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Trianon (Frankfurt am Main)

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Skyscraper in Frankfurt, Germany
Trianon
General information
TypeCommercial offices
LocationMainzer Landstraße 16-24
Frankfurt
Hesse, Germany
Coordinates50°06′45″N 8°40′00″E / 50.11250°N 8.66667°E / 50.11250; 8.66667
Construction started1990
Completed1993
Height
Roof186 m (610 ft)
Technical details
Floor count45
4 below ground
Floor area118,000 m (1,270,000 sq ft)
Lifts/elevators23
Design and construction
Architect(s)Novotny Mähner Assoziierte
Hentrich Petschnigg & Partner
Albert Speer & Partner
DeveloperFVH Frankfurter Vermögens-Holding
Structural engineerIngenieurbüro Fritz Nötzold
Philipp Holzmann AG
Other information
Public transit access Taunusanlage
References

Trianon is a 45-storey, 186 m (610 ft) skyscraper in the Westend-Süd district of Frankfurt, Germany, completed in 1993. For several decades until 2024, it served as the headquarters for DekaBank; other tenants are Deutsche Bundesbank (since 2015) and Franklin Templeton. Atop the building is an inverted pyramid suspended from the three corners. As of 2023, the tower is the eighth-tallest skyscraper in Frankfurt and also in Germany.

The Trianon's layout is roughly the shape of an equilateral triangle, the corners of which are formed by three-sided towers. The end is an inverted three-sided pyramid on the roof. It is the first structure in Germany to use high-strength concrete.

Ownership

In 2007, DekaBank sold the building to the Morgan Stanley European Office Fund (MSEOF). A 57% interest in the building was later transferred to the real estate investment fund Morgan Stanley P2 Value.

In June 2015, Morgan Stanley and Madison Real Estate sold the building to the US investor NorthStar Reality Europe for the equivalent of US$540 million. In November 2018 NorthStar Reality Europe sold Trianon to the South Korean financial consortium IGIS Asset Management and Hana Financial Investment for US$758 million.

In June 2024, Trianon's owner Geschaeftshaus am Gendarmenmarkt filed for insolvency in a Frankfurt court.

Gallery

  • Trianon as seen from Main Tower Trianon as seen from Main Tower
  • View from the base View from the base

Skyscrapers in Frankfurt

Skyscrapers in Frankfurt About OpenStreetMapsMaps: terms of use 500m
550yds 30MainTor 29Senckenberg Turm 28Global Tower 27WinX 26Japan Center 25Garden Tower 24Gallileo 23City-Haus 22Frankfurter Büro Center 21Four 20The Spin 19One Forty West 18Eurotower 17Skyper 16Marienturm 15Deutsche Bank Twin Towers 14Westend Gate 13Silberturm 12Taunusturm 11Opernturm 10Grand Tower 8Trianon 7Omniturm 6ONE 5Tower 185 4Main Tower 3Westendstraße 1 2Messeturm 1Commerzbank Tower  
Tallest skyscrapers in Frankfurt am Main
1 Commerzbank Tower
2 Messeturm
3 Westendstraße 1
4 Main Tower
5 Tower 185
6 ONE
7 Omniturm
8 Trianon
9 Seat of the European Central Bank
10 Grand Tower
11 Opernturm
12 Taunusturm
13 Silberturm
14 Westend Gate
15 Deutsche Bank Twin Towers
16 Marienturm
17 Skyper
18 Eurotower
19 One Forty West
20 The Spin
21 Four
22 Frankfurter Büro Center
23 City-Haus
24 Gallileo
25 Garden Tower
26 Japan Center
27 WinX
28 Global Tower
29 Senckenberg Turm
30 MainTor

See also

References

  1. "Trianon". CTBUH Skyscraper Center.
  2. "Emporis building ID 109678". Emporis. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  3. "Trianon". SkyscraperPage.
  4. Trianon at Structurae
  5. Tom Sims and Matthias Inverardi (25 June 2024), Frankfurt skyscraper owner files for insolvency as property crisis grips Reuters.
  6. "Announcement" (Press release). DEKA. April 26, 2007. Retrieved 25 July 2013.
  7. Girda, Alex (July 17, 2015). "Trianon Trades for No Small Change". Commercial Property Executive. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  8. Kalinsoki, Gail (December 14, 2018). "NorthStar Realty Europe Sells Frankfurt's Trianon Tower". Commercial Property Executive. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  9. Tom Sims and Matthias Inverardi (25 June 2024), Frankfurt skyscraper owner files for insolvency as property crisis grips Reuters.

External links

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