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Bank of America Building (Baltimore)

Bank of America Building
2008 05 07 - Baltimore - Baltimore St approaching N Charles St 3.JPG
General information
Type Residential
Architectural style Art Deco
Location 10 Light Street
Baltimore, Maryland
Coordinates 39°17′21″N 76°36′51″W / 39.2892°N 76.6141°W / 39.2892; -76.6141Coordinates: 39°17′21″N 76°36′51″W / 39.2892°N 76.6141°W / 39.2892; -76.6141
Completed 1929
Owner Metropolitan Baltimore LLC
Height
Antenna spire 179.832 m (590.00 ft)
Roof 155.143 m (509.00 ft)
Technical details
Floor count 34
Design and construction
Architect Taylor & Fisher
Smith & May
Developer J. Henry Miller & Son
Structural engineer Girard Engineering, Inc.
References

The Bank of America Building, also known as 10 Light Street and formerly as the Baltimore Trust Company Building, is a 34 story, 155.15 m (509.0 ft) skyscraper located at the corner of East Baltimore and Light Streets in downtown Baltimore, Maryland.

10 Light Street was the tallest building in the state, and the tallest office building in the United States south of New York City when constructed in 1929. The Art Deco building was designed by the firm of Taylor and Fisher, and completed in eighteen months, fashioned from Indiana sandstone and local brick over a steel frame at a cost of (U.S.) $3 million.

The building's exterior is decorated with carved Romanesque human and animal images, stylized eagles, and is capped with a copper and gold roof. The ornate, two-story main banking lobby is highly decorated with mosaic floors designed by Hildreth Meiere, and historic murals by Griffith Baily Coale and McGill Mackall on historic themes: the Baltimore fire of 1904, and the writing of the National Anthem at the Battle of Baltimore during the War of 1812. These murals are planned to be covered by artificial turf, so that the historic lobby can be used as an Under Armour gym.

Shortly after the Baltimore Trust Company moved into the building in 1929, the Great Depression began and the company foundered. The building was essentially vacant within a year, as the bank went into bankruptcy in 1933 and receivership in 1935. The empty building was subsequently used by the New Deal's Public Works Administration in Maryland.

From the 1940s into the 1960s, the building was first known as the Mathieson Building and then the O'Sullivan Building, reflecting its then-current major tenants.


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