Constellation Place (formerly MGM Tower) is a 35-story, 492-foot (150 m) skyscraper in the Los Angeles, California community of Century City. It houses the headquarters of Houlihan Lokey, ICM Partners, and International Lease Finance Corporation (ILFC).
It once housed the corporate headquarters of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), but MGM moved to Beverly Hills, California after August 19, 2011.
Maps, Directions, and Place Reviews
History
Constellation Place was constructed from 2001 to 2003. It is 26th-tallest building in Los Angeles, and the 5th-tallest in Century City. It was the first high-rise to be completed in the 21st century in Los Angeles. The building was designed by Johnson Fain Partners, and has 700,000 sq ft (65,000 m2) of Class A office space.
Before August 19, 2011, the headquarters were in the MGM Tower in Century City, Los Angeles. Halfway through the design building process of what would become the MGM Tower, MGM agreed to be the lead tenant. In 2000 MGM announced that it was moving its headquarters to a newly constructed building in Century City. The building opened in 2003.
In 2010, as MGM emerged from bankruptcy protection, it announced that it planned to move the headquarters to Beverly Hills, California so the company could remove around $5 billion in debt. The lease in Century City was scheduled to expire in 2018. Vincent and Eller said that MGM's per square foot monthly rent would be far lower in the Beverly Hills building than in the MGM Tower. Larry Kozmont, a real estate consultant not involved in the move, said "It's a prudent move for them. Downsizing and relocating to a space that is still prominent but not overly ostentatious and burdened by expenses is fundamental for their survival."
Office Movers Los Angeles Video
Facilities
The ILFC has its headquarters on the top two floors of the building, with 170 employees as of 2007. The CEO's penthouse office has a working fireplace.
Alex Yemenidjian, a former chairperson and chief executive of MGM, devised the headquarters space. Roger Vincent and Claudia Eller of the Los Angeles Times said that "Yemenidjian spared no expense in building out the studio's space with such Las Vegas-style flourishes as towering marble pillars and a grand spiral staircase lined with a wall of awards."
Scott Johnson, the architect, designed the bottom third of the tower to have extra-large floors so MGM executives could have outdoor decks. The marble used in the MGM spaces was imported from Italy. MGM received a dedicated private garage, a dedicated security checkpoint, and a dedicated elevator bank. That way, celebrities who visited the complex could enter and exit the building without entering public spaces. Three screening rooms were placed in the tower. One of them was a 100-seat theater on the ground floor. As of December 2010 International Creative Management controls the theater. The 14th floor lobby housed the executive suites and a wall of Oscar statuettes for Academy Award-winning films. The street that leads to the building's garage was renamed MGM Drive. A large MGM logo was placed at the top of the building. In December 2010 MGM rented 200,000 sq ft (19,000 m2) of space in the MGM Tower, and it paid nearly $5 per square foot per month in rent.
As of 2012 it was the first high-rise in Los Angeles to use electricity-generating fuel cells as a source of power. The two Bloom Energy Servers may generate up to 400 kilowatts of power, which would supply one third of the electricity used to power the building.
Tenants
- Houlihan Lokey headquarters - 4th, 5th, 6th Floors
- ICM Partners corporate headquarters
- International Lease Finance Corporation (ILFC) corporate headquarters - Suite 3400
- Fortress Investment Group - 16th floor
Source of the article : Wikipedia
EmoticonEmoticon