Jump to content

McCoy Center

Coordinates: 40°8′28″N 82°59′50″W / 40.14111°N 82.99722°W / 40.14111; -82.99722
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by JJMC89 bot (talk | contribs) at 13:07, 21 November 2016 (Migrate {{Infobox building}} coordinates parameters to {{Coord}}, see Help:Coordinates in infoboxes). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The McCoy Center
Map
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeOffice[1]
Location1111 Polaris Parkway, Columbus, OH 43240
Columbus
Coordinates40°8′28″N 82°59′50″W / 40.14111°N 82.99722°W / 40.14111; -82.99722
Opening1996 [1]
Cost$242 million[1]
Technical details
Floor area2,000,000 sq ft (185,800 m2)[1]

The McCoy Center is an office building located in Columbus, Ohio. The building is named after longtime Bank One president John G. McCoy.[1] The bank was acquired by JPMorgan Chase & Co. after a merger with Bank One Corporation in 2004. Inside is a gift shop, Starbucks, dry cleaners, shipping center, car rental, nurse's station, day care center, two cafeterias, a bistro, five Chase automated teller machines, and a personal banker.[1] The building is located off Polaris Parkway, home of the Polaris Fashion Place mall.

The facility—¼ mile from end to end—houses approximately 10,000 employees in a space equal in square footage to the Empire State Building. At 2 million-square-feet, it is the largest JPMorgan Chase & Co. facility in the world, the largest office building in the Columbus, Ohio area, and the second largest single-tenant office building in the United States behind The Pentagon,[1] from which the McCoy Center has borrowed its way-finding system. Only a handful of office buildings in the U.S. - the 5.7 million-square-foot Warren G. Magnuson Health Services Building in Seattle and the 4.4 million-square-foot McDermott Building in San Antonio among them - are bigger.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Chase Thriving in region".
  2. ^ Williams, Mark. "Chase Building: a city unto itself". The Columbus Dispatch.