BOK Tower (originally One Williams Center) was constructed in 1976 for The Williams Companies Inc. a petroleum producer in Tulsa, Oklahoma. John Williams, the CEO at the time, liked the look of the recently completed World Trade Center so much that he hired the original architect to build essentially a half-scale version of WTC Tower 1.

The lobby even has marble walls and wall hanginga similar to the old World Trade Center.

  • Trapped In America@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    17 days ago

    Homepage

    Wikipedia Page

    This is actually really cool. I would check it out next time I’m out traveling. But I can’t seem to find whether they’re open to the public or do tours or not. No observatory or restaurant on the top floor either, that I can find.

    Guess it’s time to start “looking at office space” in the Tulsa area :P

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      16 days ago

      Also, downtown Tulsa is super cool. Sweet Art Deco everywhere (we had oil money when the Depression was raging). Wasn’t any nightlife when I was a teen, but it’s lit now!

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      16 days ago

      Worked there a bit in '98! It was sweet then, can’t imagine how cool it is now.

      It’s open to the public, AFAIK, always was. Everything above the 3rd floor or so is just typical office space, though I’ll bet there’s some cool one’s in there now.

      • Trapped In America@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        16 days ago

        Dude, hell yes, thank you for this! The place is definitely going on the list for my next road trip now. I usually run a big loop and I’ve been to Texas more than enough, so I’ve been looking for other things to check out on my way through the south western states.

        • shalafi@lemmy.world
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          16 days ago

          Get out anywhere in downtown Tulsa, have a walk! One of the coolest metro areas I’ve seen. Sweet Art Deco buildings, Echo Point, Greenwood and the Tulsa Race Massacre site, lots to see and do. Lord only knows what they’ve added since, but downtown seems to get cooler every year.

          I know the massacre site sounds depressing, but it’s American history you need to experience. It was worse than merely depressing when I was a teen. No monuments, no bullshit, just a couple of acres of mown grass, concrete basement and sidewalk and street outlines. Nothing else. “Jesus. This was a thriving community?” Most eerie experience of my life puling up there in '89.

          Anyway, don’t miss Echo Point on the bridge! You can stand in an 18" concrete circle and hear your voice echo back at you. No one outside that circle hears it!

  • Bubs12@lemmy.cafe
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    17 days ago

    There is only one of them so I’m going have to call this one quarter-scale.

  • gmtom@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    Imagine looking at that ugly as grey block of a building and being like “this is peak architecture and i must pay massive sums of money to recreate this for myself”

    • turtlesareneat@discuss.online
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      16 days ago

      You have to keep the timing and context in place. It was the mid-50s, the economy was roaring, and they finally invented a way to hang walls and windows off of the structure itself, the curtain wall. This gave way to the International Style, which actually has some interesting and lovely buildings, but many of them look like gross sterile cubes, and they loved that at the time. Ornate buildings like the gothic skyscrapers (we adore so much today) were suddenly seen as old and dirty and dilapidated, giant sheets of glass were “the future,” sterile and gleaming and just unlike anything else, at such a massive scale. And of course so much cheaper than masonry buildings with complex upper floors and decorations, and faster, you could throw them up very quickly.

      Of course after 70 years of this we’ve got a lot different impression. If I were old-money wealthy I’d definitely have a penthouse in one of the old gothic towers, with the outdoor gardens under archways. I don’t even care what city.

    • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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      16 days ago

      Maybe they look better on the inside, I don’t know much about them (and 2 of the 3 I can’t exactly visit now). But yeah, I hate ugly buildings. I feel like architects have somewhat of a moral imperative to make sky scrapers beautiful and free of advertisements and company logos. If you wanna slap some tacky logo on your building at ground level, I’m more okay with it (or at least not radically opposed) but skylines should be beautiful.

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        16 days ago

        It’s way cool on the first couple of levels! The rest is typical office space. Worked there for a brief Y2K stint in '98.

        Given all the sweet Art Deco buildings downtown, they about had no choice but to make it classy.

  • danc4498@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    Anybody got any jet fuel?

    Edit: I assume the downvotes are cause jet fuel doesn’t melt steal beams.