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In recent years, Downtown Fort Worth has been extremely successful in attracting people back to the central city to live, work, play, shop and learn. Downtown Fort Worth continually serves as a national model for communities looking to restore their city's central city. Numerous new residential, business and commercial projects, as well as an influx of residents into the area, are already building on the momentum of Downtown Fort Worth.
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Office |
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With a 96.2 percent downtown occupancy rate, Fort Worth leads the Texas market for central business direct occupancy. Downtown Fort Worth consists of seven Class A office buildings totaling over 4,913,805 square feet. These centers of Class A office space include the City Center Towers - D.R. Horton Tower (819,929 square feet) and Wells Fargo Tower (716,533 square feet), Burnett Plaza (1,024,627), Jacobs Carter Burgess Plaza (1,025,260), JPMorgan Chase Bank Building (207,600 square feet), Chesapeake Plaza (440,000 square- feet) and Tarrant County College's riverfront campus (900,000 square feet). In addition, there are approximately 37 Class B office buildings with over 3,000,000 square feet of rentable space.
In 2007 an estimated 1,000,000 square feet of new Class A office space was announced for Downtown Fort Worth. Estimated delivery dates range from spring 2007 through 2009.
General Market Statistics
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Amenities |
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Downtown Fort Worth has it all - lively outdoor concerts, laugh-out-loud comedy clubs, 20 screens of box-office hits, art galleries, museums, historical architecture, restaurants ranging from casual to elegant dining, shady parks and plentiful parking. Downtown businesses are centrally located with quick access to civic and administrative buildings, breath taking views, an intermodal transportation center for direct connection to the suburban cities and Downtown Dallas via the Trinity Railway Express and the prestige of having a downtown address. It's no wonder people love working here.

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