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Park Row Building

Park Row Building
Park Row Building New York.jpg
Park Row Building is located in New York City
Park Row Building
Park Row Building is located in New York
Park Row Building
Park Row Building is located in the US
Park Row Building
Location 15 Park Row
Manhattan, New York City
Coordinates Coordinates: 40°42′40″N 74°0′30″W / 40.71111°N 74.00833°W / 40.71111; -74.00833
Built 1896-99
Architect R. H. Robertson
Architectural style Classical Revival
NRHP Reference # 05001287
Significant dates
Added to NRHP November 16, 2005
Designated NYCL June 15, 1999

The Park Row Building is a building on Park Row bordering TriBeCa and the Financial District of the New York City borough of Manhattan also known as 15 Park Row. The building was designed by R. H. Robertson, a pioneer in steel skyscraper design, and engineered by the firm of Nathaniel Roberts.

In 1999, the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the Park Row Building a landmark.

One of the first structures to be called a skyscraper, the building was completed in 1899 after two years and nine months of construction, one of several new office buildings located on what was known at the time as "Newspaper Row", the center of the newspaper industry in New York City for 80 years beginning in the 1840s. The builder was the Park Row Construction Company, a syndicate whose legal counsel, William Mills Ivins – a prominent lawyer and former judge advocate general for New York State – purchased the necessary property in his own name before transferring it to the syndicate. For this reason the building was sometimes known as the Ivins Syndicate Building.

At 391 feet (119 m), it was the tallest commercial building in the world from 1899 until 1908, when it was surpassed by the Singer Building.

The building is 29 stories tall, with 26 full floors and two, three-story cupolas. It has a frontage of 103 ft (31 m) on Park Row, 23 on Ann Street and 48 feet (15 m) on Theater Alley. The base of the building covers a land area of approximately 15,000 square feet (1,400 m2). The building contains about 8,000 tons of steel and 12,000 tons of other material, chiefly brick and terra cotta. The foundation of the Park Row Building was made of 3,900 Georgia spruce piles driven into wet sand and topped by granite blocks. The total cost to build this early skyscraper was $2,400,000.


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