Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[8] [a] The building's address was originally 1475 Broadway, but it was changed to 1 Times Square in 1966. [9] The current address is a vanity address assigned by the government of New York City . The addresses around Times Square are not assigned in any particular order; for example, 2 Times Square is several blocks away from 1 Times Square.
Judson-Rives Building features Beaux Arts architecture [2] and is made of steel-framed concrete and brick with a granite, sandstone, and glazed terra cotta facade. [3] [8]The building's front-facing west facade is six bays wide and is arranged in a base-shaft-capital composition up to the eighth floor, with an entablature separating the base from the shaft between the second and third floors.
The Apthorp (2201 Broadway) First Baptist Church in the City of New York (near 2221 Broadway) Bretton Hall (2350 Broadway) The Belnord; Metro Theater (2626 Broadway) Hotel Marseilles (2689–2693 Broadway) Manhasset Apartments (2801–2825 Broadway) Goddard Institute for Space Studies (2880 Broadway) Barnard College (3009 Broadway) Audubon ...
The city on Feb. 7 purchased 126 S. Broadway St. for $600,000 from 126 South Broadway LLC, state real estate transactions show. The LLC is registered to John Wagner, owner of the building’s two ...
Trustee Building was designed by Parkinson and Bergstrom, the duo responsible for many buildings on Broadway, including Bullock's Building, Yorkshire Hotel, Metropolitan Building, and Broadway Mart Center. It was built in 1905 [1] and originally housed financial institutions. [2]
Bullock's complex is a collection of nine historic buildings located at 639-651 south Broadway, the 300-block of 7th Street, and 634-670 south Hill Street in the Jewelry District and Broadway Theater District in the historic core of downtown Los Angeles.
The Trinity Building, designed by Francis H. Kimball and built in 1905, with an addition of 1907, [1]: 1 and Kimball's United States Realty Building of 1907, [2]: 1 located respectively at 111 and 115 Broadway in Manhattan's Financial District, are among the first Gothic-inspired skyscrapers in New York, and both are New York City designated landmarks.
Broadway Leasehold Building, built in 1914, was originally designed to house street-level retail with offices for Leasehold Company above. According to the United States Department of the Interior, the architect is unknown, [1] while other sources cite the architect as an employee of Milwaukee Building Company [6] /Meyer and Holler [7] and even more sources cite Meyer and Holler directly.