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Empire State Building

The Empire State Building is a 102-story[c] Art Deco skyscraper in Midtown Manhattan, New York City. The building was designed by Shreve, Lamb & Harmon and built from 1930 to 1931. Its name is derived from "Empire State", the nickname of the state of New York. The building has a roof height of 1,250 feet (380 m) and stands a total of 1,454 feet (443.2 m) tall, including its antenna. The Empire State Building was the world's tallest building until the first tower of the World Trade Center was topped out in 1970; following the September 11 attacks in 2001, the Empire State Building was New York City's tallest building until it was surpassed in 2012 by One World Trade Center. As of 2022, the building is the seventh-tallest building in New York City, the ninth-tallest completed skyscraper in the United States, and the 54th-tallest in the world.

Empire State Building
Aerial view in 2012
Record height
Tallest in the world from 1931 to 1970[I]
Preceded byChrysler Building
Surpassed byWorld Trade Center
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeOffice building; observation decks
Architectural styleArt Deco
Location350 Fifth Avenue[a]
New York, NY 10118[b]
Coordinates40°44′54″N 73°59′07″W / 40.74833°N 73.98528°W / 40.74833; -73.98528
Construction startedMarch 17, 1930; 93 years ago (1930-03-17)[2]
Topped-out19 September 1930; 93 years ago (1930-09-19)
CompletedApril 11, 1931; 92 years ago (1931-04-11)[3]
OpenedMay 1, 1931; 92 years ago (May 1, 1931)[4]
Cost$40,948,900[8]
(equivalent to $637 million in 2022[9])
OwnerEmpire State Realty Trust
Height
Tip1,454 ft (443.2 m)[5]
Antenna spire204 ft (62.2 m)[5]
Roof1,250 ft (381.0 m)[5]
Top floor1,224 ft (373.1 m)[5]
Observatory80th, 86th, and 102nd (top) floors[5]
Dimensions
Other dimensions424 ft (129.2 m) east–west; 187 ft (57.0 m) north–south[6]
Technical details
Floor count102[5][6][7][c]
Floor area2,248,355 sq ft (208,879 m2)[5]
Lifts/elevators73[5]
Design and construction
Architect(s)Shreve, Lamb and Harmon
DeveloperEmpire State Inc., including John J. Raskob and Al Smith
Structural engineerHomer Gage Balcom
Main contractorStarrett Brothers and Eken
Website
esbnyc.com
DesignatedJune 24, 1986
Reference no.82001192
DesignatedNovember 17, 1982
Reference no.82001192
DesignatedSeptember 27, 1982[12]
Reference no.06101.001691
DesignatedMay 19, 1981[13]
Reference no.2000[13]
Designated entityFacade
DesignatedMay 19, 1981[14]
Reference no.2001[14]
Designated entityInterior: Lobby
References
I. ^ . Emporis. Archived from the original on April 5, 2015.
[5][10][11]

The site of the Empire State Building, in Midtown South on the west side of Fifth Avenue between West 33rd and 34th Streets, was developed in 1893 as the Waldorf–Astoria Hotel. In 1929, Empire State Inc. acquired the site and devised plans for a skyscraper there. The design for the Empire State Building was changed fifteen times until it was ensured to be the world's tallest building. Construction started on March 17, 1930, and the building opened thirteen and a half months afterward on May 1, 1931. Despite favorable publicity related to the building's construction, because of the Great Depression and World War II, its owners did not make a profit until the early 1950s.

The building's Art Deco architecture, height, and observation decks have made it a popular attraction. Around four million tourists from around the world annually visit the building's 86th- and 102nd-floor observatories; an additional indoor observatory on the 80th floor opened in 2019. The Empire State Building is an international cultural icon: it has been featured in more than 250 television series and films since the film King Kong was released in 1933. The building's size has become the global standard of reference to describe the height and length of other structures. A symbol of New York City, the building has been named as one of the Seven Wonders of the Modern World by the American Society of Civil Engineers. It was ranked first on the American Institute of Architects' List of America's Favorite Architecture in 2007. Additionally, the Empire State Building and its ground-floor interior were designated city landmarks by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1980, and were added to the National Register of Historic Places as a National Historic Landmark in 1986.

Site

The Empire State Building is located on the west side of Fifth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan, between 33rd Street to the south and 34th Street to the north.[17] Tenants enter the building through the Art Deco lobby located at 350 Fifth Avenue. Visitors to the observatories use an entrance at 20 West 34th Street; prior to August 2018, visitors entered through the Fifth Avenue lobby.[1] Although physically located in South Midtown,[18] a mixed residential and commercial area,[19] the building is so large that it was assigned its own ZIP Code, 10118;[20][21] as of 2012, it is one of 43 buildings in New York City that have their own ZIP codes.[22][b]

The areas surrounding the Empire State Building are home to other major points of interest, including Macy's at Herald Square on Sixth Avenue and 34th Street,[25] and Koreatown on 32nd Street between Madison and Sixth avenues.[25][26] To the east of the Empire State Building is Murray Hill,[27] a neighborhood with a mix of residential, commercial, and entertainment activity.[28] The block directly to the northeast contains the B. Altman and Company Building, which houses the City University of New York's Graduate Center, while the Demarest Building is directly across Fifth Avenue to the east.[29] The nearest New York City Subway stations are 34th Street–Herald Square, one block west, and 33rd Street at Park Avenue, two blocks east; there is also a PATH station at 33rd Street and Sixth Avenue.[27]

Architecture

The Empire State Building was designed by Shreve, Lamb and Harmon in the Art Deco style.[30] The Empire State Building is 1,250 ft (381 m) tall to its 102nd floor, or 1,453 feet 8+916 inches (443.092 m) including its 203-foot (61.9 m) pinnacle.[31] It was the first building in the world to be more than 100 stories tall,[32] though only the lowest 86 stories are usable. The first through 85th floors contain 2.158 million square feet (200,500 m2) of commercial and office space, while the 86th floor contains an observatory.[33][31][34] The remaining 16 stories are part of the spire, which is capped by an observatory on the 102nd floor; the spire does not contain any intermediate levels and is used mostly for mechanical purposes.[31] Atop the 102nd story is the 203 ft (61.9 m) pinnacle, much of which is covered by broadcast antennas, and surmounted with a lightning rod.[35]

Form

 
The five-story base as seen from Fifth Avenue, with the main entrance at center. The Empire State Building sets back significantly above the base.

The Empire State Building has a symmetrical massing because of its large lot and relatively short base. Its articulation consists of three horizontal sections similar to the components of a column, namely a base, shaft, and capital.[33] The five-story base occupies the entire lot, while the 81-story shaft above it is set back sharply from the base.[36][37][38] The setback above the 5th story is 60 feet (18 m) deep on all sides.[33] There are smaller setbacks on the upper stories, allowing sunlight to illuminate the interiors of the top floors while also positioning these floors away from the noisy streets below.[39][40] The setbacks are located at the 21st, 25th, 30th, 72nd, 81st, and 85th stories.[41] The setbacks correspond to the tops of elevator shafts, allowing interior spaces to be at most 28 feet (8.5 m) deep (see § Interior).[33]

The setbacks were mandated by the 1916 Zoning Resolution, which was intended to allow sunlight to reach the streets as well.[d] Normally, a building of the Empire State's dimensions would be permitted to build up to 12 stories on the Fifth Avenue side, and up to 17 stories on the 33rd Street and 34th Street sides, before it would have to utilize setbacks.[37] However, with the largest setback being located above the base, the tower stories could contain a uniform shape.[48][49][42] According to architectural writer Robert A. M. Stern, the building's form contrasted with the nearly contemporary, similarly designed 500 Fifth Avenue eight blocks north, which had an asymmetrical massing on a smaller lot.[36]

Facade

The Empire State Building's Art Deco design is typical of pre–World War II architecture in New York City.[30] The facade is clad in Indiana limestone panels made by the Indiana Limestone Company[50] and sourced from a quarry in south-central Indiana;[51] the panels give the building its signature blonde color.[52] According to official fact sheets, the facade uses 200,000 cubic feet (5,700 m3) of limestone and granite, ten million bricks, and 730 short tons (650 long tons) of aluminum and stainless steel.[53] The building also contains 6,514 windows.[54] The decorative features on the facade are largely geometric, in contrast with earlier buildings, whose decorations often were intended to represent a specific narrative.[55]

 
A pair of sculpted concrete eagles above the Fifth Avenue entrance

The main entrance, composed of three sets of metal doors, is at the center of the facade's Fifth Avenue elevation, flanked by molded piers that are topped with eagles. Above the main entrance is a transom, a triple-height transom window with geometric patterns, and the golden letters "Empire State" above the fifth-floor windows.[56][38][57] There are two entrances each on 33rd and 34th streets, with modernistic, stainless steel canopies projecting from the entrances on 33rd and 34th streets there. Above the secondary entrances are triple windows, less elaborate in design than those on Fifth Avenue.[30][38][57]

The storefronts on the first floor contain aluminum-framed doors and windows within a black granite cladding.[38][57] The second through fourth stories consist of windows alternating with wide stone piers and narrower stone mullions. The fifth story contains windows alternating with wide and narrow mullions, and is topped by a horizontal stone sill.[38]

