Chamber of Commerce Building (Berkeley, California)

Chamber of Commerce Building is a historical building in downtown Berkeley, California. The Chamber of Commerce Building was built in 1925. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1985.[2][3] The twelve-story Chamber of Commerce Building was the first highrise building in Berkeley. The building was designed by Walter H. Ratcliff Jr. for the Central Berkeley Building Company. The Berkeley Chamber of Commerce headquarters was on the top floor from 1925 to 1938. The Chamber of Commerce moved across the street to 100 Berkeley Square in 1838. In 1905, the Berkeley Chamber of Commerce was founded. In 1927, on the ground floor the American Trust Bank Berkeley Branch opened. In 1938, the building's name changed to the American Trust Building. The famous Stanford Axe award, was stored in American Trust vault and was the stole by the University of California on its way to the Greek Theater in an armored car on April 3, 1930. Later Wells Fargo Bank moved in and the building became the Wells Fargo Building. The building was listed as a City of Berkeley Landmark on December 17, 1984. [4][5][6]

Chamber of Commerce Building
Chamber of Commerce Building
Chamber of Commerce Building (Berkeley, California) is located in Oakland, California
Chamber of Commerce Building (Berkeley, California)
Chamber of Commerce Building (Berkeley, California) is located in California
Chamber of Commerce Building (Berkeley, California)
Chamber of Commerce Building (Berkeley, California) is located in the United States
Chamber of Commerce Building (Berkeley, California)
Location22140–2144 Shattuck Ave. & 2071–2089 Center St, Berkeley, California
Coordinates37.870508°N 122.268872°W / 37.870508; -122.268872
Built1925 (1925)
ArchitectJames W. Plachek
NRHP reference No.85001916[1]
Added to NRHPAugust 29, 1985

James W. Plachek designed a number of other buildings in Berkeley, including: Berkeley Public Library, Corder Building, New Hotel Carquinez, UC Theatre, schools, and civic buildings. Architect James W. Plachek office was is the Heywood Building.[7]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.