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・ U.S. Foreign Policy (book)
・ U.S. Forest Service airtanker scandal
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・ U.S. Games Systems, Inc.
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・ U.S. Bank Center
U.S. Bank Center (Milwaukee)
・ U.S. Bank Center (Phoenix)
・ U.S. Bank Centre
・ U.S. Bank Championship in Milwaukee
・ U.S. Bank Plaza
・ U.S. Bank Plaza (Boise)
・ U.S. Bank Plaza (Minneapolis)
・ U.S. Bank Plaza (Sacramento)
・ U.S. Bank Stadium
・ U.S. Bank Tower (Denver)
・ U.S. Bank Tower (disambiguation)
・ U.S. Bank Tower (Los Angeles)
・ U.S. Bank Tower (Sacramento)
・ U.S. Biathlon Association
・ U.S. Bicycle Route 1


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U.S. Bank Center (Milwaukee) : ウィキペディア英語版
U.S. Bank Center (Milwaukee)

U.S. Bank Center is a skyscraper located in downtown Milwaukee, Wisconsin, noted for being the tallest building in the state of Wisconsin, and the tallest building between Chicago and Minneapolis.〔〔 Standing and 42 stories tall, it surpassed the Milwaukee City Hall as both the tallest building in Milwaukee and the state. Topped off August 29, 1972, and completed in 1973, it was the headquarters for what eventually became Firstar Corporation from 1973 to 2001. The building was designed by Bruce Graham and James DeStefano of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and engineered by Fazlur Khan. Presently, the building is home to the headquarters of Foley & Lardner, Robert W. Baird & Company, and Sensient Technologies Corporation. It also serves as the Milwaukee office for U.S. Bank, IBM, KPMG, CBRE, and Bud Selig, the former Commissioner of Major League Baseball.
==History==
Plans were initially announced by First Wisconsin National Bank to construct a new headquarters building on August 21, 1969. Although no architectural designs were complete at the time of its announcement, bank officials indicated it would rise at least 40 stories.〔 On March 18, 1971, bank officials unveiled the final design as a 42-story, skyscraper, encompassing an entire block fronting on East Wisconsin Avenue.〔 Designed by James DeStefano of the Chicago office of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, with Fitzhugh Scott Architects of Milwaukee serving as an associate planner for the project, the name of the tower was announced as the First Wisconsin Center.〔
Near the end of construction, a pair of fatalities occurred at the work site. In May 1973, a foreman died after being struck by a dump truck. That following July, one worker died and four others were injured when a derrick utilized in the installation of a aluminum panel broke free and fell 41 floors to the ground.〔 The building was topped-out on August 29, 1972, with the installation of the final steel beam atop the tower. In addition to bank officials, mayor Henry Maier, county executive John Doyne and Wisconsin governor Patrick Lucey were in attendance for the ceremony.〔 The building was initially occupied on September 4, 1973, and celebrated its official opening on October 6, 1973.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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