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Catalinas Norte

Catalinas Norte is an important business complex composed of nineteen commercial office buildings and occupied by many leading Argentine companies, foreign subsidiaries, diplomatic offices, and a hotel. It is located in the Retiro and San Nicolás neighborhoods of Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Catalinas Norte office park (right) along the Antártida Argentina Avenue

History edit

The Catalinas Warehouses and Pier Company Ltd. edit

 
The Parish of Santa Catalina de Sienna, the development's namesake

Francisco Seeber, a German Argentine businessman and legislator, created The Catalinas Warehouses and Pier Company, Ltd. in 1872 for the purpose of building a pier (near Paraguay Street), a wharf, and an office building. The acquired lands were east of the Paseo de Julio (now Leandro Alem Avenue).[1]

The area was known as the "Catalinas Incline," and was so named for the Church of Santa Catalina of Sienna (still standing on the corner of Viamonte and San Martín streets). This church also served as the namesake for Seeber's new firm. With the purchase of more land in the quarter of La Boca, the Retiro lot was named Catalinas Norte (North Catalinas), and the La Boca lot, Catalinas Sur.[1]

The firm obtained a municipal contract for the construction of the Catalina Docks. Needing a large and steady supply of soil to level and grade the hitherto flood-prone site for the wharf, Seeber bought land in the then-desolate northwest end of the city with the intent of hauling soil to Catalinas for land reclamation. Enlisting workers mostly from Entre Ríos Province, these latter established a neighborhood (Villa Urquiza) there in 1887.[2]

 
The Immigrants' Hotel, built on the Catalinas wharf, and opened in 1911

These docks became the northern and southern points of entry into Puerto Madero upon its inaugural in 1897. Catalinas Norte was later chosen as the site for the Hotel de Inmigrantes, a facility built to temporarily house the over 100,000 annual immigrant arrivals, and completed in 1911.[3] Following the construction of the modern Port of Buenos Aires from 1911 to 1925, both Catalinas docks fell into disuse, and October 31, 1945, the Catalinas Warehouses properties were sold to Yatahí, S.A. A lot facing Córdoba Avenue was, in turn, resold in 1949 to a State enterprise created during the administration of Juan Perón: Atlas, S.A. This entity built the Alas Building, and an adjacent lot was used to build the Peronist ALEA publishing house (redeveloped as Microsoft's South American headquarters in 2000).

The bulk of the land, totaling 39,110 m² (429,000 ft²), north of these buildings continued vacant for decades. A further 24,200 m² (260,000 ft³) were owned by Otto Bemberg and Company, which opened the Retiro Park (an amusement park) there in 1939; the rest was later mostly used as parking lots.[1]

Early plans edit

The underutilized state of an area so close to the financial and administrative center of the city prompted the Municipal Department of Planning in 1956 to draft an urban renewal plan for the district. This envisaged the construction of a highway that would extend from Tigre to La Plata, as well as rezoning Catalinas to allow for the construction of office buildings of up to 70 floors. This district, per these plans, would ultimately be known as the "Catalinas Gateway" to Buenos Aires.

The City Office of Regulatory Planning (OPRBA) further specified, in its revised master plan of 1958, that construction of skyscrapers in downtown Buenos Aires would be prohibited, and limited these to the Catalinas district. Mayor Hernán Giralt presented a project to the City Council for the development of "an area of hotels, an office and retail center, a location for shipping companies and air travel, a recreation center and a large area for parking," and on February 3, 1960, the Argentine National Congress authorized the City to purchase land north of Catalinas for the purpose. The Catalinas Norte Commission was established in 1961, but a subsequent political and economic crisis caused the project to stall and ultimately be discarded.[1]

The final draft edit

 
1955: Construction of the Alas Tower and the demolition of warehouses initiated development in the Catalinas Norte area
 
The Sheraton Hotel was the first high rise in Catalinas Norte proper
 
IBM Tower in the complex
 
Northern section
 
Southern section

The coup d'état that toppled President Arturo Illia in 1966 led to the dissolution of OPRBA. Mayor Eugenio Schettini instructed the Municipal Department of Architecture and Urbanism (MCBA) to design a new, simpler plan that would limit permits for office high rises. A municipal ordinance in 1967 parceled the land in accordance with the 1958 master plan, and lots were sold to Aerolíneas Argentinas, Conurban S.A, IBM, Impresit Sideco, Kokourek S.A, SEGBA (the state-owned city electric utility), Sheraton, and the Argentine Industrial Union (UIA). Retiro Park was bulldozed, and the Buenos Aires Japanese Gardens therein were relocated to their present, Palermo Woods location. The MCBA, in turn, retained four areas, opened three parking lots, and built two promenades: Carlos Della Paolera and Ingeniero Butty.[1]

