Bank of Lisbon
Bank of Lisbon, later Bank of Lisbon International, was a South African bank established by the Portuguese community. In 1995, it merged with the Mercantile Bank. Its historical building was torn down in 2019.
History
The bank was established in 1965 by three Portuguese banks: Banco Nacional Ultramarino (now part of Caixa Geral de Depósitos), Banco Português do Atlântico (now part of Millennium BCP and Banco de Angola (at the time when Angola was under Portuguese rule, holding 30% each of the shares, as well as a 10% interest from General Mining and Finance Corporation.[1] In 1986, Américo Amorim started holding shares.[2] By 1989, the bank had 28 branches in South Africa.[3] In 1995, the bank merged with the Mercantile Bank.[4]
Headquarters
The bank's longtime headquarters in Johannesburg were begun construction built in 1967 and was completed in 1970. It was designed by Gluckman, De Beer, Margoles and Partners. It had 26 floors above the ground and four basement parking levels.[5]
A fire damaged the building in September 2018. On 24 November 2019, it was demolished as consequence of the fire, with approval from the provincial government of Gauteng.[6] By May 2022, its former site was surrounded by a fence, but was now being used as a dumping site.[7]
References
- ^ Bank of Lisbon and South Africa Limited - Meetings of the board of directors
- ^ Quando Maria Filomena Mónica entrevistou Américo Amorim. "Acho que os filhos não têm de ser herdeiros de nada"
- ^ Kraft, S. (1989, May 28). Former colonies slow to break free. Houston Chronicle (Pre-1997 Fulltext)
- ^ Mercantile sale attracts scores of bidders, says bank
- ^ Bank of Lisbon Building Johannesburg - Demolished
- ^ An end of an era: Bank of Lisbon – a site of tragedy – destroyed
- ^ PICS: 3 years after demolition, site of Bank of Lisbon building now a rubbish dump