Norwest Corporation and Subsidiaries, Successor in Interest to United Banks of Colorado, Inc., and Subsidiaries, et al. - Page 10

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               2UBC is a 22-story office building, which was constructed in           
          1954 and has approximately 390,000 square feet of rentable space.           
          2UBC is considered a notable building in Denver because it was              
          the first modern highrise built in the city and was the first               
          highrise designed by I.M. Pei.  3UBC is a four-story office                 
          building, which was constructed in 1958 and has approximately               
          115,000 square feet of rentable space.  Throughout the 1970s,               
          2UBC was primarily leased to non-Bank tenants, and 3UBC was                 
          wholly occupied by the Bank.  3UBC served as the Bank's                     
          headquarters prior to completion in 1983 of One United Bank                 
          Center Building (1UBC).  See infra sec. II.A.3.b.                           
               During the 1970s, LBC also owned land on the Broadway-                 
          Lincoln block between 2UBC and 3UBC and east of 2UBC extending to           
          Lincoln Street.  There were improvements on that land                       
          constituting an enclosed courtyard.  On the corner of Lincoln               
          Street and 17th Avenue of the Broadway-Lincoln block were a                 
          glass-enclosed restaurant and a small office building, both of              
          which were owned by LBC.                                                    
               During the 1970s, LBC owned a portion of a block in downtown           
          Denver, Colorado, that is bounded by 17th Avenue to the south, by           
          18th Avenue to the north, by Lincoln Street to the west, and by             
          Sherman Street to the east (the Lincoln-Sherman block).  That               
          block is directly to the east of and across Lincoln Street from             
          the Broadway-Lincoln block.  During the 1970s and throughout some           






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