Development edit

Ground was broken on the first buildings in the complex, the Kokourek Group's Conurban Tower (in April 1969), and the Sheraton Buenos Aires Hotel & Convention Center, on June 26. Work began on the Carlos Pellegrini Tower for the UIA in 1970, and on the Catalinas Norte Tower (for Impresit Sideco) in 1972. The Conurban Tower was inaugurated in 1973, Carlos Pellegrini in 1974, and Catalinas Norte, in 1975. Work then began on the Madero Tower (so named for its Eduardo Madero Avenue address) in 1976, and in 1979, the IBM Tower. These high rises, while not the first in Buenos Aires to incorporate elements of the International Style (such as curtain walls), became the first to do so as a group. SEPRA Arquitectos, a prominent Argentine architectural firm, designed the Sheraton Hotel and the Catalinas Norte Tower.[1]

The implosion of the dictatorship's economic policies in 1981 led to a suspension in new developments for the area, however, as well as a sharp decline in new construction as a whole. A subsequent economic recovery that followed Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo's 1991 Convertibility Plan prompted renewed interest among developers, and from 1995 to 1998, the Consultatio Group developed the Alem and Catalinas Plaza twin towers, and IRSA, Laminar Plaza (all designed by SEPRA). The final addition to the complex during the 1990s was the Bank Boston Tower. The Postmodern high rise, designed by César Pelli, was completed in 2001 and at 137 meters (450 ft), would become the tallest in the district.[1]

Expansion to the south edit

The flurry of new construction also led to the redevelopment of the southern end of MCBA's redevelopment district (located in the San Nicolás ward). The Bouchard Tower and Loma Negra's Fortabat Tower, both designed by SEPRA, were built between 1991 and 1995. The República Building, designed by Pelli for the now defunct Banco República, was completed in 1996 (with Telefónica de Argentina as its chief tenant). The Microsoft Building (by Mario Roberto Álvarez), opened in 2001, and Bouchard Plaza, designed by Hellmuth, Obata and Kassabaum for the La Nación news and publishing group, opened in 2004.[4]

Sale of last remaining lots edit

The complex, which by 2004 included 15 buildings totalling over 540,000 m² (5.8 million ft²), was in the news during 2009 and 2010, when Mayor Mauricio Macri obtained the City Legislature's approval to sell the remaining three undeveloped lots.[5] The combined land is zoned to house up to 120,000 m² (1.3 million ft²) of new office space,[6] and the city sanctioned the future construction of high rises of up to 50 stories, and 150 m (492 ft) in height (slightly more than the tallest building currently in Catalinas).[7] The third and last lot was sold on November 18, 2010, to Banco Macro. The other lots had been sold to IRSA and Consultatio earlier in the year, and the combined sales netted 386 million Argentine pesos (us$99 million), or us$6,866 per m² (us$639 per ft²).[8]

Projects approved for these lots during 2011 include the Macro Tower, a 130 metres (430 ft) headquarters designed by César Pelli;[9] the 155 metres (509 ft) Consultatio Tower by Beccar Varela & Associates;[10] and the 29-story IRSA headquarters, designed by Miguel Baudizzone and Jorge Lestard.[10] BBVA Banco Francés, the fifth largest bank in Argentina, announced in 2013 that it would relocate its headquarters to the Consultatio Tower upon the building's completion.[11] One last potential zone for future development, a 5,694 m² (613,000 ft²) property alongside the Alas Building, remains in use as a parking lot.