The facade of the tower stories is split into several vertical bays on each side, with windows projecting slightly from the limestone cladding. The bays are arranged into sets of one, two, or three windows on each floor.[56][58] The bays are separated by alternating narrow and wide piers, the inclusion of which may have been influenced by the design of the contemporary Daily News Building.[59] The windows in each bay are separated by vertical nickel-chrome steel mullions and connected by horizontal aluminum spandrels between each floor.[41][57] The windows are placed within stainless-steel frames, which saved money by eliminating the need to apply a stone finish around the windows. In addition, the use of aluminum spandrels obviated the need for cross-bonding, which would have been required if stone had been used instead.[56]

Lights

 
Lights representing the Democratic and Republican parties as results are tabulated in the 2012 presidential election

The building was originally equipped with white searchlights at the top. They were first used in November 1932 when they lit up to signal Roosevelt's victory over Hoover in the presidential election of that year.[60] These were later swapped for four "Freedom Lights" in 1956.[60] In February 1964, flood lights were added on the 72nd floor[61] to illuminate the top of the building at night so that the building could be seen from the World Fair later that year.[62] The lights were shut off from November 1973 to July 1974 because of the energy crisis at the time.[63] In 1976, the businessman Douglas Leigh suggested that Wien and Helmsley install 204 metal-halide lights, which were four times as bright as the 1,000 incandescent lights they were to replace.[64] New red, white, and blue metal-halide lights were installed in time for the country's bicentennial that July.[63][65] After the bicentennial, Helmsley retained the new lights due to the reduced maintenance cost, about $116 a year.[64]

Since October 12, 1977, the spire has been lit in colors chosen to match seasonal events and holidays.[56] Organizations are allowed to make requests through the building's website.[66] The building is also lit in the colors of New York-based sports teams on nights when they host games: for example, orange, blue, and white for the New York Knicks; red, white, and blue for the New York Rangers.[67] The spire can also be lit to commemorate events including disasters, anniversaries, or deaths, as well as for celebrations such as Pride and Halloween. In 1998, the building was lit in blue after the death of singer Frank Sinatra, who was nicknamed "Ol' Blue Eyes".[68]

 
The Empire State Building is bathed annually in rainbow-colored lighting during the Pride Month of June, evoking the international LGBT icon, as seen in this 2015 image.

The structure was lit in red, white, and blue for several months after the collapse of the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001.[69] On January 13, 2012, the building was lit in red, orange, and yellow to honor the 60th anniversary of the NBC program The Today Show.[70] After retired basketball player Kobe Bryant's January 2020 death, the building was lit in purple and gold, signifying the colors of his former team, the Los Angeles Lakers.[71]

In addition to lightings, the Empire State Building is able to do immersive visual projections on the building's exterior. Most recently partnering with Netflix in May 2022 to celebrate the return of Stranger Things fourth season by projecting the Upside Down onto the Empire State Building.[72]

In 2012, the building's four hundred metal halide lamps and floodlights were replaced with 1,200 LED fixtures, increasing the available colors from nine to over 16 million.[73] The computer-controlled system allows the building to be illuminated in ways that were unable to be done previously with plastic gels.[74] For instance, CNN used the top of the Empire State Building as a scoreboard during the 2012 United States presidential election, using red and blue lights to represent Republican and Democratic electoral votes respectively.[75] Also, on November 26, 2012, the building had its first synchronized light show, using music from recording artist Alicia Keys.[76] Artists such as Eminem and OneRepublic have been featured in later shows, including the building's annual Holiday Music-to-Lights Show.[77] The building's owners adhere to strict standards in using the lights; for instance, they do not use the lights to play advertisements.[74]

Interior

 
One of several elevator lobbies

According to official fact sheets, the Empire State Building weighs 365,000 short tons (331,122 t) and has an internal volume of 37 million cubic feet (1,000,000 m3).[53] The interior required 1,172 miles (1,886 km) of elevator cable and 2 million feet (609,600 m) of electrical wires.[78] It has a total floor area of 2,768,591 sq ft (257,211 m2), and each of the floors in the base cover 2 acres (1 ha).[79] This gives the building capacity for 20,000 tenants and 15,000 visitors.[48]

The riveted steel frame of the building was originally designed to handle all of the building's gravitational stresses and wind loads.[80] The amount of material used in the building's construction resulted in a very stiff structure when compared to other skyscrapers, with a structural stiffness of 42 pounds per square foot (2.0 kPa) versus the Willis Tower's 33 pounds per square foot (1.6 kPa) and the John Hancock Center's 26 pounds per square foot (1.2 kPa).[81] A December 1930 feature in Popular Mechanics estimated that a building with the Empire State's dimensions would still stand even if hit with an impact of 50 short tons (45 long tons).[48]

Utilities are grouped in a central shaft.[37] On the 6th through 86th stories, the central shaft is surrounded by a main corridor on all four sides.[42] Per the final specifications of the building, the corridor is surrounded in turn by office space 28 feet (8.5 m) deep, maximizing office space at a time before air conditioning became commonplace.[82][83][33] Each of the floors has 210 structural columns that pass through it, which provide structural stability but limits the amount of open space on these floors.[42] The relative dearth of stone in the Empire State Building allows for more space overall, with a 1:200 stone-to-building ratio compared to a 1:50 ratio in similar buildings.[84]

Lobby

 
Fifth Avenue lobby

The original main lobby is accessed from Fifth Avenue, on the building's east side, and is the only place in the building where the design contains narrative motifs.[55] It contains an entrance with one set of double doors between a pair of revolving doors. At the top of each doorway is a bronze motif depicting one of three "crafts or industries" used in the building's construction—Electricity, Masonry, and Heating.[85] The three-story-high space runs parallel to 33rd and 34th Streets.[86] The lobby contains two tiers of marble: a wainscoting of darker marble, topped by lighter marble. There is a pattern of zigzagging terrazzo tiles on the lobby floor, which leads from east to west.[86] To the north and south are storefronts, which are flanked by tubes of dark rounded marble and topped by a vertical band of grooves set into the marble.[86] Until the 1960s, there was a Longchamps restaurant next to the lobby, with six oval murals designed by Winold Reiss; these murals were placed in storage when the Longchamps closed.[87][88]

The western ends of the north and south walls include escalators to a mezzanine level.[86][e] At the west end of the lobby, behind the security desk, is an aluminum relief of the skyscraper as it was originally built (without the antenna).[89] The relief, which was intended to provide a welcoming effect,[14] contains an embossed outline of the building, with rays radiating from the spire and the sun behind it.[90] In the background is a state map of New York with the building's location marked by a "medallion" in the very southeast portion of the outline. A compass is depicted in the bottom right and a plaque to the building's major developers is on the bottom left.[91][90] A scale model of the building was also placed south of the security desk.[91]

 
Aluminum relief of the building

The plaque at the western end of the lobby is on the eastern interior wall of a one-story tall rectangular-shaped corridor that surrounds the banks of escalators, with a similar design to the lobby.[92] The rectangular-shaped corridor actually consists of two long hallways on the northern and southern sides of the rectangle,[93] as well as a shorter hallway on the eastern side and another long hallway on the western side.[92] At both ends of the northern and southern corridors, there is a bank of four low-rise elevators in between the corridors.[91][55][94] The western side of the rectangular elevator-bank corridor extends north to the 34th Street entrance and south to the 33rd Street entrance. It borders three large storefronts and leads to escalators (originally stairs), which go both to the second floor and to the basement. Going from west to east, there are secondary entrances to 34th and 33rd Streets from the northern and southern corridors, respectively.[86][e] The side entrances from 33rd and 34th Street lead to two-story-high corridors around the elevator core, crossed by stainless steel and glass-enclosed bridges at the mezzanine floor.[30][38][91]

Until the 1960s, an Art Deco mural, inspired by both the sky and the Machine Age, was installed in the lobby ceilings.[89] Subsequent damage to these murals, designed by artist Leif Neandross, resulted in reproductions being installed. Renovations to the lobby in 2009, such as replacing the clock over the information desk in the Fifth Avenue lobby with an anemometer and installing two chandeliers intended to be part of the building when it originally opened, revived much of its original grandeur.[95] The north corridor contained eight illuminated panels created in 1963 by Roy Sparkia and Renée Nemorov, in time for the 1964 World's Fair, depicting the building as the Eighth Wonder of the World alongside the traditional seven.[94][96] The building's owners installed a series of paintings by the New York artist Kysa Johnson in the concourse level. Johnson later filed a federal lawsuit, in January 2014, under the Visual Artists Rights Act alleging the negligent destruction of the paintings and damage to her reputation as an artist.[97] As part of the building's 2010 renovation, Denise Amses commissioned a work consisting of 15,000 stars and 5,000 circles, superimposed on a 13-by-5-foot (4.0 by 1.5 m) etched-glass installation, in the lobby.[98]

