One Wilshire
One Wilshire | |
---|---|
General information | |
Address | 624 S. Grand Ave |
Town or city | Los Angeles |
Country | California |
Opened | 1966 |
Renovated | 1992 / 2001[1] |
Owner | GI Partners |
Affiliation | Telecommunications industry |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 30 |
Floor area | 664,000 square feet[2] |
Design and construction | |
Architecture firm | Skidmore, Owings and Merrill |
Developer | S. Jon Kreedman & Company |
Known for | Famous meet-me-room |
One Wilshire is an office building located at the junction of Wilshire Boulevard and South Grand Avenue in downtown Los Angeles. Built in 1966,[3] the thirty story high-rise was designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill,[4] and for its first decades in existence it was used almost exclusively by law firms.[5] In the early 1990s it began housing largely telecommunications companies, and in 1992 One Wilshire underwent a major renovation, with the improvements largely related to telecommunication network upgrades.[6] Around this time a large meet me room was constructed[2][7] on the fourth floor,[4] and in 2008 Wired claimed that One Wilshire had "the world's most densely populated Meet-Me room," with around 260 ISPs with interconnected networks.[8]
In 2001 the Carlyle Group bought the building for $119 million,[1] and Hines Real Estate Investment Trust in Houston, Texas paid $287 million for One Wilshire in 2007.[3] It sold in 2013 from Hines Real Estate Investment Trust to GI Partners for $437.5 million, the highest price ever paid for an office building in downtown Los Angeles.[3] As of 2013 it was one of the top three telecommunications centers in the world,[3] and by 2015 One Wilshire was "the most highly connected Internet point in the western U.S.,"[2] with underseas cables allowing "one-third of Internet traffic from the U.S. to Asia [to pass] through the building."[2]
History
Construction and first decades (1960s-2006)
One Wilshire was built in 1966[2] at 624 South Grand Avenue in downtown Los Angeles, on the far eastern end of Wilshire Boulevard.[3][4] The high-rise was designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill[4] to be a standard office building[2] with thirty floors[2] and 664,000 square feet of space.[2] The building's name was selected by developer S. Jon Kreedman, who would later become known for converting The Century Towers in 1977.[3] At one point in its first few decades, One Wilshire entirely housed law offices.[5] "Traditional corporate tenants" began moving out in the early 1990s,[2] and the building instead became popular with telecommunications companies, in part because AT&T's switching center was only two blocks away.[2]
"One Wilshire is located near SBC Communications/Pacbell's central switching station at 400 S. Grand, with its towering, now nearly obsolete, microwave antenna. With deregulation looming in the 1980s, Pacific Bell banned competitors from the central switching station. Long distance carrier MCI thus mounted its own microwave station on the roof of One Wilshire, at the time one of the tallest buildings with good lines of sight in downtown. And so began One Wilshire's importance as a telecom site."
— The Center for Land Use Interpretation, 2013[4]
In 1992 One Wilshire underwent a major renovation, with the improvements largely related to telecommunication network upgrades.[6] Telecommunications companies had "congregated" to One Wilshire by the early 1990s,"[2] and by 1998 One Wilshire was a "focal point" for the telecom industry, in part because it had a clear line of sight to the east that helped with microwave transmissions.[7] As the building became a hotspot for telecommunications, the so-called meet me room was constructed[2][7] on the fourth floor,[4] which allows the building's tenants to interconnect.[2] In 2001, the Carlyle Group bought the building for $119 million, subsequently spending $30 million on infrastructure improvements.[1] As of 2002, the building had five generators for the event of a blackout. Cooling units were primarily on the third floor, as well as on the roof.[4]
Sale to Hines Real Estate (2007-2012)
In December 2006, a major earthquake in Taiwan severed a number of critical undersea fiber optic cables in the Pacific. One Wilshire was one of the hubs able to re-route some of the internet and voice traffic from Taiwan through their facility.[5] CRG West of the Carlyle Group managed the property as of 2007, with 23 of the building's floors designed to hold communications infrastructure as compared to offices.[5] Around 300 companies had hardware in the building by that time, including Google and carriers from Asia, India, and Europe.[5] Others included Verizon Communications, Savvis, Level 3, Global Crossing, Qwest Communications, Pac-West Telecomm,[1] IX2 Wilshire (now known as Wilcon), the Carlyle Group's CRG West subsidiary,[1] and Sprint.[8] Hines Real Estate Investment Trust in Houston, Texas paid $287 million for One Wilshire in 2007.[3] CRG West remained a tenant after the sale.[1] In 2008 Wired claimed that One Wilshire had "the world's most densely populated Meet-Me room," with around 260 ISPs with interconnected networks.[8] At that point, the building had only four of its thirty floors devoted to law offices.[8]
