17 State Street

17 State Street is a 42-story office building located in the Financial District of Manhattan, overlooking State Street and Battery Park. It was designed by Roy Gee for Emery Roth and Sons for developers William Kaufman Organization, and it is most noted for its distinct curved glass facade.[4] The building has been owned by RFR Holding since 1999 when it was acquired from Savannah Teachers Properties Inc. for $120 million.[5]

17 State Street
(2009)
General information
StatusComplete
TypeOffice
Architectural stylemodernism
Location17 State Street,
Manhattan, New York City
Coordinates40.702795°N 74.014120°W / 40.702795; -74.014120
Completed1988
OwnerRFR Holding
ManagementRFR Realty
Height
Roof165 m (541 ft)
Technical details
Floor count42
Floor area540,000 sq ft (50,000 m2)
Design and construction
ArchitectRoy Gee (Emery Roth & Sons)
Structural engineerDeSimone Consulting Engineers
References
[1][2][3]

17 State Street was affected by Hurricane Sandy in October 2012, primarily by water damage to electrical equipment in the building's basement. For that reason, the building was closed for repairs for approximately two weeks and was one of the earliest office buildings in the Financial District to be reoccupied after the storm.[6]

Architecture

In 1988, architecture critic Paul Goldberg, said "this is not a great building, but it is one of the few truly happy intersections of the realities of New York commercial development and serious architectural aspirations".[7]

Later, in 2008, Architecture critic Carter B. Horsley has referred to it as “the city’s most beautiful curved building”, competing with Jean Nouvel’s faceted 100 Eleventh Avenue, Philip Johnson’s Lipstick Building, and pre-war masterpieces such as 1 Wall Street Court (formerly the Cocoa Exchange) and the nearby Delmonico Building.[8]

Tenants

gollark: Troubling.
gollark: tio!debug
gollark: ```c#include <stdio.h>#define PYTHON_BEGIN int main() {#define PYTHON_END ;}#define print ;printf#define x char*xPYTHON_BEGINx = "Hello, World!"print(x)PYTHON_END```
gollark: ```c#include <stdio.h>#define linux "Not Linux"int main() { printf(linux);}```
gollark: ```c#include <stdio.h>#define linux "Not Linux"int main() { printf(linux);```

References

Notes

  1. 17 State Street at Emporis
  2. "17 State Street". SkyscraperPage.
  3. 17 State Street at Structurae
  4. Wall, Diana diZerega; Cantwell, Anne-Marie (2008). Touring Gotham's Archaeological Past. Yale University Press. p. 27. ISBN 0300137893.
  5. Webb, Bailey (February 1, 2000). "Office Beat". National Real Estate Investor. Retrieved February 14, 2016.
  6. Geiger, Daniel (November 5, 2013). "Ill-fated 17 State St. soars anew". Crain's New York Business. Retrieved February 14, 2016.
  7. Goldberger, Paul (July 17, 1988). "Architecture View: At 17 State Street, High Tech Passes Into the Vernacular". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved February 14, 2016.
  8. Horsley, Carter B. (February 2008). "Details: Softening the Edges of the City:: Curved Buildings". The City Review. Retrieved February 14, 2016.
  9. Delaporte, Gus (November 26, 2013). "BATS Global Markets Expands at 17 State Street". Commercial Observer.
  10. Cullen, Terence (January 9, 2017). "IPsoft Expands to 140K SF at 17 State Street in FiDi". Commercial Observer.
  11. La Guerre, Liam (September 28, 2017). "Large UAE Bank Moving NYC Office Within FiDi". Commercial Observer.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.