Trianon (Frankfurt am Main)

The Trianon is a skyscraper in the Westend of Frankfurt am Main. The building was completed in 1993 and is the headquarters of DekaBank. At 186 meters high spread 47 floors.

Its floor plan has approximately the shape of an equilateral triangle whose corners are also formed by three-sided towers. The conclusion is an inverted three -sided pyramid on the roof. It is the first building in Germany, in which high-strength concrete came into use.

Construction

The reinforcement of the reinforced concrete building is via the three inner cores with the elevator shafts and stairwells, as well as by the surrounding reinforced concrete perforated facade. The distance of the facade columns is 1.4 m with an upright width of 54 cm. The ceiling is usually a plate beam ceiling with a ceiling thickness of 15 cm and beams with a height of 27 cm.

Foundation

The foundation consists of a reinforced concrete floor slab with an area of ​​3864 m² and 6.0 m thickness. At the edge of the plate tapers to 3.0 m. The foundation bed is 19.6 m below the ground surface. The bottom plate was prepared in a cast within 50 hours.

Use

The building was acquired by the DEKA by the Morgan Stanley Euro Zone Office Fund ( MSEOF ) in 2007. Later, a 57 % share of Trianon was passed on to the open-ended real estate fund Morgan Stanley P2 value. This proportion has been resold to the financial investor Madison in February 2012. In addition to the Deka Bank as the main tenants are numerous other tenants to find in the house, including the law firm Linklaters.

In 1999 the building was organized by Deutsche Bank and the picture newspaper exhibition "50 years of Germany".

History

The plots Mainzer Landstrasse 16-24 were historically built by individual buildings. The previous owners were often bankers. These included Benedict Goldschmidt, Albert (1805-1880) and Friedrich Mumm of black stone, Theodor Stern and William Peter Metzler. By 1908, the bank Moritz Adolph Ellissen was at number 24, lived until 1900 the banker Rothschild widows Lina and Ina Goldschmidt at number 18 after the devastation of the Second World War, the Bank for Social Economy acquired the land. 1964 consecrated the BfG its headquarters one on the property. With the growth of the bank's headquarters moved to the newly built BfG skyscraper and buildings in the Mainzer Landstrasse 16-24 was used as seat of the Frankfurt branch of BfG. During the 1980s, the land was sold to a Swedish investor group there built the Trianon. BfG was then the first tenant ( the half of the building ).

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