User:JWilz12345/Cities-United States/New York/New York City
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This page is part of my Portfolio of images, a compilation of several images here in WikiCommons that relate to topics of my interest.
Note: These images may be from other users (e.g. from WikiCommons or Flickr); kindly refer to the description pages of these image files for the image authorship and licensing terms.
Skyline / cityscape
[edit]Lower Manhattan from Hudson River side
[edit]- Daytime
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1964-06-15
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1973-05
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2001 (ca.)
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2004-06-22
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2006-01
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2019-03-15
- Night and evening
Lower Manhattan from East River side
[edit]- Daytime
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1964-09-26
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2014-09-26
- Night and evening
Midtown Manhattan and Central Park area
[edit]- Daytime
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2007-09-02
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2008-10-11
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2009-03-04
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2011-12-24
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2014-01-20
- Night and evening
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2005-12-06
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2009-11-19
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2021-09-20
Selected Manhattan buildings
[edit]1944 and behind: classical era skyscrapers and high-rises
[edit]-
Bennett Building, 1873 (by Arthur D. Gilman; additional 4 floors in 1892 based on his existing design)
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Morse Building, 1880 (by Benjamin Silliman Jr. and James M. Farnsworth)
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Potter Building, 1886 (by Norris Garshom Starkweather)
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American Surety Building, 1896 (by Bruce Price)
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108 Leonard / New York Life Insurance Company Building, 1898 (by Stephen Decatur Hatch and McKim, Mead & White)
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Empire Building , 1898 (by Kimball & Thompson)
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Park Row Building, 1899 (by R. H. Robertson)
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Flatiron Building / Fuller Building, 1902 (by Daniel Burnham and Frederick P. Dinkelberg)
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1 Wall Street Court / Beaver Building, 1904 (by Clinton & Russell)
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Whitehall Building, 1904 (main, front) and 1910 (annex, back) (by Henry J. Hardenbergh for main and Clinton & Russell for annex)
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Trinity Building, 1905 (by Francis H. Kimball)
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United States Realty Building, 1907 (by Francis H. Kimball)
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West Street Building / 90 West Street, 1907 (by Cass Gilbert)
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2 Rector Street / United States Express Company Building, 1907 (by Clinton & Russell; 3 additional floors added 1927)
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Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower, 1909 (by Napoleon LeBrun & Sons)
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Liberty Tower / Sinclair Oil Building, 1910 (by Henry Ives Cobb)
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49 Chambers / Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank Building, 1912 (by Raymond F. Almirall)
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14 Wall Street / Bankers Trust Company Building, 1912 (by Trowbridge & Livingston)
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Woolworth Building, 1912 (by Cass Gilbert)
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Adams Express Building, 1914 (by Francis H. Kimball)
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David N. Dinkins Municipal Building / Manhattan Municipal Building, 1914 (by William Mitchell Kendall of McKim, Mead & White)
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Equitable Building, 1915 (by Ernest R. Graham)
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American Express Building / 65 Broadway, 1917 (by James L. Aspinwall of Renwick, Aspinwall & Tucker)
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195 Broadway / American Telephone & Telegraph Building, 1922 (by William Welles Bosworth)
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New York Evening Post Building, 1926 (by Horace Trumbauer)
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Barclay–Vesey Building / Verizon Building / New York Telephone Company Building, 1927 (by Ralph Thomas Walker)
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Transportation Building / 225 Broadway, 1927 (by York & Sawyer)
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15 Broad Street / Equitable Trust Building, 1928 (by Trowbridge & Livingston)
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New York Life Building, 1928 (by Cass Gilbert)
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10 East 40th Street / Mercantile Building, 1929 (by Ludlow & Peabody)
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63 Wall Street / Wall and Hanover Building, 1929 (by Delano & Aldrich)
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Chanin Building / 122 East 42nd Street, 1929 (by Sloan & Robertson and Rene Paul Chambellan)
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120 Wall Street, 1930 (by Ely Jacques Kahn)
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Trump Building / 40 Wall Street / Bank of Manhattan Trust Building, 1930 (by Harold Craig Severance with Yasuo Matsui and Shreve, Lamb & Harmon)
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Chrysler Building, 1930 (by William Van Alen)
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The San Remo Apartments, 1930 (by Emery Roth)
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500 Fifth Avenue, 1931 (by Shreve, Lamb & Harmon)
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20 Exchange Place / City Bank–Farmers Trust Building, 1931 (by Cross & Cross)
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1 Wall Street / Irving Trust Company Building, 1931 (by Ralph Thomas Walker)
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Empire State Building, 1931 (by Shreve, Lamb & Harmon)
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Waldorf Astoria New York, 1931 (by Schultze & Weaver)
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General Electric Building / 570 Lexington Avenue, 1931 (by Cross & Cross)
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70 Pine Street / American International Building, 1932 (by Clinton & Russell and Holton & George)
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Comcast Building / 30 Rockefeller Plaza / RCA Building / GE Building, 1933 (by Raymond Hood)
1945–1990: early modern but unprotected skyscrapers and high-rises
[edit]- {{PD-US-architecture}} (also applies to classical era)
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United Nations Secretariat Building, 1951 (by United Nations Headquarters Board of Design, which included Wallace Harrison [team leader], Oscar Niemeyer, Le Corbusier, et. al.)
