Santander Tower

{{Short description|Skyscraper located in downtown Dallas}}

{{Use American English|date=February 2025}}

{{Infobox building

| building_name = Santander Tower

| image = Thanksgiving Tower.jpg

| caption =

| former_name = Thanksgiving Tower

| location = 1601 Elm Street
Dallas, Texas

| coordinates = {{coord|32.782025|-96.798112|region:US-TX_type:landmark|display=title,inline}}

| start_date =

| completion_date = 1982

| status = Complete

| building_type = Commercial office

| architectural_style = Modernism

| roof = {{convert|197|m|abbr=on}}

| floor_count = 50
6 below ground

| elevator_count =

| cost =

| floor_area = {{convert|1410300|ft2|abbr=on}}

| architect = HKS Architects

| engineer =

| main_contractor = Huber Hunt & Nichols

| developer = Hunt Oil Company

| owner = Pacific Elm Properties, a Woods Capital company

| management = Woods Capital Property Management, LLC

| references = {{CTBUH|1803}}{{Cite web |url=https://www.emporis.com/buildings/118456 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160306091431/https://www.emporis.com/buildings/118456 |url-status=usurped |archive-date=March 6, 2016 |title=Emporis building ID 118456 |work=Emporis}}{{SkyscraperPage|257}}{{Structurae|20012164}}

}}

Santander Tower, formerly known as Thanksgiving Tower, is a 50-story, {{convert|197|m|abbr=on}} skyscraper at 1601 Elm Street adjacent to Thanks-Giving Square in downtown Dallas, Texas. At its completion in 1982, it was the second tallest building in Dallas, surpassing Elm Place. One year later, with the completion of 1700 Pacific, it became the third tallest, and it is currently the 8th-tallest building in the city. The building is connected to the Dallas Pedestrian Network and the Bullington Truck Terminal. Santander Tower is owned and managed by Woods Capital, and it was designed by the architecture firm HKS Architects. Formerly known as the Thanks-Giving Tower, it was renamed in 2020 after Banco Santander.[https://santanderconsumerusa.com/blog/renaming-tower-a-sign-of-companys-commitment-to-dallas Thanksgiving Tower Name Change]

In mid-2022 it was announced that 12 of the 50 floors will be converted into 228 residential units with building ownership citing post-pandemic housing demand and a weakened office market as the catalysts for the adaptive reuse project. {{cite news|last=Brown|first=Steve|date=2022-07-25|title=Santander Tower moves ahead on adding 228 apartments|url=https://www.dallasnews.com/business/real-estate/2022/07/25/downtown-dallas-tower-redo-moves-ahead-with-contractor-and-apartment-builder/|work=Dallas Morning News|access-date=2022-07-25}}

Repositioning

In 2013, Woods Capital acquired the tower out of foreclosure. Woods began a repositioning campaign estimated at $45m to revitalize the building and surrounding areas. During this program the lobbies, plaza, mechanical systems, common areas, and other portions of the tower were all upgraded. {{cite web |title=Woods Capital Acquires Thanksgiving Tower |url=https://www.woodscapital.com/single-post/2013/07/09/woods-capital-acquires-thanksgiving-tower |website=Woods Capital |access-date=April 14, 2023}} Occupancy in the building increased because of the repositioning.

See also

References

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