The attention to detail and the style and the charm of this building (which is no towering place, really) make their full impact at street level, though this is one of those buildings you remember if you have ever seen it while in the Bryant Park area.
Instead of the lengthy Wikipedia article, I am quoting from a blog about NYC here ( aviewoncities.com)-- it has a more personal style of writing...
In 1924, this stunning black-and-gold building added new character to New York's Bryant Park area
.
Something Different
For Raymond Hood, what started out as a small job designing
radiator
covers became so much more. When the American Radiator and Standard
Sanitary Company decided to build a new showroom and office building on
40th Street near Fifth Avenue,
the company turned to the man who had been creating their radiator
covers and asked him to come up with a design for their new
headquarters. Just a few months prior, Hood had become instantly famous
for his unique winning design for the Chicago Tribune building and American Radiator was just one of many companies that pursued his talents.
Hood didn't let them down. The result was a 23-story, free standing mid-block office tower that was like nothing else in the Bryant Park
neighborhood... or in all of NYC, for that matter. Hood's design, which
called for a black brick exterior, was far different from the stodgy
brownstones that were prevalent in the area. Hood explained that he
chose the black brickwork to "lessen the visual contrast between the
walls and the windows and give the tower an effect of solidity and
massiveness". The result was stunning.
The tower is neo-Gothic as is the magnificent bronze
and
marble entryway. Other aspects of the building are more akin to Art
Deco, a style that would take the world by storm by the middle of the
1920s. Gilded terra cotta ornaments crown the tower. The four-story
base features bronze plating and black granite. Bronze carved allegories
sit at the top of the base.
The Art Deco Crown
Inside, the lobby was decorated with mirrors and
black marble. The basement once held a large showroom, where the latest
in boilers and furnaces were displayed to the buying public.
The American Radiator Building was officially
declared a New York City Landmark in 1974. It was later sold to the
American Standard Company and then a Japanese firm called Clio Biz. In
the 1990s, British Architect David Chipperfield transformed the building
into the Bryant Park Hotel, a charming boutique establishment.
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