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Seagram Building, 1958 (by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Philip Johnson, Ely Jacques Kahn, and Robert Allan Jacobs)
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28 Liberty Street / One Chase Manhattan Plaza, 1961 (by Gordon Bunshaft of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill)
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MetLife Building, 1963 (by Richard Roth, Walter Gropius, and Pietro Belluschi)
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1 New York Plaza, 1970 (by Kahn & Jacobs and Lescaze & Associates)
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55 Water Street, 1972 (by Emery Roth & Sons)
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Citigroup Center, 1977 (by Hugh Stubbins and Emery Roth & Sons)
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Trump Tower, 1982 (by Der Scutt of Swanke Hayden Connell Architects)
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200 Vesey Street / Three World Financial Center / American Express Tower, 1985 (by Cesar Pelli & Associates and Haines Lundberg Waehler)
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200 Liberty Street / One World Financial Center, 1986 (by Cesar Pelli & Associates)
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250 Vesey Street / Four World Financial Center, 1986 (by Cesar Pelli & Associates)
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225 Liberty Street / Two World Financial Center, 1987 (by Cesar Pelli & Associates and Haines Lundberg Waehler)
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32 Old Slip / One Financial Square, 1987 (by Edward Durell Stone & Associates)
1991–2010: dawn of copyright-protected skyscrapers and high-rises
[edit]- {{FoP-US}} (will become {{PD-old-70}} if it has been 70 years since the passing of an architect or last-surviving architect; or some future PD-US template if it is a corporate work and 95 years have passed since publication or 120 years since creation)
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Condé Nast Building / 4 Times Square, 1999 (by FXCollaborative)
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Deutsche Bank Center / Time Warner Center, 2003 (by David Childs, T. J. Gottesdiener, Mustafa K. Abadan, all from Skidmore, Owings & Merrill)
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7 World Trade Center, 2006 (by David Childs of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill)
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New York Times Building, 2007 (by Renzo Piano and FXCollaborative)
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Bank of America Tower, 2009 (by COOKFOX Architects and Adamson Associates)
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8 Spruce Street, 2010 (by Frank Gehry with Gehry Partners LLP)
2011 to present: era of "pencil towers"
[edit]- {{FoP-US}} (will become {{PD-old-70}} if it has been 70 years since the passing of an architect or last-surviving architect; or some future PD-US template if it is a corporate work and 95 years have passed since publication or 120 years since creation)
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One Madison, 2013 (by CetraRuddy)
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4 World Trade Center, 2013 (by Fumihiko Maki)
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One World Trade Center, 2014 (by David Childs of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill)
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One57, 2014 (by Christian de Portzamparc)
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432 Park Avenue, 2015 (by Rafael Viñoly)
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Four Seasons Hotel New York Downtown / 30 Park Place, 2016 (by Robert A. M. Stern)
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10 Hudson Yards, 2016 (by Kohn Pedersen Fox)
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56 Leonard Street, 2017 (by Herzog & de Meuron)
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3 World Trade Center, 2018 (by Richard Rogers of RSHP)
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30 Hudson Yards, 2019 (by Kohn Pedersen Fox)
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15 Hudson Yards, 2019 (by Diller Scofidio + Renfro)
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220 Central Park South, 2019 (by Robert A.M. Stern Architects and SLCE Architects)
Notable demolished/destroyed skyscrapers and high-rises
[edit]-
New York World Building, 1890–1955 (by George B. Post)
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Manhattan Life Insurance Building, 1894–1963 (by Kimball & Thompson)
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Singer Building, 1908–1967 (by Ernest Flagg)
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City Investing Building, 1908–1968 (by Francis H. Kimball)
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World Trade Center, 1972–2001 (by Minoru Yamasaki)
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7 World Trade Center, 1987–2001 (by Emery Roth & Sons)
Other selected buildings
[edit]-
St. Paul's Chapel, 1766 (by Thomas McBean or Peter Harrison)
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Trinity Church, 1846 (by Richard Upjohn)
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Chamber of Commerce Building, 1902 (by James Barnes Baker)
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Grand Central Terminal, 1913 (by Warren and Wetmore and Reed and Stem
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Riverside Church, 1930 (by Henry C. Pelton and Allen & Collens)