Elevators

The Empire State Building has 73 elevators in all, including service elevators.[99] Its original 64 elevators, built by the Otis Elevator Company,[79] in a central core and are of varying heights, with the longest of these elevators reaching from the lobby to the 80th floor.[37][100] As originally built, there were four "express" elevators that connected the lobby, 80th floor, and several landings in between; the other 60 "local" elevators connected the landings with the floors above these intermediate landings.[49] Of the 64 total elevators, 58 were for passenger use (comprising the four express elevators and 54 local elevators), and eight were for freight deliveries.[42] The elevators were designed to move at 1,200 feet per minute (366 m/min). At the time of the skyscraper's construction, their practical speed was limited to 700 feet per minute (213 m/min) per city law, but this limit was removed shortly after the building opened.[79][42]

Additional elevators connect the 80th floor to the six floors above it, as the six extra floors were built after the original 80 stories were approved.[31][101] The elevators were mechanically operated until 2011, when they were replaced with automatic elevators during the $550 million renovation of the building.[102] An additional elevator connects the 86th and 102nd floor observatories, which allows visitors access the 102nd floor observatory after having their tickets scanned. It also allows employees to access the mechanical floors located between the 87th and 101st floors.[80]

Observation decks

 
80th floor observation deck

The 80th, 86th, and 102nd floors contain observatories.[103][89][104] The latter two observatories saw a combined average of four million visitors per year in 2010.[105][106][107] Since opening, the observatories have been more popular than similar observatories at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, the Chrysler Building, the first One World Trade Center, or the Woolworth Building, despite being more expensive.[106] There are variable charges to enter the observatories; one ticket allows visitors to go as high as the 86th floor, and there is an additional charge to visit the 102nd floor. Other ticket options for visitors include scheduled access to view the sunrise from the observatory, a "premium" guided tour with VIP access, and the "AM/PM" package which allows for two visits in the same day.[108]

 
 
Interior and exterior observation decks at the 86th floor

The 86th floor observatory contains both an enclosed viewing gallery and an open-air outdoor viewing area, allowing for it to remain open 365 days a year regardless of the weather. The 102nd floor observatory is completely enclosed and much smaller in size. The 102nd floor observatory was closed to the public from the late 1990s to 2005 due to limited viewing capacity and long lines.[109][110] The observation decks were redesigned in mid-1979.[111] The 102nd floor was again redesigned in a project that was completed in 2019, allowing the windows to be extended from floor to ceiling and widening the space in the observatory overall.[112][113] An observatory on the 80th floor, opened in 2019, includes various exhibits as well as a mural of the skyline drawn by British artist Stephen Wiltshire.[114][104] An interactive multimedia museum, with multiple hands-on exhibitions about the building's history, was added during this project.[115] The design of the 10,000 sq ft (930 m2) Observatory Experience was inspired by the plans and designs of the original Empire State Building.[116]

According to a 2010 report by Concierge.com, the five lines to enter the observation decks are "as legendary as the building itself". Concierge.com stated that there were five lines: the sidewalk line, the lobby elevator line, the ticket purchase line, the second elevator line, and the line to get off the elevator and onto the observation deck.[117] In 2016, New York City's official tourism website made note of only three lines: the security check line, the ticket purchase line, and the second elevator line.[118] Following renovations completed in 2019, designed to streamline queuing and reduce wait times, guests enter from a single entrance on 34th Street, where they make their way through 10,000-square-foot (930 m2) exhibits on their way up to the observatories. Guests were offered a variety of ticket packages, including a package that enables them to skip the lines throughout the duration of their stay.[113] The Empire State Building garners significant revenue from ticket sales for its observation decks, making more money from ticket sales than it does from renting office space during some years.[106][119]

 
A 360° panoramic view of New York City from the 86th-floor observation deck in spring 2005. East River is to the left, Hudson River to the right, south is near center.

New York Skyride

In early 1994, a motion simulator attraction was built on the 2nd floor,[120] as a complement to the observation deck.[121] The original cinematic presentation lasted approximately 25 minutes, while the simulation was about eight minutes.[122] The ride had two incarnations. The original version, which ran from 1994 until around 2002, featured James Doohan, Star Trek's Scotty, as the airplane's pilot who humorously tried to keep the flight under control during a storm.[123][124] After the September 11 attacks in 2001, the ride was closed.[121] An updated version debuted in mid-2002, featuring actor Kevin Bacon as the pilot, with the new flight also going haywire.[125] This new version served a more informative goal, as opposed to the old version's main purpose of entertainment, and contained details about the 9/11 attacks.[126] The simulator received mixed reviews, with assessments of the ride ranging from "great" to "satisfactory" to "corny".[127]

Spire

Above the 102nd floor

The final stage of the building was the installation of a hollow mast, a 158-foot (48 m) steel shaft fitted with elevators and utilities, above the 86th floor. At the top would be a conical roof and the 102nd-floor docking station.[128][129] Inside, the elevators would ascend 167 feet (51 m) from the 86th floor ticket offices to a 33-foot-wide (10 m) 101st-floor[f] waiting room.[130][131] From there, stairs would lead to the 102nd floor,[f] where passengers would enter the airships.[128] The airships would have been moored to the spire at the equivalent of the building's 106th floor.[131][132]

As constructed, the mast contains four rectangular tiers topped by a cylindrical shaft with a conical pinnacle.[129] On the 102nd floor (formerly the 101st floor), there is a door with stairs ascending to the 103rd floor (formerly the 102nd).[f] This was built as a disembarkation floor for airships tethered to the building's spire, and has a circular balcony outside.[16] It is now an access point to reach the spire for maintenance. The room now contains electrical equipment, but celebrities and dignitaries may also be given permission to take pictures there.[133][134] Above the 103rd floor, there is a set of stairs and a ladder to reach the spire for maintenance work.[133] The mast's 480 windows were all replaced in 2015.[135] The mast serves as the base of the building's broadcasting antenna.[129]

Broadcast stations

 
Antennas for broadcast stations located at the top of the building

Broadcasting began at the Empire State Building on December 22, 1931, when NBC and RCA began transmitting experimental television broadcasts from a small antenna erected atop the mast, with two separate transmitters for the visual and audio data. They leased the 85th floor and built a laboratory there.[136] In 1934, RCA was joined by Edwin Howard Armstrong in a cooperative venture to test his FM system from the building's antenna.[137][138] This setup, which entailed the installation of the world's first FM transmitter,[138] continued only until October of the next year due to disputes between RCA and Armstrong.[136][137] Specifically, NBC wanted to install more TV equipment in the room where Armstrong's transmitter was located.[138]

After some time, the 85th floor became home to RCA's New York television operations initially as experimental station W2XBS channel 1 then, from 1941, as commercial station WNBT channel 1 (now WNBC channel 4). NBC's FM station, W2XDG, began transmitting from the antenna in 1940.[136][139] NBC retained exclusive use of the top of the building until 1950 when the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ordered the exclusive deal be terminated. The FCC directive was based on consumer complaints that a common location was necessary for the seven extant New York-area television stations to transmit from so that receiving antennas would not have to be constantly adjusted. Other television broadcasters would later join RCA at the building on the 81st through 83rd floors, often along with sister FM stations.[136] Construction of a dedicated broadcast tower began on July 27, 1950,[140] with TV, and FM, transmissions starting in 1951. The 200-foot (61 m) broadcast tower was completed in 1953.[129][52][141] From 1951, six broadcasters agreed to pay a combined $600,000 per year for the use of the antenna.[142] In 1965, a separate set of FM antennae was constructed ringing the 103rd floor observation area to act as a master antenna.[136]

The placement of the stations in the Empire State Building became a major issue with the construction of the World Trade Center's Twin Towers in the late 1960s, and early 1970s. The greater height of the Twin Towers would reflect radio waves broadcast from the Empire State Building, eventually resulting in some broadcasters relocating to the newer towers instead of suing the developer, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.[143] Even though the nine stations who were broadcasting from the Empire State Building were leasing their broadcast space until 1984, most of these stations moved to the World Trade Center as soon as it was completed in 1971. The broadcasters obtained a court order stipulating that the Port Authority had to build a mast and transmission equipment in the North Tower, as well as pay the broadcasters' leases in the Empire State Building until 1984.[144] Only a few broadcasters renewed their leases in the Empire State Building.[145]

The September 11 attacks destroyed the World Trade Center and the broadcast centers atop it, leaving most of the city's stations without a transmitter for ten days until the Armstrong Tower in Alpine, New Jersey, was re-activated temporarily.[146] By October 2001, nearly all of the city's commercial broadcast stations (both television and FM radio) were again transmitting from the top of the Empire State Building. In a report that Congress commissioned about the transition from analog television to digital television, it was stated that the placement of broadcast stations in the Empire State Building was considered "problematic" due to interference from nearby buildings. In comparison, the congressional report stated that the former Twin Towers had very few buildings of comparable height nearby thus signals suffered little interference.[147] In 2003, a few FM stations were relocated to the nearby Condé Nast Building to reduce the number of broadcast stations using the Empire State Building.[148] Eleven television stations and twenty-two FM stations had signed 15-year leases in the building by May 2003. It was expected that a taller broadcast tower in Bayonne, New Jersey, or Governors Island, would be built in the meantime with the Empire State Building being used as a "backup" since signal transmissions from the building were generally of poorer quality.[149] Following the construction of One World Trade Center in the late 2000s and early 2010s, some TV stations began moving their transmitting facilities there.[150]

