|
notes
|
Was demolished just 13
years after it was completed and replaced by the Bankers Trust Co.
Building.
The office tower, located at the northwest
corner of Wall, Nassau and Broad Streets - the most famous intersection in
business history - is the product of a long cycle of construction and
reconstruction that tells a story about the intersection of the
architectural, engineering, business and real estate forces that have
shaped New York City.
Long occupied by commercial uses, the value
of the lot at the corner of Wall and Nassau Streets rose more than tenfold
by 1896 when the owners decided to replace a 6-story structure, the Union
Building, with a 300-foot tall tower. The slender Gillender
Building - then fourth tallest in the city - rose 22 stories on a site
of only 26 x 73 feet.
Twelve years later the building and lot
were sold to the Manhattan Trust Company for the highest price ever
recorded in Manhattan: over $800 a square foot, according to the New York
Times. The same year, the Bankers Trust Company, which absorbed the
Manhattan Trust, negotiated a lease on the adjoining L-shaped lot, home to
the 7-story Stevens Building. The company decided to replace the
Gillender - then the tallest building ever razed - and the Stevens with a
much larger structure on a combined lot of 93 x 96 feet. At 41-stories,
the new building was the tallest banking building in the world when it
opened in 1912
Fewer than 20 years later, the Bankers
Trust Company expanded yet again by acquiring three additional neighbors:
the 8-story Astor Building at 10 Wall Street and 9 Pine Street, the
10-story 7 Pine Street, and the turn-of-the-century Hanover
National Bank. Rather than start from scratch again, the company opted
to construct an annex to the original tower, designed by Shreve, Lamb
and Harmon, architects of the Empire State Building. This L-shaped Art
Deco annex more than tripled the building's rentable area
Today the exterior of the Bankers Trust
Building remains unchanged and, as a protected landmark, will do so in
perpetuity
|