Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Hotel Claridge was a 16-story building on Times Square in Manhattan, New York City, at the southeast corner of Broadway and 44th Street. Originally known as the Hotel Rector, it was built of brick in the Beaux-arts style in 1910–1911. The 14-story building had 240 guest rooms and 216,000 square feet of space. [1]
125 West 55th Street (north) New York City Center, theatre at 131 West 55th Street (north) 55th Street Playhouse, theatre at 154 West 55th Street; CitySpire Center (north), 75-story, 814 ft (248 m) tower (tallest on street), north [14] The London NYC 54-floor, 590 ft (180 m) tower completed in 1990 (south) [15] Hotel Wellington (north)
The William and Helen Ziegler House (also known as the William and Helen Martin Murphy Ziegler Jr. House), located at 116 East 55th Street between Park and Lexington Avenues in the Midtown neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, was built in 1926–27 and was designed by William Lawrence Bottomley in the Neo-Georgian syle, which Bottomley specialized in during the 1920s and 1930s.
125 West 55th Street, also known as Avenue of the Americas Plaza, is a 23-story, 575,000-square-foot (53,400 m 2) office building located on 55th Street between the Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue) and Seventh Avenue in Midtown Manhattan, New York City.
The complex has an address of 17 West 54th Street to the south and 24 West 55th Street to the north, [3] midblock between Fifth Avenue and Sixth Avenue. [2] The land lot is rectangular and covers around 25,000 square feet (2,300 m 2 ), [ 4 ] [ 5 ] with a frontage of 125 feet (38 m) on either street and a depth of about 200 feet (61 m).
The 55th Street Playhouse—periodically referred to as the 55th Street Cinema and Europa Theatre—was a 253-seat movie house [3] at 154 West 55th Street, [2] Midtown Manhattan, New York City, that opened on May 20, 1927.
1345 Avenue of the Americas (also known as the AllianceBernstein Building and formerly the Burlington House) is a 625-foot (191 m)-tall, 50-story skyscraper in Midtown Manhattan, New York City. [1]
The restaurant formally opened on October 15, 1941, at 5 East 55th Street on Fifth Avenue, across the street from the St. Regis New York. In 1957, Le Pavillon moved to the Ritz Tower on Park Avenue and 57th Street. [3] Soulé died in 1966, [4] and Le Pavillon closed in 1971. [5]