As of 2021, the Empire State Building is home to the following stations:[151]

History

The site was previously owned by John Jacob Astor of the prominent Astor family, who had owned the site since the mid-1820s.[153][154] In 1893, John Jacob Astor Sr.'s grandson William Waldorf Astor opened the Waldorf Hotel on the site.[155][156] Four years later, his cousin, John Jacob Astor IV, opened the 16-story Astoria Hotel on an adjacent site.[63][155][157] The two portions of the Waldorf–Astoria hotel had 1,300 bedrooms, making it the largest hotel in the world at the time.[158] After the death of its founding proprietor, George Boldt, in early 1918, the hotel lease was purchased by Thomas Coleman du Pont.[159][160] By the 1920s, the old Waldorf–Astoria was becoming dated and the elegant social life of New York had moved much farther north.[161][36][162] Additionally, many stores had opened on Fifth Avenue north of 34th Street.[163][164] The Astor family decided to build a replacement hotel on Park Avenue[155][165] and sold the hotel to Bethlehem Engineering Corporation in 1928 for $14–16 million.[161] The hotel closed shortly thereafter on May 3, 1929.[63]

Planning

Early plans

 
The Waldorf-Astoria in 1901

Bethlehem Engineering Corporation originally intended to build a 25-story office building on the Waldorf–Astoria site. The company's president, Floyd De L. Brown, paid $100,000 of the $1 million down payment required to start construction on the building, with the promise that the difference would be paid later.[155] Brown borrowed $900,000 from a bank but defaulted on the loan.[166][167]

After Brown was unable to secure additional funding,[36] the land was resold to Empire State Inc., a group of wealthy investors that included Louis G. Kaufman, Ellis P. Earle, John J. Raskob, Coleman du Pont, and Pierre S. du Pont.[166][167][168] The name came from the state nickname for New York.[52][169] Alfred E. Smith, a former Governor of New York and U.S. presidential candidate whose 1928 campaign had been managed by Raskob,[165][170] was appointed head of the company.[36][166][167] The group also purchased nearby land so they would have the 2 acres (1 ha) needed for the base, with the combined plot measuring 425 feet (130 m) wide by 200 feet (61 m) long.[169][171] The Empire State Inc. consortium was announced to the public in August 1929.[172][173][171] Concurrently, Smith announced the construction of an 80-story building on the site, to be taller than any other buildings in existence.[171][174]

Empire State Inc. contracted William F. Lamb, of architectural firm Shreve, Lamb and Harmon, to create the building design.[2][169][175] Lamb produced the building drawings in just two weeks using the firm's earlier designs for the Reynolds Building in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, as the basis.[52] He had also been inspired by Raymond Hood's design for the Daily News Building, which was being constructed at the same time.[169] Concurrently, Lamb's partner Richmond Shreve created "bug diagrams" of the project requirements.[176] The 1916 Zoning Act forced Lamb to design a structure that incorporated setbacks resulting in the lower floors being larger than the upper floors.[d] Consequently, the building was designed from the top down,[177] giving it a pencil-like shape.[39] The plans were devised within a budget of $50 million and a stipulation that the building be ready for occupancy within 18 months of the start of construction.[36]

Design changes

 
Architectural sketch of heights and allowed building areas

The original plan of the building was 50 stories,[42] but was later increased to 60 and then 80 stories.[171] Height restrictions were placed on nearby buildings[171] to ensure that the top fifty floors of the planned 80-story, 1,000-foot-tall (300 m) building[31][178] would have unobstructed views of the city.[171] The New York Times lauded the site's proximity to mass transit, with the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit's 34th Street station and the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad's 33rd Street terminal one block away, as well as Penn Station two blocks away and Grand Central Terminal nine blocks away at its closest. It also praised the 3,000,000 square feet (280,000 m2) of proposed floor space near "one of the busiest sections in the world".[171] The Empire State Building was to be a typical office building, but Raskob intended to build it "better and in a bigger way", according to architectural writer Donald J. Reynolds.[165]

While plans for the Empire State Building were being finalized, an intense competition in New York for the title of "world's tallest building" was underway. 40 Wall Street (then the Bank of Manhattan Building) and the Chrysler Building in Manhattan both vied for this distinction and were already under construction when work began on the Empire State Building.[31] The "Race into the Sky", as popular media called it at the time, was representative of the country's optimism in the 1920s, fueled by the building boom in major cities.[179] The race was defined by at least five other proposals, although only the Empire State Building would survive the Wall Street Crash of 1929.[36][g] The 40 Wall Street tower was revised, in April 1929, from 840 feet (260 m) to 925 feet (282 m) making it the world's tallest.[181] The Chrysler Building added its 185-foot (56 m) steel tip to its roof in October 1929, thus bringing it to a height of 1,046 feet (319 m) and greatly exceeding the height of 40 Wall Street.[31] The Chrysler Building's developer, Walter Chrysler, realized that his tower's height would exceed the Empire State Building's as well, having instructed his architect, William Van Alen, to change the Chrysler's original roof from a stubby Romanesque dome to a narrow steel spire.[181] Raskob, wishing to have the Empire State Building be the world's tallest, reviewed the plans and had five floors added as well as a spire; however, the new floors would need to be set back because of projected wind pressure on the extension.[182] On November 18, 1929, Smith acquired a lot at 27–31 West 33rd Street, adding 75 feet (23 m) to the width of the proposed office building's site.[183][184] Two days later, Smith announced the updated plans for the skyscraper. The plans included an observation deck on the 86th-floor roof at a height of 1,050 feet (320 m), higher than the Chrysler's 71st-floor observation deck.[182][185]

The 1,050-foot Empire State Building would only be 4 feet (1.2 m) taller than the Chrysler Building,[182][186][187] and Raskob was afraid that Chrysler might try to "pull a trick like hiding a rod in the spire and then sticking it up at the last minute."[42][188][186] The plans were revised one last time in December 1929, to include a 16-story, 200-foot (61 m) metal "crown" and an additional 222-foot (68 m) mooring mast intended for dirigibles. The roof height was now 1,250 feet (380 m), making it the tallest building in the world by far, even without the antenna.[189][42][190] The addition of the dirigible station meant that another floor, the now-enclosed 86th floor, would have to be built below the crown;[190] however, unlike the Chrysler's spire, the Empire State's mast would serve a practical purpose.[188] A revised plan was announced to the public in late December 1929, just before the start of construction.[36][162] The final plan was sketched within two hours, the night before the plan was supposed to be presented to the site's owners in January 1930.[36] The New York Times reported that the spire was facing some "technical problems", but they were "no greater than might be expected under such a novel plan."[37] By this time the blueprints for the building had gone through up to fifteen versions before they were approved.[42][191][192] Lamb described the other specifications he was given for the final, approved plan:

The program was short enough—a fixed budget, no space more than 28 feet from window to corridor, as many stories of such space as possible, an exterior of limestone, and completion date of [May 1], 1931, which meant a year and six months from the beginning of sketches.[83][42]

Construction

The contractors were Starrett Brothers and Eken, which were composed of Paul and William A. Starrett and Andrew J. Eken.[193] The project was financed primarily by Raskob and Pierre du Pont,[194] while James Farley's General Builders Supply Corporation supplied the building materials.[2] John W. Bowser was the construction superintendent of the project,[195] and the structural engineer of the building was Homer G. Balcom.[175][196] The tight completion schedule necessitated the commencement of construction even though the design had yet to be finalized.[197]

Hotel demolition

Demolition of the old Waldorf–Astoria began on October 1, 1929.[198] Stripping the building down was an arduous process, as the hotel had been constructed using more rigid material than earlier buildings had been. Furthermore, the old hotel's granite, wood chips, and "'precious' metals such as lead, brass, and zinc" were not in high demand, resulting in issues with disposal.[199] Most of the wood was deposited into a woodpile on nearby 30th Street or was burned in a swamp elsewhere. Much of the other materials that made up the old hotel, including the granite and bronze, were dumped into the Atlantic Ocean near Sandy Hook, New Jersey.[200][201]

By the time the hotel's demolition started, Raskob had secured the required funding for the construction of the building.[202] The plan was to start construction later that year but, on October 24, the New York Stock Exchange experienced the major and sudden Wall Street Crash, marking the beginning of the decade-long Great Depression. Despite the economic downturn, Raskob refused to cancel the project because of the progress that had been made up to that point.[172] Neither Raskob, who had ceased speculation in the stock market the previous year, nor Smith, who had no stock investments, suffered financially in the crash.[202] However, most of the investors were affected and as a result, in December 1929, Empire State Inc. obtained a $27.5 million loan from Metropolitan Life Insurance Company so construction could begin.[203] The stock market crash resulted in no demand for new office space; Raskob and Smith nonetheless started construction,[204] as canceling the project would have resulted in greater losses for the investors.[172]

Steel structure

 
A worker bolts beams in 1930 during construction; the Chrysler Building can be seen in the background.

