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Thursday, June 13, 2013

The wonderful old Woolworth Building

Once the City's tallest building, the Woolworth tower built by the dime store millionaire ( the last Woolworth stores closed in England not all that long ago even though they had long been defunct in the United States)--it has seen a lot of changes....I remember years ago they decided to "modernize" the fancy top structure of the building, with all its terra cotta buttresses etc.

I am not sure, but I think it is being made or has been made into a hotel or apartment spaces too...yes, this from Wikipedia:


In August 2012, The New York Times reported that an investment group led by Alchemy Properties, a New York developer, bought the top 30 floors of the landmark on July 31 for $68 million from the Witkoff Group and Cammeby's International. The firm plans to renovate the space into luxury apartments and convert the penthouse into a five-level living space. The lower 28 floors are still owned by the Witkoff Group and Cammeby International, who plans to lease them as office space.
"It's very exciting for us," said Kenneth S. Horn, president of Alchemy Properties (in the NYT article). "We've done a lot of historic buildings in the city, but this is 'the mama,' as they say."
The project will cost approximately $150 million, according to the article, including its $68 million purchase price. Although apartment prices have not been set, they may sell for as much as $3,000 a square foot, said Howard Lorber, chairman of the brokerage firm Prudential Douglas Elliman. That could mean $7.5 million for a 2,500-square-foot unit. The penthouse at the pinnacle could command more.

But there is more...


We go not to Wikipedia this time but to Fordham University's scholarly site:

Cathedral of Commerce
 The Woolworth Building
The Woolworth Building
233 Broadway, New York City
The Woolworth Building, completed in 1913, stands at a height of 792 feet, 1 inch. Conceived by Frank W. Woolworth, designed by Cass Gilbert and engineered by Gunvald Aus, it was designed and built to be the tallest building in the world.
Early in 1910, F.W. Woolworth decided to erect a building on the southwest corner of Broadway and Park Place. However, it was not the original concept that the building be of such relatively enormous proportions as the Woolworth Building was to become. In November, 1910, the building was projected to be 45 stories, or 625 feet, plus a tower of 86 square feet. Its projected cost was $5 million.
F.W. Woolworth would acquire the surrounding lots in the following months, and the building was to become the length of the entire block front. After the caissons were sunk, Woolworth decided that the current plans for the height of the building (already at 750 feet, making it the would-be tallest building) were too meager, and incresed the planned height. Additional caissons were sunk and provisions were made for the change in the height.
The final cost of the building would be $13.5 million, and while it would have 58 stories, its stories are so large (11-20 ft.) that the building is actually considered to be 79 or 80 conventional stories.
  arcade interior
The express elevator bank and the lobby/arcade
The architect, Cass Gilbert, designed The Woolworth Building with a definite Gothic style. The building's heavy steel frame is well hidden by its Gothic-style and heavily detailed terra cotta shell. The lobby/arcade has a cruciform floor plan, vaulted ceilings and Gothic-style ornamentation. The lobby ceiling is laid with colored glass in Byzantine/Early Christian mosaic style. The marble and bronze around the mailboxes, elevators and doors are in gothic design. The lobby halls include a set of humorous gargoyles depicting the key people in the building's construction. There are murals on either end of the lobby's north-south hallway at the mezzanine level, depicting Labor and Commerce, respectively. The building has arched entryways, also ornamented beautifully. These features and the Gothic tower and exterior design truly make the Woolworth Building worthy of the title Cathedral of Commerce, given by Rev. S. Parkes Cadman at the building's opening. Gilbert resents the label, however claiming that the models used in his design were purely secular structures, and that the Woolworth Building was meant in no way to be religious.
Gunvald Aus Lewis Pierson Edward J. Hogan
(from L-R) Gunvald Aus (engineer), Lewis Pierson (president of Irving Bank), Edward J. Hogan (rental agent)
The Woolworth Building is truly an engineering marvel as well. The building boasted the highest office space to elevator space ratio for any building at the time of its completion, making it very profitable. It also had a new system for elevator safety which contained air cushions on the bottom of the shafts. The elevators traveled as fast as 700 geet per minute. The maintenance and mechanical equipment was housed in a unique manner, in order to gain the most possible useable space. The height of the building alone required state-of-the-art engineering. The caissons had to be sunk to enormous depths in order to reach bedrock, needed for the stability of such an enormous structure.
The culmination of the building's design and construction occured on April 24, 1913, when President Woodrow Wilson pressed a button in the White House, illuminating both the interior and exterior of the Woolworth Building. The building was built to be a great structure as a testament to both the Woolworth Corporation and urban American architecture. F.W. Woolworth intended his building to be dominating and graceful, the best advertisement possible for his company. The Woolworth Building is truly a masterpiece, in all respects.
The Woolworth Building also has a connection with Fordham University. Before the Lincoln Center Campus was built, the University conducted School of Education and Graduate Arts and Sciences courses in space within the Building.


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