
Jaccard Building
The Jaccard Building was a Romanesque Chicago School commercial block at the northeast corner of Broadway and Olive Streets, rising approximately eight stories above one of downtown St. Louis's busiest intersections. Its broad arched windows, bay projections, and rich terra-cotta ornament made it a landmark on the Broadway financial corridor in the final decades of the nineteenth century.
The building's origins and architect remain unconfirmed, but it was standing by 1885, when the National Bank of Commerce — then known simply as the Bank of Commerce — relocated there from its previous home at Fourth and Olive. The bank occupied the building for nearly two decades, during which time it posted signage identifying the structure as the "Bank of Commerce Building," the name under which it appears in most contemporary photographs and city directories. By the turn of the century the bank had outgrown the space. In 1901 it commissioned Isaac Taylor to design a new eleven-story headquarters at the southeast corner of the same intersection — directly across Broadway — and moved into that building when it opened in 1902. The Jaccard Building, now vacated by its most prominent tenant, continued to stand at the northeast corner. The building was demolished ca. 1912–1913 to clear the site for the Marquette Building, a nineteen-story Classical Revival skyscraper designed by Eames & Young and completed in 1914. The Marquette Building stands on the site today.