Overview edit

Existing and approved commercial real estate in Catalinas Plaza

Building Completed floors Height in m (ft) Area in m² (ft²)
Edificio Alas 1957 41 141 (463) 99,000 1,065,000
Sheraton Buenos Aires 1972 23 91 (299) 62,000 667,000
Torre Conurban 1973 25 95 (312) 26,217 282,000
Torre Carlos Pellegrini 1974 31 121 (397) 35,000 377,000
Torre Catalinas Norte 1975 29 109 (358) 34,000 366,000
Torre Madero 1980 28 96 (315) 33,767 363,000
IBM Tower 1983 19 85 (279) 31,000 334,000
Torre Bouchard 1994 30 110 (361) 36,025 388,000
Torre Fortabat 1995 23 85 (279) 17,000 183,000
Edifício República 1996 22 91 (299) 35,369 381,000
Torre Alem Plaza 1998 32 128 (420) 38,000 409,000
Torre Catalinas Plaza 1998 29 115 (377) 34,000 366,000
Edificio Laminar Plaza 1999 20 72.5 (238) 35,720 384,000
Edificio Microsoft 2001 12 57 (187) 15,800 170,000
Torre BankBoston 2001 33 137 (450) 45,000 484,000
Torre Bouchard Plaza 2004 26 100 (328) 65,000 700,000
Torre Consultatio/BBVA 2015 33 155 (508) 76,000 817,000
Torre Macro 2016 28 130 (426) 35,500 382,000
Torre IRSA 2017 29 99 (325) 55,500 597,000

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g [1] 2011-09-08 at the Wayback Machine Contreras, Leonel. Rascacielos Porteños (1580 — 2005). Comisión para la Preservación del Patrimonio Histórico Cultural de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires. (in Spanish)
  2. ^ Historia de Villa Urquiza 2009-11-09 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  3. ^ Rock, David. Argentina: 1516 — 1982. University of California Press, 1987.
  4. ^ La Nación (in Spanish)
  5. ^ Infobae (in Spanish)
  6. ^ Clarín (in Spanish)
  7. ^ El Cronista[permanent dead link] (in Spanish)
  8. ^ Clarín (in Spanish)
  9. ^ "Banco Macro avanza con el plan para construir el edificio corporativo". InfoBae.
  10. ^ a b "Tres rascacielos transformarán Catalinas". La Nación.
  11. ^ "El BBVA Francés pagó $ 1.200 millones y se quedó con la nueva torre de Costantini". Cronista. 12 July 2013.

External links edit

  • (in Spanish)

