Overview
Salesforce Tower is a major commercial skyscraper located in the central business district of Indianapolis, Indiana, in the United States. Rising to 247 metres (811 feet) with 49 stories, it is the tallest building in the state and a defining element of the city's skyline. Completed in 1990, the tower primarily houses office space and serves as a focal point for downtown employment and commerce. For technical details and a concise building profile see skyscraper information.
Design and construction
The tower was conceived and built in the late 1980s and completed in 1990, reflecting the corporate high‑rise design vocabulary of that era. Its exterior combines glazed façades with stone and metal cladding and is topped by a stepped crown that emphasizes verticality. The structure accommodates standard Class A office infrastructure: multiple passenger elevators, modern mechanical and electrical systems for its time, and life‑safety features required by commercial building codes. Like many large downtown towers, it has been subject to periodic systems upgrades to maintain contemporary standards for tenant comfort and energy performance.
Key characteristics
- Height: 247 m (811 ft).
- Floors: 49 stories of office space.
- Completion: 1990.
- Primary use: Commercial office building with street‑level retail access.
- Location: Downtown core of Indianapolis, Indiana, United States.
History and naming
When it opened in 1990 the building was known as Bank One Tower and served as a prominent regional office for Bank One. After Bank One merged with JPMorgan Chase in 2004, the name was changed to Chase Tower. In 2017 the cloud‑software company Salesforce acquired the building's naming rights and it became Salesforce Tower; such naming arrangements reflect a wider trend of corporate sponsorship for landmark urban properties. The sequence of names traces broader changes in the banking and technology sectors over recent decades.
Uses, tenants and public access
The tower accommodates a mix of tenants typical for a central business district high‑rise, including professional services and corporate offices. Public access is generally limited to the ground‑level lobby and any retail or service outlets on the street frontage; upper floors are private office space. There is no widely advertised public observation deck, and public programming is usually confined to occasional events or exhibitions in the lobby or plaza areas.
Urban significance and maintenance
As Indiana's tallest building, Salesforce Tower is both a symbolic landmark and a practical concentration of downtown office employment. It contributes to the city's tax base and urban density and figures regularly in conversations about downtown development, skyline identity and adaptive reuse of office property. Like comparable buildings of its vintage, it has undergone maintenance cycles and selective modernization to sustain competitiveness in the downtown office market.
Further information
For additional technical specifications, historical records and current tenant information consult municipal property resources and specialist building databases; a concise external profile is available at skyscraper information, while local civic resources describe the tower's role in Indianapolis and Indiana. The building's commercial history is linked to major banking consolidations such as the Bank One–JPMorgan Chase merger and references to Chase Bank appear in accounts of that period.