A structural steel contract was awarded on January 12, 1930,[205] with excavation of the site beginning ten days later on January 22,[206] before the old hotel had been completely demolished.[207] Two twelve-hour shifts, consisting of 300 men each, worked continuously to dig the 55-foot (17 m) deep foundation.[206] Small pier holes were sunk into the ground to house the concrete footings that would support the steelwork.[208] Excavation was nearly complete by early March,[209] and construction on the building itself started on March 17,[210][2] with the builders placing the first steel columns on the completed footings before the rest of the footings had been finished.[211] Around this time, Lamb held a press conference on the building plans. He described the reflective steel panels parallel to the windows, the large-block Indiana Limestone facade that was slightly more expensive than smaller bricks, and the building's vertical lines.[189] Four colossal columns, intended for installation in the center of the building site, were delivered; they would support a combined 10,000,000 pounds (4,500,000 kg) when the building was finished.[212]

The structural steel was pre-ordered and pre-fabricated in anticipation of a revision to the city's building code that would have allowed the Empire State Building's structural steel to carry 18,000 pounds per square inch (120,000 kPa), up from 16,000 pounds per square inch (110,000 kPa), thus reducing the amount of steel needed for the building. Although the 18,000-psi regulation had been safely enacted in other cities, Mayor Jimmy Walker did not sign the new codes into law until March 26, 1930, just before construction was due to commence.[210][213] The first steel framework was installed on April 1, 1930.[214] From there, construction proceeded at a rapid pace; during one stretch of 10 working days, the builders erected fourteen floors.[215][2] This was made possible through precise coordination of the building's planning, as well as the mass production of common materials such as windows and spandrels.[216] On one occasion, when a supplier could not provide timely delivery of dark Hauteville marble, Starrett switched to using Rose Famosa marble from a German quarry that was purchased specifically to provide the project with sufficient marble.[208]

The scale of the project was massive, with trucks carrying "16,000 partition tiles, 5,000 bags of cement, 450 cubic yards [340 m3] of sand and 300 bags of lime" arriving at the construction site every day.[217] There were also cafes and concession stands on five of the incomplete floors so workers did not have to descend to the ground level to eat lunch.[3][218] Temporary water taps were also built so workers did not waste time buying water bottles from the ground level.[3][219] Additionally, carts running on a small railway system transported materials from the basement storage[3] to elevators that brought the carts to the desired floors where they would then be distributed throughout that level using another set of tracks.[217][84][218] The 57,480 short tons (51,320 long tons) of steel ordered for the project was the largest-ever single order of steel at the time, comprising more steel than was ordered for the Chrysler Building and 40 Wall Street combined.[220][221] According to historian John Tauranac, building materials were sourced from numerous, and distant, sources with "limestone from Indiana, steel girders from Pittsburgh, cement and mortar from upper New York State, marble from Italy, France, and England, wood from northern and Pacific Coast forests, [and] hardware from New England."[215] The facade, too, used a variety of material, most prominently Indiana limestone but also Swedish black granite, terracotta, and brick.[222]

By June 20, the skyscraper's supporting steel structure had risen to the 26th floor, and by July 27, half of the steel structure had been completed.[217] Starrett Bros. and Eken endeavored to build one floor a day in order to speed up construction, achieving a pace of 4+12 stories per week;[223][105] prior to this, the fastest pace of construction for a building of similar height had been 3+12 stories per week.[223] While construction progressed, the final designs for the floors were being designed from the ground up (as opposed to the general design, which had been from the roof down). Some of the levels were still undergoing final approval, with several orders placed within an hour of a plan being finalized.[223] On September 10, as steelwork was nearing completion, Smith laid the building's cornerstone during a ceremony attended by thousands. The stone contained a box with contemporary artifacts including the previous day's New York Times, a U.S. currency set containing all denominations of notes and coins minted in 1930, a history of the site and building, and photographs of the people involved in construction.[224][225] The steel structure was topped out at 1,048 feet (319 m) on September 19, twelve days ahead of schedule and 23 weeks after the start of construction.[226] Workers raised a flag atop the 86th floor to signify this milestone.[223][227]

Completion and scale

 
During construction in October 1930; the USS Los Angeles, ZMC-2 and a J-class blimp seen overhead

Work on the building's interior and crowning mast commenced after the topping out.[227] The mooring mast topped out on November 21, two months after the steelwork had been completed.[225][228] Meanwhile, work on the walls and interior was progressing at a quick pace, with exterior walls built up to the 75th floor by the time steelwork had been built to the 95th floor.[229] The majority of the facade was already finished by the middle of November.[3] Because of the building's height, it was deemed infeasible to have many elevators or large elevator cabins, so the builders contracted with the Otis Elevator Company to make 66 cars that could speed at 1,200 feet per minute (366 m/min), which represented the largest-ever elevator order at the time.[230]

In addition to the time constraint builders had, there were also space limitations because construction materials had to be delivered quickly, and trucks needed to drop off these materials without congesting traffic. This was solved by creating a temporary driveway for the trucks between 33rd and 34th Streets, and then storing the materials in the building's first floor and basements. Concrete mixers, brick hoppers, and stone hoists inside the building ensured that materials would be able to ascend quickly and without endangering or inconveniencing the public.[229] At one point, over 200 trucks made material deliveries at the building site every day.[3] A series of relay and erection derricks, placed on platforms erected near the building, lifted the steel from the trucks below and installed the beams at the appropriate locations.[231] The Empire State Building was structurally completed on April 11, 1931, twelve days ahead of schedule and 410 days after construction commenced.[3] Al Smith shot the final rivet, which was made of solid gold.[232]

 
Photograph of a cable worker taken by Lewis Hine

The project involved more than 3,500 workers at its peak,[2] including 3,439 on a single day, August 14, 1930.[233] Many of the workers were Irish and Italian immigrants,[234] with a sizable minority of Mohawk ironworkers from the Kahnawake reserve near Montreal.[234][235][236] According to official accounts, five workers died during the construction,[237][238] although the New York Daily News gave reports of 14 deaths[3] and a headline in the socialist magazine The New Masses spread unfounded rumors of up to 42 deaths.[239][238] The Empire State Building cost $40,948,900 to build (equivalent to $637 million in 2022[9]), including demolition of the Waldorf–Astoria. This was lower than the $60 million budgeted for construction.[8]

Lewis Hine captured many photographs of the construction, documenting not only the work itself but also providing insight into the daily life of workers in that era.[206][240][241] Hine's images were used extensively by the media to publish daily press releases.[242] According to the writer Jim Rasenberger, Hine "climbed out onto the steel with the ironworkers and dangled from a derrick cable hundreds of feet above the city to capture, as no one ever had before (or has since), the dizzy work of building skyscrapers". In Rasenberger's words, Hine turned what might have been an assignment of "corporate flak" into "exhilarating art".[243] These images were later organized into their own collection.[244] Onlookers were enraptured by the sheer height at which the steelworkers operated. New York magazine wrote of the steelworkers: "Like little spiders they toiled, spinning a fabric of steel against the sky".[231]

Opening and early years

 
The Empire State Building in 1932. The building's antenna was installed 21 years later, in 1953.

The Empire State Building officially opened on May 1, 1931, forty-five days ahead of its projected opening date, and eighteen months from the start of construction.[57][2][245] The opening was marked with an event featuring United States President Herbert Hoover, who turned on the building's lights with the ceremonial button push from Washington, D.C.[246][247][4] Over 350 guests attended the opening ceremony, and following luncheon, at the 86th floor including Jimmy Walker, Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Al Smith.[4] An account from that day stated that the view from the luncheon was obscured by a fog, with other landmarks such as the Statue of Liberty being "lost in the mist" enveloping New York City.[248] The Empire State Building officially opened the next day.[248][195] Advertisements for the building's observatories were placed in local newspapers, while nearby hotels also capitalized on the events by releasing advertisements that lauded their proximity to the newly opened building.[249]

According to The New York Times, builders and real estate speculators predicted that the 1,250-foot-tall (380 m) Empire State Building would be the world's tallest building "for many years", thus ending the great New York City skyscraper rivalry. At the time, most engineers agreed that it would be difficult to build a building taller than 1,200 feet (370 m), even with the hardy Manhattan bedrock as a foundation.[250] Technically, it was believed possible to build a tower of up to 2,000 feet (610 m), but it was deemed uneconomical to do so, especially during the Great Depression.[84][251] As the tallest building in the world, at that time, and the first one to exceed 100 floors, the Empire State Building became an icon of the city and, ultimately, of the nation.[32]

In 1932, the Fifth Avenue Association gave the building its 1931 "gold medal" for architectural excellence, signifying that the Empire State had been the best-designed building on Fifth Avenue to open in 1931.[252] A year later, on March 2, 1933, the movie King Kong was released. The movie, which depicted a large stop motion ape named Kong climbing the Empire State Building, made the still-new building into a cinematic icon.[253][254]

