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This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places on Manhattan Island, the primary portion of the New York City borough of Manhattan (also designated as New York County, New York), from 14th to 59th Streets.
Society House of the American Society of Civil Engineers (220 West 57th Street) December 16, 2008: Socony-Mobil Building: February 25, 2003: Springs Mills Building (140 West 40th Street) April 13, 2010: Starrett-Lehigh Building: October 7, 1986: Steinway Hall: November 13, 2001: Stewart & Company Building: April 18, 2006
[207] [208] In the 40th Street plaza of the park, there is a station called Bryant Park Games where visitors can borrow an array of games, including Chinese chess and quoits. In addition, chess and table tennis can also be played at Bryant Park. [209] Food and drink are served at four park-operated concessionary kiosks. [210]
The Springs Mills Building is a 21-story office building at 104 West 40th Street in Manhattan, New York City, just west of Sixth Avenue and Bryant Park.The Modernist building sits on an L-shaped lot that extends back to 39th Street and rises to a thin glass hexagonal tower. [2]
The address 260 West 41st Street contained Sussex House, an eight-story, 140-room dormitory, [10] as well as a mural advertising garment store Seely Shoulder Shapes. [12] Behind it was a 16-story office building at 265 West 40th Street. Sex shops, prostitution, and loitering were prevalent on the 41st Street side of the site. [10]
It is housed in the former headquarters of the New York Herald Tribune on West 40th Street, which CUNY purchased in August 2004 for $60 million. [15] Renovation of the building cost $10.7 million and took place at the same time that The New York Times was building a new, 52-story office tower to house its headquarters next door. [16]
The Bryant Park Studios (formerly known as the Beaux-Arts Building) is an office building at 80 West 40th Street in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City, at the corner of 40th Street and Sixth Avenue. The building, overlooking the southwest corner of Bryant Park, was designed by Charles A. Rich in the French Beaux-Arts style.
The New Victory Theater is a theater at 209 West 42nd Street in the Theater District of Midtown Manhattan in New York City, near Times Square.Built in 1900 as the Republic Theatre (also Theatre Republic), it was designed by Albert Westover and developed by Oscar Hammerstein I as a Broadway theater.