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The success of the Astor House invited competition. The 1853 St Nicholas Hotel on Broadway at Broome Street was built for $1 million and offered the innovation of central heating that circulated warmed air through registers to every room. It was said to have ended the Astor House's preeminence in New York hostelry. [15]
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 ...
Broadway (/ ˈ b r ɔː d w eɪ /) is a street and major thoroughfare in the U.S. state of New York.The street runs from State Street at Bowling Green in the south of Manhattan for 13 mi (20.9 km) through the borough, over the Broadway Bridge, and 2 mi (3.2 km) through the Bronx, exiting north from New York City to run an additional 18 mi (29.0 km) through the Westchester County municipalities ...
The E. V. Haughwout Building is a five-story, 79-foot-tall (24 m) commercial loft building in the SoHo neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, at the corner of Broome Street and Broadway.
The residential floors are numbered 48-70 for marketing purposes. Among the first tenants were rapper P. Diddy and New York Yankees pitcher Randy Johnson. [4] The building has two fluid tuned mass dampers, which are designed to damp building sway. Located on the 50th floor mechanical room, they have 16-inch-thick (41 cm) concrete walls, and ...
The New York City Subway's BMT Broadway Line (carrying the R and W trains) crosses diagonally underneath the Cunard Building from northwest to southeast. Two additional subway lines, the IRT Lexington Avenue Line ( 4 and 5 trains) and the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line ( 1 train), run adjacent to the western and eastern boundaries of the ...
The Belleclaire is located at 2175 Broadway, at the southwest corner with 77th Street, on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City.It occupies the eastern end of the city block bounded by Broadway to the east, 77th Street to the north, West End Avenue to the west, and 76th Street to the south. [1]
The Broadway–Chambers Building was Gilbert's first design in New York City. [3] Gilbert went on to design structures such as the Woolworth Building (the onetime tallest building in the world, three blocks south on Broadway), [16] as well as the Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House, 90 West Street, and the United States Supreme Court Building.