Bank of America Tower: NYC’s 366m Eco
充电宝的英文名是Power Bank #生活常识# #充电宝#
Key Facts
SpecificationDetailLocationOne Bryant Park, 111 West 42nd Street, Midtown Manhattan, New York City, USAHeight1 200 ft / 366 m to spire – 953 ft / 290 m roofFloors55 above grade (+5 below)Year Completed2009ArchitectCOOKFOX Architects – Richard Cook & Robert FoxArchitectural StyleEcological High-Tech / Neo-ModernOwnerThe Durst Organization & Bank of AmericaConstruction History
January 30, 2003 – The Durst Organization purchases the outdated 1980s office block on the corner of Sixth Avenue and 42nd Street, intending to anchor Bryant Park with a next-generation green skyscraper.
August 23, 2004 – Bank of America signs a 20-year lease for 75 percent of the new tower, triggering a fast-track design–build schedule aimed at delivering premium space by the banking giant’s centennial.
May 17, 2005 – Excavation kicks off; 235 caissons are drilled 80 ft into Manhattan schist, and engineers pour a 7-ft-thick concrete mat that will support 750 million lb of superstructure and equipment.
June 21, 2006 – Steel rises above grade; a hybrid system of steel megacolumns and a concrete shear-wall core climbs at roughly one storey every four days, keeping pace with an on-site concrete batch plant.
March 20, 2008 – The structure tops out at 945 ft; ironworkers hoist a 55-ft stainless-steel mast designed to house communications antennae and the building’s daylight-harvesting beacons.
May 19, 2009 – The first wave of Bank of America employees moves into trading floors on Level 7, while fit-out crews race to complete upper-level executive suites.
February 4, 2010 – The Bank of America Tower’s LEED Platinum plaque is unveiled by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, marking the first super-tall worldwide to achieve the certification at the time of opening.
The tower has always retained the Bank of America name, reflecting both tenancy dominance and the political symbolism of post-9/11 confidence in sustainable urban capitalism.
Architectural Features
A crystalline prism sliced by three chamfered notches gives the tower a faceted silhouette that catches shifting daylight like a cut gem. Megacolumns at each corner transfer loads into the concrete spine, freeing office plates of interior columns and maximizing daylight penetration. The sculpted crown angles away from neighboring towers, preserving view corridors across Bryant Park and reducing downdrafts at street level. Together these gestures create a dynamic profile that complements, rather than overpowers, Midtown’s pre-war icons. The curtain wall uses low-iron glass insulated with argon, laminated to a thermal-break aluminium mullion that halves conductive heat loss compared with conventional frames. A rooftop co-gen plant – essentially a natural-gas micro-turbine – generates 4.6 MW of electricity on site, its waste heat feeding absorption chillers for year-round HVAC. Underfloor air distribution delivers conditioned air directly to occupant zones, allowing warmer plenum temperatures and thinner floor assemblies. Self-consolidating concrete pumped 1 000 ft skyward enabled slim core walls without vibration, a first for New York’s dense theatre district. Floor-to-ceiling glazing is paired with automatic roller shades and daylight sensors, trimming lighting consumption by an estimated 25 percent. Greywater from sinks, cooling towers and the co-gen condenser is filtered and reused for toilet flushing and drip irrigation, saving 10.3 million gal of potable water annually. The lobby’s air is scrubbed by a dedicated outside-air system with MERV-15 filtration, reducing airborne particulates by two orders of magnitude relative to Midtown sidewalks. A living roof spanning setbacks shelters pollinator gardens that mitigate heat-island effect while giving employees a pocket of nature 600 ft above 42nd Street. The tower’s crystalline setbacks reinterpret the Gothic spires of Raymond Hood’s Rockefeller Center through a modern ecological lens. Vertical frit patterns echo the fluting of nearby Art Deco towers yet render it in silvery ceramic instead of limestone. Interior finishes – Calacatta marble, FSC-certified walnut and recycled blue-jean insulation – blend Wall Street luxury with Portland-style environmental ethics. Even the lobby’s sculptural staircase pays homage to Eliel Saarinen’s 1922 Tribune Tower proposal, threading historical Chicago futurism into contemporary New York ecology.Floor usage
