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The Hotel Beacon is a Beaux-Arts, 24-story building on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City, designed by Walter W. Ahlschlager. [3] It was built in 1928 at 2130 Broadway, at the corner with 75th Street, on the site of the Tilden Club House [5] and the Dakota Stables.
The Astor, 2015. The Astor is a building at 235 West 75th Street, on Broadway between 75th and 76th Streets, on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City. William Waldorf Astor hired architects Clinton and Russell to design the two southern towers of The Astor in 1901.
Bounded roughly by S. Crandon Avenue on the East, E. 78th Street on the South, S. Clyde Avenue on the West, and E. 75th Street on the North 41°45′13″N 87°34′07″W / 41.753503°N 87.568661°W / 41.753503; -87.568661 ( South Shore Bungalow Historic
The land lot has a frontage of 204.33 ft (62.28 m) along Central Park West, [4] 180 ft (55 m) on 74th Street, and 150 ft (46 m) on 75th Street. [6] Nearby places include the Kenilworth apartment building immediately to the north, the Langham apartment building to the south, and the Ramble and Lake of Central Park to the east.
The house occupies a rectangular land lot of 4,025 square feet (373.9 m 2), with a frontage of 35 feet (11 m) on Fifth Avenue to the west and 115 feet (35 m) on 75th Street to the south. [ 3 ] [ 7 ] Immediately to the south are the apartment building at 930 Fifth Avenue [ 8 ] and the Nathaniel L. McCready House at 4 East 75th Street.
75th Street may refer to: In New York City. 75th Street (Manhattan) 75th Street – Elderts Lane (BMT Jamaica Line) Elsewhere. 75th Street (Grand Crossing ...
75th Avenue–61st Street Historic District is a national historic district in Glendale, Queens, New York. It includes 183 contributing buildings built between 1910 and 1925. They consist mainly of two story brick row houses with one apartment per floor. Building features include round and box front dwellings, cast stone detailing, brownstone ...
Moves to West 91st Street and East 75th Street [ edit ] In 1920, the members moved to a new Neoclassical building at 210 West 91st Street, designed by William Tachau ; [ 2 ] the old building on Lenox Avenue was sold to the Seventh-Day Adventist Temple, which in turn sold it in 1925 to the Mount Olivet Baptist Church. [ 11 ]