Buchman & Fox

Buchman & Fox was a New York-based architectural firm formed about 1900 by the architects Albert Buchman[1] and Mortimer J. Fox. Buchman, with his former partner Deisler, had been the architect of Estherwood (Dobbs Ferry, New York) (1894–95). Fox retired in 1917[2] and Ely Jacques Kahn assumed partnership with Buchman.

Commissions

  • New facade for the Hebrew Girls' School (later Henry Street Settlement), New York City, 1900
  • Leonori Building, New York City, 1902[3]
  • Hotel Le Marquis, New York City, 1905
  • The Times Square Building, New York City, 1912

Notes

  1. Albert Buchman at archINFORM
  2. The American Architect, 3 October 1917: 345.
  3. Gray, Christopher (14 February 1988). "Streetscapes: The Leonori". New York Times. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
gollark: And why hasn't someone else tried to/succeeded in figuring out the wormholes?
gollark: How is there *not* massive price gouging on the transit network anyway? I'm sure this was explained at some point, but I forgot the explanation, sooo...
gollark: The time loop thing does reduce the use a lot come to think of it, yes.
gollark: You wouldn't go *personally*, just send some nanobots by starwisp or something.
gollark: If you pick, say, a random moon far from any stargates or civilized space, who can be said to "own" it?
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.