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New York Architecture
Images- Midtown Exxon
Building |
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architect
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Harrison, Abramovitz &
Harris |
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location
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1251
Sixth Ave., bet W49 and W50. |
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date
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1971 |
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style
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International Style II
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construction
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229m, 750ft, 54 floors. steel
structure, limestone
The vertical facade striping consists of
narrow limestone-clad piers as vertical structural members, with a similar
structural system used on the other buildings within the new complex. The
windows and opaque spandrels form continuous glass stripes -- an automatic
washing machine that slides down the facade is used in washing the windows
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type
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Office Building |
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Part of the Rockefeller
Center Extension (also known as XYZ plan) |
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notes
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1251 Avenue of the Americas was built
in 1967-1971 as the second building in the Rockefeller Center
Extension across Sixth Avenue, with the Exxon oil company as the
main occupant. |
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The first plans for the three new
office towers, called the Exxon Building, McGraw-Hill Building and
Celanese Building, were made in 1963 by Harrison and Abramovitz. The
plan arranged the buildings around a large sunken central plaza
(with entrances to the new buildings, as well as the Rockefeller
Center concourse), with the centermost one placed north-south, at
right angles with the established Manhattan gridline. In the
realized plan, however, all the buildings were placed east-west on
adjacent blocks. |
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Due to the buildings' excess bulk, as
opposed to the allowances given by zoning, the western ends of the
plots were to be used as north-south public promenades running
through each block. |
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The vertical facade striping consists
of narrow limestone-clad piers as vertical structural members, with
a similar structural system used on the other buildings within the
new complex. |
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Facing Sixth Avenue, there is a sunken
plaza with a large pool and fountains as well as trees and the
lifelike bronze statue Out to Lunch, of the same series as the one
outside the former Union
Carbide Building. |
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The 54-storey Exxon building occupies
the plot opposite the RCA
Building (today GE Building), and its vertically accentuated
form rises to the height of 228.5 meters, being the second-tallest
building in the whole Rockefeller Center. |
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contact
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nyc-architecture.com
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