The McCoy Center[2] is an office building located in Columbus, Ohio. The building was acquired by JPMorgan Chase & Co. with its 2004 merger with Bank One Corporation. Formally known as the Corporate Center Columbus (or more often and colloquially "Polaris"), the building was renamed after the merger to honor the McCoy family, who led the Columbus-based Bank One for three generations. Inside is a gift shop, Starbucks, Which Wich?, Saladworks, recreational game room, shipping center, car rental, nurse's station, health & wellness center, one cafeteria, a bistro, multiple Chase automated teller machines, and a personal banker.[1] The building is located off Polaris Parkway, home of the Polaris Fashion Place mall.

The McCoy Center
Map
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeOffice[1]
Location1111 Polaris Parkway, Columbus, OH 43240
Columbus
Coordinates40°8′28″N 82°59′50″W / 40.14111°N 82.99722°W / 40.14111; -82.99722
Opening1996 [1]
Cost$242 million[1]
Technical details
Floor area2,000,000 sq ft (185,800 m2)[1]

The facility—¼ mile from end to end—houses approximately 13,000 employees in a space equal in square footage to the Empire State Building. With four floors and 2 million square feet (190,000 m2), it is the largest JPMorgan Chase & Co. facility in the world, the largest office building in the Columbus, Ohio area, and the second largest single-tenant office building in the United States behind The Pentagon,[1] from which the McCoy Center has borrowed its way-finding system. Only a handful of office buildings in the U.S. - the 5.7 million-square-foot Warren G. Magnuson Health Sciences Building in Seattle and the 4.4 million-square-foot McDermott Building in San Antonio among them - are bigger.[3]

Starting in 2017, Chase began a $200 million renovation of the facility which is still ongoing[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f "Chase Thriving in region". Archived from the original on 2019-11-06.
  2. ^ Weese, Evan (October 28, 2016). "PHOTOS: Inside JPMorgan Chase's sprawling McCoy Center at Polaris". Columbus Business First. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  3. ^ Williams, Mark. "Chase Building: a city unto itself". The Columbus Dispatch.
  4. ^ Navera, Tristan (November 20, 2017). "Photos: Inside Chase's $200M redo of its Polaris headquarters". Columbus Business First. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
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