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The Building
Excerpted from an
article by Carter B. Horsley
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Lobby,
circa 1937 |
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Lobby
Today |
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Front
Entrance |
Photography
by Richard Lewin |
One of the city's great skyline buildings even though
it has been dwarfed by some towers on 57th Street, the
Hampshire House is noted for its spectacular, steeply-pitched
copper roof with two tall chimneys.
"While the opening of the Pierre and the Waldorf-Astoria
effectively marked the end of hotel construction in
the Metropolitan Era, the strange circumstances that
surrounded the completion of Caughey & Evans's Hampshire
House, once labeled 'Manhattan's Monument to Frenzied
Finance,' revived the old spirit at the end of the Depression,"
noted Robert A. M. Stern, Gregory Gilmartin and Thomas
Mellins in the great book, "New York 1930, Architecture
and Urbanism Between The Two World Wars," (Rizzoli,
1987).
The 37-story building was started in January, 1931,
but abandoned six months later by its developer, the
H. K. Ferguson Company of Cleveland, and, the authors
continued, "stood derelict until 1938."
"Executed in glistening white brick, Hampshire
House was a strange hybrid, a cascade of setbacks attached
to a rectangular tower that rose from the back of the
lot. The tower was crowned by a steep copper roof and
twin chimneys that referred to the Savoy-Plaza, but
the dormers below were Spanish Baroque, and the base
of the building with its rusticated white marble walls
aluminum fixtures, and polished black granite trim was
as stylish example of Modern Classicism," the authors
wrote.
The Savoy-Plaza was the very large hotel designed in
a neo-Classical/French Renaissance style by McKim, Meade
& White on the present site of the General Motors
Building across Fifth Avenue from the Plaza Hotel. The
Savoy-Plaza made the southeast corner of Central Park
the city's most elegant enclave as it tied together
the formal elegance of the Plaza Hotel and the Bergdorf
Goodman store with a massive but elegant tower noted
for its pitched roof, a photograph of which graces the
cover of "New York 1930." Only the former
Pennsylvania Station and the Singer Building on Lower
Broadway were greater architectural losses in the city
in the 20th Century.
Despite the authors' comparison of the Hampshire House
with the Savoy Plaza, the Hampshire House's roof was
more dramatic and much more colorful. While their description
of the façade is accurate, their categorizing
it as Modern Classicism is not terribly relevant. The
base of the building does have moderne elements, but
they pale in comparison with its great roof, the focal
point of Central Park South.
The building was converted to a cooperative in 1937
and has 175 units. It has som has some terraces, a doorman and
a canopied entrance with a revolving door but no health
club. It is convenient to public transportation, shopping
and restaurants and is, of course, across from Central
Park and has spectacular views.
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