Basement 5 – Basement 2 – Substation, 4.6 MW co-generation plant, 33 000 gal greywater storage, loading dock and bike room for 250 commuters. Ground – Level 6 – Triple-height lobby, flagship banking hall, conference center, trading floors and a 350-seat auditorium for corporate town-halls. Levels 7 – 32 – Open-plan offices for Bank of America Global Markets, each with raised-floor air, 45 ft column grids and circadian LED lighting. Levels 33 – 50 – Multitenant Class-A offices, Access to an 11 000 sq ft sky garden on Level 46 that doubles as an event venue overlooking Times Square. Levels 51 – 55 – Mechanical penthouse, rainwater harvesting tanks, tuned mass dampers and communications masts cloaked by glazed fins that light in emerald on St Patrick’s Day.Fun Facts
Upon completion the tower was lauded as the world’s most energy-efficient high-rise of its height class, drawing 70 percent of its peak power internally. Its cooling system uses ice-bank storage, freezing water overnight when grid demand is low, a technique rarely deployed above 600 ft. The lobby’s CO₂ monitors flash green bars on digital art walls whenever air quality beats Central Park’s baseline, a bragging right no other skyscraper claims. Elevator rides recuperate kinetic energy on the way down, feeding it back into the building’s power loop like a vertical hybrid car. Al Gore delivered his “We have a planetary emergency” speech in the auditorium on April 14, 2011, choosing the location to spotlight corporate climate leadership. Bill Clinton recorded a podcast episode on sustainable finance inside a tenant studio with floor-to-ceiling views of Sixth Avenue. Taylor Swift secretly previewed a music video on the sky garden, drawing paparazzi drones that bounced harmlessly off bird-safe glass. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the tower’s advanced filtration earned it the nickname “the clean-air castle” among essential finance staff. An art installation of fiber-optic “rain” descends 120 ft through the lobby atrium, pulsing blue whenever the building harvests greywater. Office floors contain refrigerated “energy pods” stocked with electrolyte drinks for traders during long earnings sessions. A hidden stair from Level 38 to 40 bypasses security turnstiles, designed for executives to make timed appearances during regulatory audits. The co-gen exhaust stack is tuned to replicate a Gregorian chord at 37 Hz, inaudible but reportedly calming to building occupants. The tower’s emerald-white night lighting appears in The Amazing Spider-Man 2, standing in as Oscorp’s eco-friendly headquarters. In Billions, hedge-fund titan Bobby Axelrod hails the tower as the “one green thing on Gotham’s soul,” seconds before shorting its bonds in a fictional subplot. The Times Square broadcast cuts to its façade during New Year’s Eve coverage, making it a silent co-host of the midnight ball drop.Other relevant facts
– Bank of America Tower is one of only two New York skyscrapers connected to the regional steam network and a building-scale co-gen plant, allowing it to switch between grid, on-site gas and district steam for resilience. In 2021 the tower piloted a blockchain-verified renewable-energy credit system, tracing every kilowatt to specific upstate wind farms. Seasonal demand-response agreements pay tenants cash rebates for lowering afternoon consumption, essentially turning offices into profit-sharing batteries. Combined, these measures carve 13 000 metric tons of CO₂ from the city’s annual footprint.
– The building’s ice-storage vault doubles as a thermal art canvas: embedded LEDs light the freezing tanks in pastel hues visible through a maintenance window on 43rd Street. Passers-by can scan a QR code to see real-time grid carbon intensity and how the tower is shifting its load to cleaner hours. Designers call it “public utilities theatre,” blending civic data transparency with Midtown spectacle. Local schools run STEAM field trips that culminate in a selfie with the neon-lit ice farm.
– A colony of 100 000 honeybees lives in hives on the 51st-floor green roof, producing 250 lb of “BankPark Gold” honey sold in the lobby café. Proceeds fund a mentorship programme for high-schoolers interested in urban agriculture and environmental engineering. The bees also pollinate Bryant Park’s lawn panels and adjacent street trees, illustrating a micro-ecology symbiosis between skyscraper and urban green space. In 2022 the project won an Urban Land Institute award for small-scale biodiversity innovation.
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