34°35′43″S 58°22′17″W / 34.59528°S 58.37139°W / -34.59528; -58.37139

catalinas, norte, important, business, complex, composed, nineteen, commercial, office, buildings, occupied, many, leading, argentine, companies, foreign, subsidiaries, diplomatic, offices, hotel, located, retiro, nicolás, neighborhoods, buenos, aires, argenti. Catalinas Norte is an important business complex composed of nineteen commercial office buildings and occupied by many leading Argentine companies foreign subsidiaries diplomatic offices and a hotel It is located in the Retiro and San Nicolas neighborhoods of Buenos Aires Argentina Catalinas Norte office park right along the Antartida Argentina Avenue Contents 1 History 1 1 The Catalinas Warehouses and Pier Company Ltd 1 2 Early plans 1 3 The final draft 1 4 Development 1 5 Expansion to the south 1 6 Sale of last remaining lots 2 Overview 3 References 4 External linksHistory editThe Catalinas Warehouses and Pier Company Ltd edit nbsp The Parish of Santa Catalina de Sienna the development s namesakeFrancisco Seeber a German Argentine businessman and legislator created The Catalinas Warehouses and Pier Company Ltd in 1872 for the purpose of building a pier near Paraguay Street a wharf and an office building The acquired lands were east of the Paseo de Julio now Leandro Alem Avenue 1 The area was known as the Catalinas Incline and was so named for the Church of Santa Catalina of Sienna still standing on the corner of Viamonte and San Martin streets This church also served as the namesake for Seeber s new firm With the purchase of more land in the quarter of La Boca the Retiro lot was named Catalinas Norte North Catalinas and the La Boca lot Catalinas Sur 1 The firm obtained a municipal contract for the construction of the Catalina Docks Needing a large and steady supply of soil to level and grade the hitherto flood prone site for the wharf Seeber bought land in the then desolate northwest end of the city with the intent of hauling soil to Catalinas for land reclamation Enlisting workers mostly from Entre Rios Province these latter established a neighborhood Villa Urquiza there in 1887 2 nbsp The Immigrants Hotel built on the Catalinas wharf and opened in 1911These docks became the northern and southern points of entry into Puerto Madero upon its inaugural in 1897 Catalinas Norte was later chosen as the site for the Hotel de Inmigrantes a facility built to temporarily house the over 100 000 annual immigrant arrivals and completed in 1911 3 Following the construction of the modern Port of Buenos Aires from 1911 to 1925 both Catalinas docks fell into disuse and October 31 1945 the Catalinas Warehouses properties were sold to Yatahi S A A lot facing Cordoba Avenue was in turn resold in 1949 to a State enterprise created during the administration of Juan Peron Atlas S A This entity built the Alas Building and an adjacent lot was used to build the Peronist ALEA publishing house redeveloped as Microsoft s South American headquarters in 2000 The bulk of the land totaling 39 110 m 429 000 ft north of these buildings continued vacant for decades A further 24 200 m 260 000 ft were owned by Otto Bemberg and Company which opened the Retiro Park an amusement park there in 1939 the rest was later mostly used as parking lots 1 Early plans edit The underutilized state of an area so close to the financial and administrative center of the city prompted the Municipal Department of Planning in 1956 to draft an urban renewal plan for the district This envisaged the construction of a highway that would extend from Tigre to La Plata as well as rezoning Catalinas to allow for the construction of office buildings of up to 70 floors This district per these plans would ultimately be known as the Catalinas Gateway to Buenos Aires The City Office of Regulatory Planning OPRBA further specified in its revised master plan of 1958 that construction of skyscrapers in downtown Buenos Aires would be prohibited and limited these to the Catalinas district Mayor Hernan Giralt presented a project to the City Council for the development of an area of hotels an office and retail center a location for shipping companies and air travel a recreation center and a large area for parking and on February 3 1960 the Argentine National Congress authorized the City to purchase land north of Catalinas for the purpose The Catalinas Norte Commission was established in 1961 but a subsequent political and economic crisis caused the project to stall and ultimately be discarded 1 The final draft edit nbsp 1955 Construction of the Alas Tower and the demolition of warehouses initiated development in the Catalinas Norte area nbsp The Sheraton Hotel was the first high rise in Catalinas Norte proper nbsp IBM Tower in the complex nbsp Northern section nbsp Southern sectionThe coup d etat that toppled President Arturo Illia in 1966 led to the dissolution of OPRBA Mayor Eugenio Schettini instructed the Municipal Department of Architecture and Urbanism MCBA to design a new simpler plan that would limit permits for office high rises A municipal ordinance in 1967 parceled the land in accordance with the 1958 master plan and lots were sold to Aerolineas Argentinas Conurban S A IBM Impresit Sideco Kokourek S A SEGBA the state owned city electric utility Sheraton and the Argentine Industrial Union UIA Retiro Park was bulldozed and the Buenos Aires Japanese Gardens therein were relocated to their present Palermo Woods location The MCBA in turn retained four areas opened three parking lots and built two promenades Carlos Della Paolera and Ingeniero Butty 1 Development edit Ground was broken