Eight Forty One

Eight Forty One is a 309 feet (94 metres), 22-floor office building on the south bank of St. Johns River in Jacksonville, Florida. Completed in 1955, it was the tallest building in the city for 13 years until surpassed by the Riverplace Tower.[2] It was "The Tallest Office Building in the South" and the tallest in Florida until NASA's Vehicle Assembly Building was completed in 1965.[3] The building's former names include the Aetna Building, Prudential Plaza I or One Prudential Plaza, and the Prudential Building.[4]

Eight Forty One
Location within Central Jacksonville
Eight Forty One (Florida)
Former namesAetna Building
One Prudential Plaza,
Prudential Life Insurance Building
General information
TypeCommercial offices
Architectural styleInternational Style
Moderne
Location841 Prudential Drive Jacksonville, Florida, United States
Coordinates30.316376°N 81.663712°W / 30.316376; -81.663712
Construction started1953
Completed1955
Opening1955
OwnerSouth Shore Group
Height
Roof309 ft (94 m)[1]
Technical details
Floor count22[1]
Design and construction
Architecture firmKBJ Architects

History

Prudential Building in 1960.

Originally known as the Prudential Building, it was constructed in 1955 for Prudential Insurance, which had selected Jacksonville as its Southeastern headquarters.[5][6] Construction materials included Alabama limestone, North Carolina pink granite and Georgia marble. The 13-acre (53,000 m2) property is situated on the south/east bank of the St. Johns River and includes 1,100 feet (340 m) of riverfrontage. A 2-ton piece of the Rock of Gibraltar, once in the lobby, is now found in the courtyard on the riverfront.[1] The building was used as background in scenes from the film Creature From the Black Lagoon.[1]

A sister building, Two Prudential Plaza, was constructed next door in 1985. The Prudential Building underwent a major renovation in 1988.[7]

Ocwen Financial Corp. completed the $36 million purchase of the Prudential Plaza One building in August, 1998.

In 1999, Aetna acquired the Prudential HealthCare business for $1 billion, and the signage was changed to "Aetna". The building is officially known as Prudential Plaza I. Another major renovation was completed in 2002 after 153,000 sq ft (14,200 m2) was vacated by Aetna. The makeover also included construction of a 1,100-space parking garage by Elkins Constructors.[7] On February 21, 2002 the Prudential Plaza I building was renamed 841 Prudential Drive.[8]

On January 23, 2004, Ocwen sold 841 Prudential Drive to South Shore Group for $39 million.[9] The building's name reverted to Aetna Building.

At the January 31, 2008 meeting of the Downtown Development Review Board (DDRB) of the Jacksonville Economic Development Commission (JEDC), plans were tenatively approved for a 128-slip dockage facility to be named The South Shore Marina & Riverwalk at the Aetna Building. The project will use a design similar to that used by South Beach marinas. Landscape and lighting improvements will be made to the existing Jacksonville Riverwalk.[10] Permits from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection and the United States Army Corps of Engineers had already been obtained.

Tenants

The building was the original home of what is now the River Club of Jacksonville, a private business club that relocated to building now known as the Wells Fargo Center in 1976.[6]

The 12th floor is occupied by the Regus Aetna Center, which provides executive office suites to businesses needing temporary office space.[11]

Records
Preceded by
Barnett National Bank Building
Tallest Building in Jacksonville
19541967
94m
Succeeded by
Riverplace Tower
gollark: Intertemporal meme piracy is a big industry.
gollark: Really, basically all countries have laws which are far too complicated. People should *not* be bound by laws they cannot humanly read and comprehend.
gollark: …
gollark: Besides, they have a time machine, they can work out better ways to do things than killing people if they are at all competent.
gollark: What? I guess you could blame them for various religious wars. But generally if that sort of thing happens there are underlying tensions anyway.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.