![]() ![]() The development accommodates the International Smoke restaurant and bar, located on the ground floor. ![]() The development's "lifestyle" program organizes cultural events. Resident services include a private concierge and access to the 20,000-square-foot (1,900 m 2) Owner's Club Level, which features amenities such as a private lounge, wine cellar, and fitness center. The tower's design was marketed as resembling a translucent crystal, and was, until accompanied by much larger adjacent buildings, a landmark for the Transbay Redevelopment and the southern skyline of San Francisco. The building is located next to the site of the Transbay Transit Center. Below street level, there are 434 parking spaces in a five-level subterranean garage located under the 11-story tower. ![]() The 53 units in the separate 12-story tower are marketed as City Residences. Neither is there a forty-fourth floor, because the number four is considered unlucky by many Asians. As happens with many high-rises, there is no thirteenth floor because of superstitions related to triskaidekaphobia. ![]() The bottom 25 floors of the main tower are marketed as Residences while the floors from 26 to the top are marketed as Grand Residences. The residences are expensive a penthouse unit sold for $13 million in December 2016. Between the two towers is a 43-foot (13 m), two-story glass atrium. In addition to the 58-story tower, there is a 125-foot (38 m), 11-story tower on the northeast end of the complex. The tower is slender, with each floor containing 14,000 square feet (1,300 m 2) of floor space. It was the tallest residential building west of the Mississippi River, but has been surpassed by The Austonian in Texas. At 645 feet (197 m), it is the tallest concrete structure in San Francisco, the fourth-tallest building in San Francisco, and the tallest built since 345 California Street in 1986. Description ĭeveloped by Mission Street Development LLC, an affiliate of Millennium Partners, the US$350 million project was designed by Handel Architects, engineered by DeSimone Consulting Engineers and built by Webcor Builders. The larger tower's highest level, 58 floors above the ground, is listed as the 60th, because floors 13 and 44 are missing for superstitious reasons. In total, the project has 419 residential units, with 53 of those units in the smaller tower. The blue-gray glass, late-modernist buildings are bounded by Mission, Fremont, and Beale Streets, and the north end of the Transbay Transit Center site. Opened to residents on April 23, 2009, 301 Mission includes two buildings: a 12-story tower located on the northeast of the property, and Millennium Tower, a 58-story, 645-foot-tall (197 m) condominium skyscraper. The building is being modified in an effort to stop its sinking. In May 2016, residents were informed the main tower was both sinking and tilting, resulting in several lawsuits concerning repair costs and whether the tilt had been withheld from buyers. A mixed-use, primarily residential high rise, it is the tallest residential building and the 6th-tallest overall in San Francisco. Millennium Tower (San Francisco) (the United States) Show map of the United Statesģ7☄7′25″N 122☂3′46″W / 37.7904°N 122.3961°W / 37.7904 -122.3961ģ01 Mission Street is a high-rise residential building in the South of Market district of downtown San Francisco. ![]()
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