Landmark Place | |
---|---|
General information | |
Type | Residential/ retail |
Architectural style | Brutalist / Modernist |
Location | Hamilton, Ontario, Canada |
Completed | 1974 |
Height | |
Roof | 127 m (417 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 44 including observation deck |
Lifts/elevators | 6 |
Landmark Place is the tallest building in downtown Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, at the corner of Main Street East and Catharine Street South in the Corktown neighbourhood. This 43-storey building (130 metres/427 feet) was completed in 1974, and was originally known as the Century 21 building.[1] It was built by Al Frisina as a mixed use building; commercial, residential and retail. Original plans included adding a heliport and a revolving rooftop restaurant but those plans were scrapped. Frisina also believes that no other building will be built in Hamilton taller than Landmark Place because as he puts it; 'the demand's not there and nobody's crazy enough to do it.' In the early 1960s, Frisina took on Hamilton's six-storey height limit. He brought in a consultant who told the city it could save money on services by building up instead of out. Frisina won and built the 18-storey Clarendon on Hunter near Bay. Today it is known as The Fontainebleu.[2]
The top 5 floors of the building are now occupied by luxury suites.[1]