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Showing posts with label buildings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label buildings. Show all posts

February 02, 2011

Vienna Moments




music+image

Thank You for your kind comments and visits / Gracias por sus visitas y comentarios.

May 03, 2010

Top of The Rock

Chrysler & MetLife Buildings
Empire State Building
From The GE Building, which is the focal point of the entire Rockefeller Center complex.
The building looks dramatically different when viewing its narrow and wide facades. From 5th Avenue it is an elegant, narrow shaft while looking down 6th Avenue it forms an enormous slab.
The vertical and Gothic-inspired detailing of the austere Art Deco facade is integrated with a slim, functionally expressive form. Inside, this modern skyscraper features an open floor plan.
The lobby's rich materials and reduced black and beige ornamental scheme are enhanced by dramatic lighting.
Granite covers the base to a height of 1.2 meters (four feet), and the shaft has a refined facade of Indiana limestone with aluminum spandrel panels.
An escalator - a striking feature for its time - provides access to the shopping concourse below.
Nicknames include "The Slab" and "30 Rock".
The building was awarded landmark status in 1985.
The "Top of the Rock" rooftop observation deck closed in May 1986, and reopened on November 1, 2005. Its elevators have glass ceilings facing into illuminated shafts.
Whilst under construction in 1932, this building is where the famous photo "Lunchtime Atop a Skyscraper" was taken by the photographer Charles C. Ebbets. The photo shows 11 construction workers eating whilst sitting on a steel beam seemingly suspended in mid-air. [Emporis.com]
music+image

Gracias por su visita / Thanks for your kind visits.

April 25, 2010

The Flatiron Building

The Flatiron Building
The Flatiron Building, or Fuller Building as it was originally called, is located at 175 Fifth Avenue in the borough of Manhattan, and is considered to be one of the first skyscrapers ever built. Upon completion in 1902 it was one of the tallest buildings in New York City. The building sits on a triangular island block at 23rd street, Fifth Avenue, and Broadway anchoring the south (downtown) end of Madison Square.

The Flatiron Building was designed by Chicago's Daniel Burnham as a vertical Renaissance palazzo with Beaux-Arts styling. Unlike New York's early skyscrapers, which took the form of towers arising from a lower, blockier mass, such as the contemporary Singer Building (1902–1908), the Flatiron Building epitomizes the Chicago school conception: like a classical Greek column, its limestone and glazed terra-cotta façade is divided into a base, shaft and capital.

music+image

Gracias por su visita / Thanks for your kind visits.

November 18, 2008

Views from Central Park





Time Warner Center Towers. Its design, by David Childs and Mustafa Kemal Abadan of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, consists of two 750 ft (229 m) towers bridged by a multi-story atrium containing upscale retail shops. The building surrounds half of Columbus Circle in Midtown Manhattan.
The building drew publicity in 2003 when Mexican financier David Martinez paid $54.7 million dollars for a penthouse condo, then a record for New York residential sales.

November 06, 2008

Future of Change


Lexington Ave. under the stars.

Ver.2



Cheers for a better tomorrow.

November 03, 2008

Moonlight in Queens


Lofts building on Court Sq. & 45 Av.

Near 44 Dr. in Queens.