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New York Architecture
Images- Lower Manhattan ONE
NEW YORK PLAZA |
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architect
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Kahn & Jacobs with
William Lescaze & Associates, Architects. Aaron Garfinkel &
Associates, Engineer. George A. Fuller Company, Contractor. Sol G. Atlas
and John P. McGrath, Developers. TrizecHahn, Current Owner. |
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location
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Whitehall
Street at South Street. |
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date
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1969 |
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style
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International
Style II |
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construction
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2.5 million ft2, 50 Stories |
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type
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Office Building |
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images
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notes
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Known
for its "waffle-iron" facade, recently repainted from its
original black, One New York Plaza is most remarkable for its size. Unlike
its slender neighbors which are confined to conventional Lower Manhattan
plots, One New York Plaza profits from an 111,000 ft2 footprint. "New
York Plaza" is one of four buildings, along with Two and Four New
York Plaza and 55 Water Street, constructed on the site of the failed 1959
plan for the Battery Park Urban Renewal Area plan, conceived as modern
housing--later a new home for the New York Stock Exchange--on 7 small
blocks at the southeastern tip of Manhattan. The plan called for the City
to use powers of Urban Renewal to acquire the properties, consolidate them
by eliminating cross streets, and sell the final product to the Exchange.
The firm of Atlas-McGrath, which owned most of the land, successfully
argued in court that the Urban Renewal designation was unnecessary given
their willingness to redevelop the site privately. The court dissolved the
Renewal Area under the condition that Atlas-McGrath develop the site
according to the City's plans. When the Exchange backed out, the developer
was free to use the land at will. The result is four extraordinarily large
buildings, built on two superblocks, the first of which constructed was
One New York Plaza.
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contact
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nyc-architecture.com
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