States
Construction started2010
Completed2013
Height
Roof100.5 m (330 ft)
Technical details
Floor count23
Floor area480,000 sq. ft.
Design and construction
ArchitectJLJI (Gensler)
Website
{{[1]}}

Tenants

The building is also the Cleveland office of these law firms: Cleveland-based Tucker Ellis, Zashin & Rich, and Columbus, Ohio-based Porter Wright Morris Arthur.[5] In addition to these major tenants the tower is home to the Cleveland-based metal chemical company OM Group, and is the Cleveland office of San Francisco-based financial corporation Wells Fargo[6] The EYTC is attached to a Starwood Aloft Hotel. The hotel has a 150 guest rooms and the W XYZ bar.[7]

List of tenants

(as of August 2018)

  • Ernst & Young (Top six floors)
  • Porter Wright Morris Arthur (Cleveland office HQ)
  • Tucker Ellis (Headquarters)
  • Zashin & Rich (Cleveland office HQ)
  • OM Group (World Headquarters)
  • Wells Fargo (regional Cleveland office)
  • McKinsey & Company[8] (Cleveland HQ)
  • Gilbane Building Co.[9] (Cleveland Construction HQ)
  • Winter | Trimacco Co., LPA (Cleveland office)

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.