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Grand Central Tower (also known as 175 Park Avenue) was a scrapped proposal by Penn Central to have a skyscraper built on top of Grand Central Terminal in 1968. It was designed by Marcel Breuer and would have been 950 feet (290 m) tall.
Grand Central Terminal served intercity trains until 1991, when Amtrak began routing its trains through nearby Penn Station. Grand Central covers 48 acres (19 ha) and has 44 platforms, more than any other railroad station in the world. Its platforms, all below ground, serve 30 tracks on the upper level and 26 on the lower.
The Grand Central Tower (originally known as the Guaranty Bank Building) is a high-rise building in Phoenix, Arizona.It is an office building designed in international style and constructed between 1959 and 1960 for developer David H. Murdock.
175 Park Avenue, formerly known as Project Commodore, [1] is a mixed-use supertall designed by Skidmore, Owings, & Merrill and developed by RXR Realty and TF Cornerstone that is proposed to be built on the former site of the Commodore Hotel, currently the Hyatt Grand Central New York.
I visited Grand Brasserie, a new restaurant inside Grand Central Terminal in New York City. The restaurant holds up to 400 diners and occupies a massive 16,000-square-foot space.
In February 1968, six months after Grand Central Terminal was landmarked, plans were announced for a tower over the terminal, known as Grand Central Tower and designed by Marcel Breuer. [208] With a proposed height of 950 feet (290 m), the tower would have stood 150 feet (46 m) taller than the Pan Am Building, and its footprint would have ...
The man accused of two unprovoked slashings at Grand Central Terminal on Tuesday night cried out for his mother at his Christmas Day court proceeding — as a Manhattan judge ordered him held on ...
Grand Central: How a Train Station Transformed America. Grand Central Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4555-2595-9. Robins, Anthony W.; New York Transit Museum (2013). Grand Central Terminal: 100 Years of a New York Landmark. ABRAMS. ISBN 978-1-61312-387-4. Schlichting, Kurt C. (2001). Grand Central Terminal: Railroads, Architecture and Engineering in ...