Recent sale and events (2013-present)
By 2013 One Wilshire was one of the top three telecommunications centers in the world, along with 60 Hudson Street in New York City and Telehouse in London.[3] As a primary terminus for fiber-optic cable routes between Asia and North America,[3] One Wilshire was also the most important telecommunications hub in the western United States.[3] Hines Real Estate Investment Trust sold the building to GI Partners in July 2013, for a total of $437.5 million in US currency.[9] At a sale price of $660 per square foot, it was the highest price ever paid for an office building in downtown Los Angeles.[3] According to Fortune, as of 2015 the building is "the most highly connected Internet point in the western U.S.,"[2] with underseas cables allowing "one-third of Internet traffic from the U.S. to Asia [to pass] through the building."[2]
Ownership timeline
Date | Seller | Buyer | Cost |
---|---|---|---|
1960s | Original land owners | S. Jon Kreedman & Company | Unknown |
2001 | S. Jon Kreedman & Company | Carlyle Group | $119 million USD[1] |
2007 | Carlyle Group | Hines Real Estate Investment Trust | $287 million USD[3] |
2013 | Hines Real Estate | GI Partners | $437.5 million USD[9] |
Tenants
Initially One Wilshire leased office space to law firms, though in the 1990s most of its tenants became telecommunications companies. Google was a tenant by 2007,[5] and Wilcon expanded its presence in 2013[10][11] after it acquired IX2,[12][13] which at the time was[12] based in One Wilshire and one of the first colocation tenants in the building dating back to 1998.[10][14] Among One Wilshire's other major tenants that year were Verizon Communications, Sirius XM Radio, and China Telecom,[3] with about a third of One Wilshire used as standard office space for firms such as Musick Peeler and Crowell, Weedon & Co.[3] As of 2015 the building had over 300 tenants.[2] Its largest tenant continues to be CoreSite Realty Corporation,[2][5] a data center provider which established an office in One Wilshire upon its founding in 2001.[1] As of 2015 Fiber Internet Center is a tenant, and American Internet Services also maintains a Point of Presence (OWPOP) at One Wilshire. Others include AT&T, Amazon Web Services, and Netflix.[2]
Trivia
- The building is featured in the background of the 2007 music video of "Paralyzer" by Finger Eleven.
- The building appears in the background of the opening scene of the 1999 film Blue Streak.
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h LA’s One Wilshire Sold for $287 Million. DataCenter Knowledge, August 6, 2007
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Vanian, Jonathan (June 8, 2015). "These are the buildings that make up the 'cloud'". Fortune. Retrieved 2015-06-30.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Vincent, Roger (July 18, 2013). "One Wilshire sells for record $437.5 million". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
- ^ a b c d e f g h One Wilshire: Telco Hotel Central". Center for Land Use Interpretation. Accessed 21 September 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f g Jardin, Xeni (February 19, 2007). "Xeni Tech: A Los Angeles 'Hotel' for Internet Carriers". National Public Radio - Day to Day,.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) - ^ a b "One Wilshire". Hines. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
- ^ a b c Savageau, John (November 7, 2009). "Wiring Los Angeles with Eric Bender, President of Wilshire Connection". john-savageau.com. Retrieved 2015-06-30.
- ^ a b c d e Bullock, Dave (03 March 2008). "A Lesson in Internet Anatomy: The World's Densest Meet-Me Room". Wired. Accessed 21 September 2013.
- ^ a b Tang, Jessica (June 5, 2015). "The Internet I.R.L." The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
- ^ a b Jones, Penny (30 May 2014). "Wilcon: Taking a regional approach to colo in LA". Datacenter Dynamics. Retrieved 2015-06-30.
- ^ "Data Centers at One Wilshire". wilcon.com. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
- ^ a b "Wilcon Acquires Freedom Dark Fiber Networks". Pamlico Capital. August 13, 2013. Retrieved 2015-06-30.
- ^ Yang, Justin (March 19, 2014). "Wilcon Rebrands Firms Acquired in Recent Roll-Up". Los Angeles Business Journal. Retrieved 2015-06-30.
- ^ Bernier, Paula (March 19, 2014). "Wilcon Announces Integration of Freedom, IX2, and Wilshire Connection". TMCnet.com. Retrieved 2015-06-30.
External links
- Media related to One Wilshire at Wikimedia Commons
- 1960s architecture in the United States
- 1966 establishments in California
- Skyscrapers in California
- Office buildings completed in 1966
- Office buildings in California
- Internet exchange points in the United States
- Infrastructure completed in 1966
- Telephone exchange buildings
- Telecommunications buildings in the United States
- Internet in the United States