JPMorgan Chase Tower, Skyscraper in downtown Houston, Texas, United States.
This office building rises to a height of three hundred five meters with seventy-five floors above ground, featuring a facade of polished granite, stainless steel, and dark-tinted glass with a distinctive forty-five-degree angled corner creating a five-sided profile.
Originally named the Texas Commerce Tower when completed in nineteen eighty-two, the building became the tallest structure west of the Mississippi River at that time and underwent several name changes reflecting different corporate tenants before adopting its current designation in two thousand.
The ground-level plaza displays a large sculpture by Joan Miró titled Personage and Birds, installed during renovations between two thousand twenty and two thousand twenty-one, adding public art to the downtown area and serving as a gathering space for residents and workers.
The building houses commercial offices and connects directly to Houston's underground pedestrian tunnel system, providing climate-controlled access to surrounding buildings, with fifty-two elevators serving the tower's floors and four basement levels available for parking and mechanical systems.
The distinctive architectural feature of a corner sheared at a forty-five-degree angle creates a unique pentagonal footprint that distinguishes this tower from typical rectangular skyscrapers and provides occupants with wide westward views across the city.
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