Tenants and tourism

At the beginning of 1931, Fifth Avenue was experiencing high demand for storefront space, with only 12 of 224 stores being unoccupied. The Empire State Building, along with 500 Fifth Avenue and 608 Fifth Avenue, were expected to add a combined 11 stores.[255][256] The office space was less successful, as the Empire State Building's opening had coincided with the Great Depression in the United States.[244] In the first year, only 23 percent of the available space was rented,[257][258] as compared to the early 1920s, where the average building would be 52 percent occupied upon opening and 90 percent occupied within five years.[259] The lack of renters led New Yorkers to deride the building as the "Empty State Building"[244][260] or "Smith's Folly".[129]

The earliest tenants in the Empire State Building were large companies, banks, and garment industries.[129] Jack Brod, one of the building's longest resident tenants,[261][262] co-established the Empire Diamond Corporation with his father in the building in mid-1931[263] and rented space in the building until he died in 2008.[263] Brod recalled that there were only about 20 tenants at the time of opening, including him,[262] and that Al Smith was the only real tenant in the space above his seventh-floor offices.[261] Generally, during the early 1930s, it was rare for more than a single office space to be rented in the building, despite Smith's and Raskob's aggressive marketing efforts in the newspapers and to anyone they knew.[264] The building's lights were continuously left on, even in the unrented spaces, to give the impression of occupancy. This was exacerbated by competition from Rockefeller Center[257] as well as from buildings on 42nd Street, which, when combined with the Empire State Building, resulted in surplus of office space in a slow market during the 1930s.[265]

Aggressive marketing efforts served to reinforce the Empire State Building's status as the world's tallest.[266] The observatory was advertised in local newspapers as well as on railroad tickets.[267] The building became a popular tourist attraction, with one million people each paying one dollar to ride elevators to the observation decks in 1931.[268] In its first year of operation, the observation deck made approximately $2 million in revenue, as much as its owners made in rent that year.[257][244] By 1936, the observation deck was crowded on a daily basis, with food and drink available for purchase at the top,[269] and by 1944 the building had received its five-millionth visitor.[270] In 1931, NBC took up tenancy, leasing space on the 85th floor for radio broadcasts.[271][136] From the outset the building was in debt, losing $1 million per year by 1935. Real estate developer Seymour Durst recalled that the building was so underused in 1936 that there was no elevator service above the 45th floor, as the building above the 41st floor was empty except for the NBC offices and the Raskob/Du Pont offices on the 81st floor.[272]

Other events

Per the original plans, the Empire State Building's spire was intended to be an airship docking station. Raskob and Smith had proposed dirigible ticketing offices and passenger waiting rooms on the 86th floor, while the airships themselves would be tied to the spire at the equivalent of the building's 106th floor.[131][132] An elevator would ferry passengers from the 86th to the 101st floor[f] after they had checked in on the 86th floor,[130] after which passengers would have climbed steep ladders to board the airship.[131] The idea, however, was impractical and dangerous due to powerful updrafts caused by the building itself,[274] the wind currents across Manhattan,[131] and the spires of nearby skyscrapers.[275] Furthermore, even if the airship were to successfully navigate all these obstacles, its crew would have to jettison some ballast by releasing water onto the streets below in order to maintain stability, and then tie the craft's nose to the spire with no mooring lines securing the tail end of the craft.[16][131][275] On September 15, 1931, a small commercial United States Navy airship circled 25 times in 45-mile-per-hour (72 km/h) winds.[276] The airship then attempted to dock at the mast, but its ballast spilled and the craft was rocked by unpredictable eddies.[277][278] The near-disaster scuttled plans to turn the building's spire into an airship terminal, although one blimp did manage to make a single newspaper delivery afterward.[36][131]

On July 28, 1945, a B-25 Mitchell bomber crashed into the north side of the Empire State Building, between the 79th and 80th floors.[35] One engine completely penetrated the building and landed in a neighboring block, while the other engine and part of the landing gear plummeted down an elevator shaft. Fourteen people were killed in the incident,[279][192] but the building escaped severe damage and was reopened two days later.[279][280]

Profitability

 
A series of setbacks causes the building to taper with height.

By the 1940s, the Empire State Building was 98 percent occupied.[91] The structure broke even for the first time in the 1950s.[244][281] At the time, mass transit options in the building's vicinity were limited compared to the present day. Despite this challenge, the Empire State Building began to attract renters due to its reputation.[282] A 222-foot (68 m) radio antenna was erected on top of the towers starting in 1950,[140] allowing the area's television stations to be broadcast from the building.[141]

Despite the turnaround in the building's fortunes, Raskob listed it for sale in 1951,[283] with a minimum asking price of $50 million.[142] The property was purchased by business partners Roger L. Stevens, Henry Crown, Alfred R. Glancy and Ben Tobin.[284][285][286] The sale was brokered by the Charles F. Noyes Company, a prominent real estate firm in upper Manhattan,[142] for $51 million, the highest price paid for a single structure at the time.[287] By this time, the Empire State had been fully leased for several years with a waiting list of parties looking to lease space in the building, according to the Cortland Standard.[288] That same year, six news companies formed a partnership to pay a combined annual fee of $600,000 to use the building's antenna,[142] which was completed in 1953.[141] Crown bought out his partners' ownership stakes in 1954, becoming the sole owner.[289] The following year, the American Society of Civil Engineers named the building one of the "Seven Modern Civil Engineering Wonders".[290][291]

In 1961, Lawrence A. Wien signed a contract to purchase the Empire State Building for $65 million, with Harry B. Helmsley acting as partners in the building's operating lease.[284][292] This became the new highest price for a single structure.[292] Over 3,000 people paid $10,000 for one share each in a company called Empire State Building Associates. The company in turn subleased the building to another company headed by Helmsley and Wien, raising $33 million of the funds needed to pay the purchase price.[284][292] In a separate transaction,[292] the land underneath the building was sold to Prudential Insurance for $29 million.[284][293] Helmsley, Wien, and Peter Malkin quickly started a program of minor improvement projects, including the first-ever full-building facade refurbishment and window-washing in 1962,[294][295] the installation of new flood lights on the 72nd floor in 1964,[61][62] and replacement of the manually operated elevators with automatic units in 1966.[296] The little-used western end of the second floor was used as a storage space until 1964, at which point it received escalators to the first floor as part of its conversion into a highly sought retail area.[297][298]

Loss of "tallest building" title

 
The World Trade Center's North Tower surpassed the Empire State Building in height by 1970.[299][300]

In 1961, the same year that Helmsley, Wien, and Malkin had purchased the Empire State Building, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey formally backed plans for a new World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan.[301] The plan originally included 66-story twin towers with column-free open spaces. The Empire State's owners and real estate speculators were worried that the twin towers' 7.6 million square feet (710,000 m2) of office space would create a glut of rentable space in Manhattan as well as take away the Empire State Building's profits from lessees.[302] A revision in the World Trade Center's plan brought the twin towers to 1,370 feet (420 m) each or 110 stories, taller than the Empire State.[303] Opponents of the new project included prominent real-estate developer Robert Tishman, as well as Wien's Committee for a Reasonable World Trade Center.[303] In response to Wien's opposition, Port Authority executive director Austin J. Tobin said that Wien was only opposing the project because it would overshadow his Empire State Building as the world's tallest building.[304]

The World Trade Center's twin towers started construction in 1966.[305] The following year, the Ostankino Tower succeeded the Empire State Building as the tallest freestanding structure in the world.[306] In 1970, the Empire State surrendered its position as the world's tallest building,[307] when the World Trade Center's still-under-construction North Tower surpassed it, on October 19;[299][300] the North Tower was topped out on December 23, 1970.[300][308]

In December 1975, the observation deck was opened on the 110th floor of the Twin Towers, significantly higher than the 86th floor observatory on the Empire State Building.[192] The latter was also losing revenue during this period, particularly as a number of broadcast stations had moved to the World Trade Center in 1971; although the Port Authority continued to pay the broadcasting leases for the Empire State until 1984.[144] The Empire State Building was still seen as prestigious, having seen its forty-millionth visitor in March 1971.[309]

1980s and 1990s

By 1980, there were nearly two million annual visitors,[268] although a building official had previously estimated between 1.5 million and 1.75 million annual visitors.[111] The building received its own ZIP code in May 1980 in a roll out of 63 new postal codes in Manhattan. At the time, its tenants collectively received 35,000 pieces of mail daily.[24] The Empire State Building celebrated its 50th anniversary on May 1, 1981, with a much-publicized, but poorly received, laser light show,[310] as well as an "Empire State Building Week" that ran through to May 8.[311][94] The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) voted to designate the building and its lobby as city landmarks on May 19, 1981,[312][313]

Capital improvements were made to the Empire State Building during the early to mid-1990s at a cost of $55 million.[314] Because all of the building's windows were being replaced at the same time, the LPC mandated a paint-color test for the windows; the test revealed that the Empire State Building's original windows were actually red.[315] The improvements also entailed replacing alarm systems, elevators, windows, and air conditioning; making the observation deck compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA); and refurbishing the limestone facade.[316] The observation deck renovation was added after disability rights groups and the United States Department of Justice filed a lawsuit against the building in 1992, in what was the first lawsuit filed by an organization under the new law.[317][318] A settlement was reached in 1994, in which Empire State Building Associates agreed to add ADA-compliant elements, such as new elevators, ramps, and automatic doors, during the renovation.[318][319]