on the first buildings in the complex the Kokourek Group s Conurban Tower in April 1969 and the Sheraton Buenos Aires Hotel amp Convention Center on June 26 Work began on the Carlos Pellegrini Tower for the UIA in 1970 and on the Catalinas Norte Tower for Impresit Sideco in 1972 The Conurban Tower was inaugurated in 1973 Carlos Pellegrini in 1974 and Catalinas Norte in 1975 Work then began on the Madero Tower so named for its Eduardo Madero Avenue address in 1976 and in 1979 the IBM Tower These high rises while not the first in Buenos Aires to incorporate elements of the International Style such as curtain walls became the first to do so as a group SEPRA Arquitectos a prominent Argentine architectural firm designed the Sheraton Hotel and the Catalinas Norte Tower 1 The implosion of the dictatorship s economic policies in 1981 led to a suspension in new developments for the area however as well as a sharp decline in new construction as a whole A subsequent economic recovery that followed Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo s 1991 Convertibility Plan prompted renewed interest among developers and from 1995 to 1998 the Consultatio Group developed the Alem and Catalinas Plaza twin towers and IRSA Laminar Plaza all designed by SEPRA The final addition to the complex during the 1990s was the Bank Boston Tower The Postmodern high rise designed by Cesar Pelli was completed in 2001 and at 137 meters 450 ft would become the tallest in the district 1 Expansion to the south edit The flurry of new construction also led to the redevelopment of the southern end of MCBA s redevelopment district located in the San Nicolas ward The Bouchard Tower and Loma Negra s Fortabat Tower both designed by SEPRA were built between 1991 and 1995 The Republica Building designed by Pelli for the now defunct Banco Republica was completed in 1996 with Telefonica de Argentina as its chief tenant The Microsoft Building by Mario Roberto Alvarez opened in 2001 and Bouchard Plaza designed by Hellmuth Obata and Kassabaum for the La Nacion news and publishing group opened in 2004 4 Sale of last remaining lots edit The complex which by 2004 included 15 buildings totalling over 540 000 m 5 8 million ft was in the news during 2009 and 2010 when Mayor Mauricio Macri obtained the City Legislature s approval to sell the remaining three undeveloped lots 5 The combined land is zoned to house up to 120 000 m 1 3 million ft of new office space 6 and the city sanctioned the future construction of high rises of up to 50 stories and 150 m 492 ft in height slightly more than the tallest building currently in Catalinas 7 The third and last lot was sold on November 18 2010 to Banco Macro The other lots had been sold to IRSA and Consultatio earlier in the year and the combined sales netted 386 million Argentine pesos us 99 million or us 6 866 per m us 639 per ft 8 Projects approved for these lots during 2011 include the Macro Tower a 130 metres 430 ft headquarters designed by Cesar Pelli 9 the 155 metres 509 ft Consultatio Tower by Beccar Varela amp Associates 10 and the 29 story IRSA headquarters designed by Miguel Baudizzone and Jorge Lestard 10 BBVA Banco Frances the fifth largest bank in Argentina announced in 2013 that it would relocate its headquarters to the Consultatio Tower upon the building s completion 11 One last potential zone for future development a 5 694 m 613 000 ft property alongside the Alas Building remains in use as a parking lot Overview editExisting and approved commercial real estate in Catalinas Plaza Building Completed floors Height in m ft Area in m ft Edificio Alas 1957 41 141 463 99 000 1 065 000Sheraton Buenos Aires 1972 23 91 299 62 000 667 000Torre Conurban 1973 25 95 312 26 217 282 000Torre Carlos Pellegrini 1974 31 121 397 35 000 377 000Torre Catalinas Norte 1975 29 109 358 34 000 366 000Torre Madero 1980 28 96 315 33 767 363 000IBM Tower 1983 19 85 279 31 000 334 000Torre Bouchard 1994 30 110 361 36 025 388 000Torre Fortabat 1995 23 85 279 17 000 183 000Edificio Republica 1996 22 91 299 35 369 381 000Torre Alem Plaza 1998 32 128 420 38 000 409 000Torre Catalinas Plaza 1998 29 115 377 34 000 366 000Edificio Laminar Plaza 1999 20 72 5 238 35 720 384 000Edificio Microsoft 2001 12 57 187 15 800 170 000Torre BankBoston 2001 33 137 450 45 000 484 000Torre Bouchard Plaza 2004 26 100 328 65 000 700 000Torre Consultatio BBVA 2015 33 155 508 76 000 817 000Torre Macro 2016 28 130 426 35 500 382 000Torre IRSA 2017 29 99 325 55 500 597 000References edit a b c d e f g 1 Archived 2011 09 08 at the Wayback Machine Contreras Leonel Rascacielos Portenos 1580 2005 Comision para la Preservacion del Patrimonio Historico Cultural de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires in Spanish Historia de Villa Urquiza Archived 2009 11 09 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Rock David Argentina 1516 1982 University of California Press 1987 La Nacion in Spanish Infobae in Spanish Clarin in Spanish El Cronista permanent dead link in Spanish Clarin in Spanish Banco Macro avanza con el plan para construir el edificio corporativo InfoBae a b Tres rascacielos transformaran Catalinas La Nacion El BBVA Frances pago 1 200 millones y se quedo con la nueva torre de Costantini Cronista 12 July 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Catalinas Norte Guia de Catalinas Norte in Spanish 34 35 43 S 58 22 17 W 34 59528 S 58 37139 W 34 59528 58 37139 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Catalinas Norte amp oldid 1136758540, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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