St. Louis's biggest skyscraper will be up for auction next month, with a starting bid of $7 million asked to get things rolling.
The building once was the AT&T tower, and is 44 stories tall, covers an entire city block, and is now completely empty. It's the largest tower in the city, and is located in the downtown area, at 909 Chestnut Street. The building is bounded by Pine, Chestnut, North 9th and North 10th Streets. The building comprises 1.4 million square feet, and although its bondholders attempted to sell it last year, they were not successful.
In September 2017, AT&T left the tower to move into two nearby buildings, both of which it owns. The tower has been vacant ever since. AT&T sold the tower to Inland Real Estate Group for almost $205 million.
The building was designed by HOK, which was formerly known as Hellmuth, Obata + Kassabaum. HOK is the largest architectural and engineering firm in the United States and has over 1,700 staff members working in 24 offices around the world. Among the buildings it has developed and constructed are Washington, D.C.'s National Air and Space Museum, the Salvador Dali Museum located in St. Petersburg, Florida, and airport terminals in Amsterdam and Indianapolis.
The auction is set for April 16. Officials handling an event like this can use Print shops to create materials about the building.
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