Prudential sold the land under the building in 1991 for $42 million to a buyer representing hotelier Hideki Yokoi [ja], who was imprisoned at the time in connection with the deadly Hotel New Japan Fire [ja] at the Hotel New Japan [ja] in Tokyo.[320] In 1994, Donald Trump entered into a joint-venture agreement with Yokoi, with a shared goal of breaking the Empire State Building's lease on the land in an effort to gain total ownership of the building so that, if successful, the two could reap the potential profits of merging the ownership of the building with the land beneath it.[321] Having secured a half-ownership of the land, Trump devised plans to take ownership of the building itself so he could renovate it, even though Helmsley and Malkin had already started their refurbishment project.[314] He sued Empire State Building Associates in February 1995, claiming that the latter had caused the building to become a "high-rise slum"[284] and a "second-rate, rodent-infested" office tower.[322] Trump had intended to have Empire State Building Associates evicted for violating the terms of their lease,[322] but was denied.[323] This led to Helmsley's companies countersuing Trump in May.[324] This sparked a series of lawsuits and countersuits that lasted several years,[284] partly arising from Trump's desire to obtain the building's master lease by taking it from Empire State Building Associates.[316] Upon Harry Helmsley's death in 1997, the Malkins sued Helmsley's widow, Leona Helmsley, for control of the building.[325]

21st century

2000s

Following the destruction of the World Trade Center during the September 11 attacks in 2001, the Empire State Building again became the tallest building in New York City, but was only the second-tallest building in the Americas after the Sears (later Willis) Tower in Chicago.[306][326][327] As a result of the attacks, transmissions from nearly all of the city's commercial television and FM radio stations were again broadcast from the Empire State Building.[147] The attacks also led to an increase in security due to persistent terror threats against prominent sites in New York City.[328]

In 2002, Trump and Yokoi sold their land claim to the Empire State Building Associates, now headed by Malkin, in a $57.5 million sale.[284][329] This action merged the building's title and lease for the first time in half a century.[329] Despite the lingering threat posed by the 9/11 attacks, the Empire State Building remained popular with 3.5 million visitors to the observatories in 2004, compared to about 2.8 million in 2003.[330]

Even though she maintained her ownership stake in the building until the post-consolidation IPO in October 2013, Leona Helmsley handed over day-to-day operations of the building in 2006 to Peter Malkin's company.[284][331] In 2008, the building was temporarily "stolen" by the New York Daily News to show how easy it was to transfer the deed on a property, since city clerks were not required to validate the submitted information, as well as to help demonstrate how fraudulent deeds could be used to obtain large mortgages and then have individuals disappear with the money. The paperwork submitted to the city included the names of Fay Wray, the famous star of King Kong, and Willie Sutton, a notorious New York bank robber. The newspaper then transferred the deed back over to the legitimate owners, who at that time were Empire State Land Associates.[332]

2010s to present

 
Since 2009, the Empire State Building has been lit blue and white annually for commencement at Columbia University.
 
The current One World Trade Center (seen in the distance) surpassed the Empire State Building's height on April 30, 2012.

Starting in 2009, the building's public areas received a $550 million renovation, with improvements to the air conditioning and waterproofing, renovations to the observation deck and main lobby,[95] and relocation of the gift shop to the 80th floor.[333][334] About $120 million was spent on improving the energy efficiency of the building, with the goal of reducing energy emissions by 38% within five years.[334][99] For example, all of the windows were refurbished onsite into film-coated "superwindows" which block heat but pass light.[99][335][336] Air conditioning operating costs on hot days were reduced, saving $17 million of the project's capital cost immediately and partially funding some of the other retrofits.[335] The Empire State Building won the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Gold for Existing Buildings rating in September 2011, as well as the World Federation of Great Towers' Excellence in Environment Award for 2010.[336] For the LEED Gold certification, the building's energy reduction was considered, as was a large purchase of carbon offsets. Other factors included low-flow bathroom fixtures, green cleaning supplies, and use of recycled paper products.[337]

On April 30, 2012, One World Trade Center topped out, taking the Empire State Building's record of tallest in the city.[338] By 2014, the building was owned by the Empire State Realty Trust (ESRT), with Anthony Malkin as chairman, CEO, and president.[339] The ESRT was a public company, having begun trading publicly on the New York Stock Exchange the previous year.[340] In August 2016, the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) was issued new fully diluted shares equivalent to 9.9% of the trust; this investment gave them partial ownership of the entirety of the ESRT's portfolio, and as a result, partial ownership of the Empire State Building.[341] The trust's president John Kessler called it an "endorsement of the company's irreplaceable assets".[342] The investment has been described by the real-estate magazine The Real Deal as "an unusual move for a sovereign wealth fund", as these funds typically buy direct stakes in buildings rather than real estate companies.[343] Other foreign entities that have a stake in the ESRT include investors from Norway, Japan, and Australia.[342]

A renovation of the Empire State Building was commenced in the 2010s to further improve energy efficiency, public areas, and amenities.[1] In August 2018, to improve the flow of visitor traffic, the main visitor's entrance was shifted to 20 West 34th Street as part of a major renovation of the observatory lobby.[344] The new lobby includes several technological features, including large LED panels, digital ticket kiosks in nine languages, and a two-story architectural model of the building surrounded by two metal staircases.[1][344] The first phase of the renovation, completed in 2019, features an updated exterior lighting system and digital hosts.[344] The new lobby also features free Wi-Fi provided for those waiting.[1][345] A 10,000-square-foot (930 m2) exhibit with nine galleries opened in July 2019.[346][347] The 102nd floor observatory, the third phase of the redesign, reopened to the public on October 12, 2019.[112][113][115] That portion of the project included outfitting the space with floor-to-ceiling glass windows and a brand-new glass elevator.[348] The final portion of the renovations to be completed was a new observatory on the 80th floor, which opened on December 2, 2019.[114][104] In total, the renovation cost $160 million[115] or $165 million and took four years to finish.[114][104]

A comprehensive restoration of the building's mooring and antenna masts also began in June 2019. Antennas on the mooring mast were removed or relocated to the upper mast, while the aluminum panels were cleaned and coated with silver paint.[349][350][351] To minimize disruption to the observation decks, the restoration work took place at night. The project was completed by late 2020.[351]

Height records

 
Height comparison of several New York City buildings, with Empire State second from left

The longest world record held by the Empire State Building was for the tallest skyscraper (to structural height), which it held for 42 years until it was surpassed by the North Tower of the World Trade Center in October 1970.[306][326][352] The Empire State Building was also the tallest human-made structure in the world before it was surpassed by the Griffin Television Tower Oklahoma (KWTV Mast) in 1954,[353] and the tallest freestanding structure in the world until the completion of the Ostankino Tower in 1967.[306] An early-1970s proposal to dismantle the spire and replace it with an additional 11 floors, which would have brought the building's height to 1,494 feet (455 m) and made it once again the world's tallest at the time, was considered but ultimately rejected.[354]

With the destruction of the World Trade Center in the September 11 attacks, the Empire State Building again became the tallest building in New York City, and the second-tallest building in the Americas, surpassed only by the Willis Tower in Chicago. The Empire State Building remained the tallest building in New York until the new One World Trade Center reached a greater height in April 2012.[306][326][327][355] As of 2022, it is the seventh-tallest building in New York City and the tenth-tallest in the United States.[356] The Empire State Building is the 49th-tallest in the world as of February 2021.[357] It is also the eleventh-tallest freestanding structure in the Americas behind the tallest U.S. buildings and the CN Tower.[358]

Notable tenants

As of 2013, the building houses around 1,000 businesses.[359] Current tenants include:

Former tenants include:

Incidents

1945 plane crash

 
Wreckage from the 1945 Empire State Building B-25 crash

At 9:40 am on July 28, 1945, a B-25 Mitchell bomber, piloted in thick fog by Lieutenant Colonel William Franklin Smith Jr.,[389] crashed into the north side of the Empire State Building between the 79th and 80th floors (then the offices of the National Catholic Welfare Council).[35][56] One engine completely penetrated the building, landing on the roof of a nearby building where it started a fire that destroyed a penthouse.[381][390][391] The other engine and part of the landing gear plummeted down an elevator shaft, causing a fire that was extinguished in 40 minutes. Fourteen people were killed in the incident.[279][192][391] Elevator operator Betty Lou Oliver fell 75 stories and survived, which still holds the Guinness World Record for the longest survived elevator fall recorded.[392]

Despite the damage and loss of life, many floors were open two days later.[279][280] The crash helped spur the passage of the long-pending Federal Tort Claims Act of 1946, as well as the insertion of retroactive provisions into the law, allowing people to sue the government for the incident.[393] Also as a result of the crash, the Civil Aeronautics Administration enacted strict regulations regarding flying over New York City, setting a minimum flying altitude of 2,500 feet (760 m) above sea level regardless of the weather conditions.[394][279]

