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BOK Tower

Standing right in front of you is a sheer rectangular block of closely spaced white steel ribs stretching skyward, crowned by a distinct red BOK logo near the flat roof.

This structure is a staggering monument to a very specific kind of corporate ambition. In the 1970s, John and Joe Williams of the Williams Companies spearheaded a massive, highly controversial urban renewal effort. Urban renewal was a mid-century planning strategy that often meant bulldozing older neighborhoods in the name of modernization. Here, they cleared out nine square blocks of downtown Tulsa, demolishing almost all of the city's oldest architecture built before 1910 to make way for this mega-project. You can check your screen to see the sheer footprint of this endeavor.

The ambition was ruthless, but it also collided sharply with practical budgets. John Williams hired Minoru Yamasaki. Yamasaki originally presented a model featuring two side-by-side towers of about thirty stories each. Williams wanted a far more dramatic skyline. But he also knew building two massive foundations and two complex elevator systems was a huge drain on funds. His solution was incredibly blunt. He literally picked up one model and stacked it on top of the other. Thus, the 52-story, 667-foot giant in front of you was born, saving cash while creating what was Oklahoma's tallest building until 2011.

Take a look at your app to see the undeniable half-scale resemblance to the World Trade Center's North Tower. That eerie architectural twinship took on a heartbreaking dimension on September 11, 2001. Energy traders right here in BOK Tower were on a routine conference call with Cantor Fitzgerald in New York, just above the impact zone. As the realization set in that help would not arrive, the Tulsa employees frantically dictated the New York workers' last messages to their spouses and children until the lines went dead. In the terrible days that followed, Williams employees converted their Tulsa offices into a 24-hour phone bank for the families of the Cantor Fitzgerald victims.

The tower has weathered its own local crises and constant modernizations. A catastrophic city water main rupture in 2005 inundated the basement and electrical vaults, knocking out power and forcing a massive sixteen million dollar repair. Yet, the building keeps evolving, most recently making headlines in 2026 when it was purchased by Cherokee Nation Businesses for forty-two million dollars, a highly unusual twist of tribal jurisdiction since the tower actually sits squarely on Muscogee Nation land.

The building's offices and new amenities are open weekdays from eight in the morning until five the next morning, but remain closed on weekends. Leaving behind the rigid, towering steel of this controversial skyline centerpiece, we are going to seek out the ancient, organic history rooted deeply in the land itself as we walk two minutes over to Tulsa parks and recreation.

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