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425 Fifth Avenue is a 618-foot (188-meter) residential skyscraper at 38th Street and Fifth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan, New York City. It was developed by RFR Davis [2] and designed by Michael Graves. It has 55 floors and 197 units. [3]
3 Park Avenue is a mixed-use office building and high school erected in 1973 on Park Avenue in Manhattan, New York City.The building, surrounded on three sides by a plaza, is categorized as a Midtown South address in the Kips Bay, Manhattan, Murray Hill, and Rose Hill neighborhoods.
In March 1935, the New York Life Insurance Company moved to foreclose on the hotel's second mortgage loan of $200,000. [115] [116] Marshall, who had directed the hotel from its opening, remained in his position as its general manager. [116] [117] New York Life acquired the hotel that May at a foreclosure auction in which it bid $2.419 million.
Hippocrene Books is an independent US publishing press located at 171 Madison Avenue, New York City, NY 10016. Hippocrene specializes in foreign language study guides , international cookbooks , and Polish-interest publishing.
450 Park Avenue (also known as Franklin National Bank Building) is an office building on Park Avenue in Midtown Manhattan in New York City. The building has 33 floors and is 390 feet (120 m) tall. The building has 33 floors and is 390 feet (120 m) tall.
2 Park Avenue is a 28-story office building in the Murray Hill neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City.The structure, along the west side of Park Avenue between 32nd and 33rd Streets, was designed by Ely Jacques Kahn and was developed by Abe N. Adelson from 1926 to 1928.
10 East 40th Street from the New York Public Library Main Branch. It was previously known as the Chase Tower, after its first tenant, Chase Brass & Copper. Its owner until his death in 1938 was Frederick William Vanderbilt. During the 1970s, the building housed part of the Mid-Manhattan Library. [4]
The three residences served as "the homes of many distinguished citizens of New York". [8] [9] [a] Also on the site were two stables built before 1910 at the addresses 24 and 26 East 40th Street. [11] By 1920, commercial concerns had relocated to the area, [8] which The New York Times called "a great civic centre". [12]