150 Nassau Street (également appelé Park Place Tower et anciennement American Tract Society Building) est un bâtiment de 23 étages et de 88 mètres de hauteur situé dans le quartier financier de Lower Manhattan à New York. Il se trouve à l'angle sud-est de Spruce Street et Nassau Street, à côté du 8 Spruce Street, de l'ancien immeuble du New York Times et de l'hôtel de ville de New York.

1. Historique

Le 150 Nassau Street a été construit en 1894 – 1895 comme siège de l'American Tract Society (ATS), une organisation à but non lucratif, non sectaire mais évangélique qui distribuait des tracts religieux. Conçu par l'architecte R. H. Robertson, il est l'un des premiers gratte-ciel construits à partir d'un squelette en acier et faisait partie des plus hauts bâtiments de New York lorsqu'il a été achevé. 150 Nassau Street était situé près de Park Row, qui abritait le siège de nombreux journaux. Après le départ d'ATS, le journal New York Sun a occupé le building de 1914 à 1919. La partie comprise entre les 10ème et 23ème étage a été convertie en condominiums entre 1999 et 2002. En 1999, il a été désigné comme un monument protégé par la New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission.

1. Description

Le 150 Nassau Street a été conçu par Robert Henderson Robertson dans le style roman. Le 150 Nassau Street a été l'un des premiers gratte-ciel de New York à utiliser un cadre squelettique en acier . Il est conçu avec des éléments d'architecture néo-romane et néo-Renaissance .

1. Références

« American Tract Society Building », New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, 15 juin 1999 « American Tract Society's 20-Story Office Building, New York City », Engineering News, vol. 32,‎ décembre 1894, p. 526–528 (lire en ligne) « Annual report », American Tract Society, vol. 71,‎ 1896, p. 121–124 Slocum, Stephen E., Jr. (1975). The American Tract Society, 1825-1975 (doctoral dissertation). New York University.

1. Liens externes

Portail de New York Portail de l’architecture et de l’urbanisme

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Chamber of Commerce Building (Manhattan)

The Chamber of Commerce Building is a commercial building on 65 Liberty Street, between Liberty Place and Broadway, in the Financial District of Manhattan in New York City, New York, U.S. Designed by architect James Barnes Baker, the four-story Beaux-Arts building was constructed between 1901 and 1902 as the first headquarters to be built specifically for the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York. The facade is a New York City designated landmark, and the building is listed on both the New York State Register of Historic Places and the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) as a National Historic Landmark. It is also a contributing property to the Wall Street Historic District, listed on the NRHP. The structure is clad with Vermont marble and includes a rusticated masonry base, a short colonnade, and a copper mansard roof. The facade formerly contained statues of John Jay, Alexander Hamilton, and DeWitt Clinton, which had been designed by Daniel Chester French and Philip Martiny. The second story contained the Chamber of Commerce's Great Hall, hung with portraits of important individuals from American history. The rest of the building was largely devoted to offices or meeting rooms for the chamber. Over the years, numerous stores and banks have rented out the ground story. The building's design was largely positively received upon its completion. The building was constructed after wealthy members of the Chamber of Commerce raised funds. The architecture firm of Helmle and Corbett remodeled the interior and built a new floor in 1922, resulting in changes to the mansard roof. French and Martiny's sculptures, installed in 1903, were removed in 1926 due to severe deterioration. After the Chamber of Commerce relocated to Midtown Manhattan in 1979, the building stood vacant for ten years. The International Commercial Bank of China bought the building in 1989, and the interior was subsequently renovated by Haines Lundberg Waehler.
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Singer Building

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One Liberty Plaza

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