A year later, on July 24, 1946, another airplane narrowly missed striking the building. The unidentified twin-engine plane scraped past the observation deck, frightening the tourists there.[395]

2000 elevator plunge

On January 24, 2000, an elevator in the building suddenly descended 40 stories after a cable that controlled the cabin's maximum speed was severed.[396] The elevator fell from the 44th floor to the fourth floor, where a narrowed elevator shaft provided a second safety system. Despite the 40-floor fall, both of the passengers in the cabin at the time were only slightly injured. After the fall, building inspectors reviewed all of the building's elevators.[397]

Suicide attempts

Because of the building's iconic status, it and other Midtown landmarks are popular locations for suicide attempts.[398] More than 30 people have attempted suicide over the years by jumping from the upper parts of the building, with most attempts being successful.[399][400]

The first suicide from the building occurred on April 7, 1931, before it was even completed, when a carpenter who had been laid-off went to the 58th floor and jumped.[401] The first suicide after the building's opening occurred from the 86th floor observatory in February 1935, when Irma P. Eberhardt fell 1,029 feet (314 m) onto a marquee sign.[402] On December 16, 1943, William Lloyd Rambo jumped to his death from the 86th floor, landing amidst Christmas shoppers on the street below.[403] In the early morning of September 27, 1946, shell-shocked Marine Douglas W. Brashear Jr. jumped from the 76th-floor window of the Grant Advertising Agency; police found his shoes 50 feet (15 m) from his body.[404]

On May 1, 1947, Evelyn McHale leapt to her death from the 86th floor observation deck and landed on a limousine parked at the curb. Photography student Robert Wiles took a photo of McHale's oddly intact corpse a few minutes after her death. The police found a suicide note among possessions that she left on the observation deck: "He is much better off without me.... I wouldn't make a good wife for anybody". The photo ran in the May 12, 1947, edition of Life magazine[405] and is often referred to as "The Most Beautiful Suicide". It was later used by visual artist Andy Warhol in one of his prints entitled Suicide (Fallen Body).[406] A 7-foot (2.1 m) mesh fence was put up around the 86th floor terrace in December 1947 after five people tried to jump during a three-week span in October and November of that year.[407][408] By then, sixteen people had died from suicide jumps.[407]

Only one person has jumped from the upper observatory. Frederick Eckert of Astoria ran past a guard in the enclosed 102nd-floor gallery on November 3, 1932, and jumped a gate leading to an outdoor catwalk intended for dirigible passengers. He landed and died on the roof of the 86th floor observation promenade.[409]

Two people have survived falls by not falling more than a floor. On December 2, 1979, Elvita Adams jumped from the 86th floor, only to be blown back onto a ledge on the 85th floor by a gust of wind and left with a broken hip.[410][411][412] On April 25, 2013, a man fell from the 86th floor observation deck, but he landed alive with minor injuries on an 85th-floor ledge where security guards brought him inside and paramedics transferred him to a hospital for a psychiatric evaluation.[413]

Shootings

Two fatal shootings have occurred in the direct vicinity of the Empire State Building. Abu Kamal, a 69-year-old Palestinian teacher, shot seven people on the 86th floor observation deck during the afternoon of February 23, 1997. He killed one person and wounded six others before committing suicide.[414] Kamal reportedly committed the shooting in response to events happening in Palestine and Israel.[415]

On the morning of August 24, 2012, 58-year-old Jeffrey T. Johnson shot and killed a former co-worker on the building's Fifth Avenue sidewalk. He had been laid off from his job in 2011. Two police officers confronted the gunman, and he aimed his firearm at them. They responded by firing 16 shots, killing him but also wounding nine bystanders. Most of the injured were hit by bullet fragments, although three took direct hits from bullets.[15][416]

Impact

 
The Empire State Building, Glenn Odem Coleman,
c. 1931

As the tallest building in the world and the first one to exceed 100 floors, the Empire State Building immediately became an icon of the city and of the nation.[244][32][309] In 2013, Time magazine noted that the Empire State Building "seems to completely embody the city it has become synonymous with".[417] The historian John Tauranac called it "'the' twentieth-century New York building", despite the existence of taller and more modernist buildings.[418]

The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission voted to designate the building and its lobby as city landmarks on May 19, 1981,[312][313] citing the historic nature of the first and second floors, as well as "the fixtures and interior components" of the upper floors.[419] The New York City Planning Commission endorsed the landmark status.[420] The building became a National Historic Landmark in 1986[10][421][422] in close alignment with the New York City Landmarks report.[421] The Empire State Building was added to the National Register of Historic Places the following year due to its architectural significance.[423]

Contemporary reception

Early architectural critics also focused on the Empire State Building's exterior ornamentation.[36] Architectural critic Talbot Hamlin wrote in 1931, "That it is the world's tallest building is purely incidental."[424] George Shepard Chappell, writing in The New Yorker under the pseudonym "T-Square", wrote the same year that the Empire State Building had a "palpably enormous" appeal to the general public, and that "its difference and distinction [lay] in the extreme sensitiveness of its entire design".[36][425] Edmund Wilson of The New Republic wrote that the building's neutral color palette made it "New York's handsomest skyscraper".[315]

Architectural critics also wrote negatively of the mast, especially in light of its failure to become a real air terminal. Chappell called the mast "a silly gesture", and Lewis Mumford called it "a public comfort station for migratory birds".[36] Nevertheless, architecture critic Douglas Haskell said the Empire State Building's appeal came from the fact that it was "caught at the exact moment of transition—caught between metal and stone, between the idea of 'monumental mass' and that of airy volume, between handicraft and machine design, and in the swing from what was essentially handicraft to what will be essentially industrial methods of fabrication."[426]

As icon

Early in the building's history, travel companies such as Short Line Motor Coach Service and New York Central Railroad used the building as an icon to symbolize the city.[427] In a 1932 survey of 50 American architects, fourteen ranked the Empire State Building as the United States' best building; the Empire State Building received more votes than any building except the Lincoln Memorial.[428][429] After the construction of the first World Trade Center, architect Paul Goldberger noted that the Empire State Building "is famous for being tall, but it is good enough to be famous for being good."[111]

As an icon of the United States, it is also very popular among Americans. In a 2007 survey, the American Institute of Architects found that the Empire State Building was "America's favorite building".[430] The building was originally a symbol of hope in a country devastated by the Depression, as well as a work of accomplishment by newer immigrants.[244] The writer Benjamin Flowers states that the Empire State was "a building intended to celebrate a new America, built by men (both clients and construction workers) who were themselves new Americans."[239] The architectural critic Jonathan Glancey refers to the building as an "icon of American design".[359] Additionally, in 2007, the Empire State Building was first on the AIA's List of America's Favorite Architecture.[431]

The Empire State Building has been hailed as an example of a "wonder of the world" due to the massive effort expended during construction.[418] The Washington Star listed it as part of one of the "seven wonders of the modern world" in 1931, while Holiday magazine wrote in 1958 that the Empire State's height would be taller than the combined heights of the Eiffel Tower and the Great Pyramid of Giza.[418] The American Society of Civil Engineers also declared the building "A Modern Civil Engineering Wonder of the United States" in 1958[291] and one of the Seven Wonders of the Modern World in 1994.[432] Ron Miller, in a 2010 book, also described the Empire State Building as one of the "seven wonders of engineering".[433] It has often been called the Eighth Wonder of the World as well, an appellation that it has held since shortly after opening.[191][277][434] The panels installed in the lobby in 1963 reflected this, showing the seven original wonders alongside the Empire State Building.[96] The Empire State Building also became the standard of reference to describe the height and length of other structures globally, both natural and human-made.[435]

The building has also inspired replicas. The New York-New York Hotel and Casino in Paradise, Nevada, contains the "Empire Tower",[436] a 47-story replica of the Empire State Building.In addition, the New York-New York Hotel and Casino in Paradise, Nevada, contains the "Chrysler Tower",[436] a replica of the Chrysler Building measuring 35 or 40 stories tall.[437][438] A portion of the hotel's interior was also designed to resemble the Empire State Building's interior.[437]

In media

As an icon of New York City, the Empire State Building has been featured in various films, books, TV shows, and video games. According to the building's official website, more than 250 movies contain depictions of the Empire State Building.[439] In his book about the building, John Tauranac writes that its first documented appearance in popular culture was Swiss Family Manhattan, a 1932 children's story by Christopher Morley.[440] A year later, the film King Kong depicted Kong, a giant stop motion ape that climbs the Empire State Building during the film's climax,[253][254][441] bringing the building into the popular imagination.[56][441] Later movies such as An Affair to Remember (1957), Sleepless in Seattle (1993), and Independence Day (1996) also prominently featured the building.[442][439] The building has also been featured in other works, such as "Daleks in Manhattan", a 2007 episode of the TV series Doctor Who;[442] and Empire, an eight-hour black-and-white silent film by Andy Warhol,[442] which was later added to the Library of Congress's National Film Registry.[443]

Throughout its history, the Empire State Building has welcomed celebrities, royalty, and dignitaries to visit the observation deck. From celebrities like Taylor Swift and Zendaya to royalty such as Prince William, the Empire State Building hosts notable figures every year.[444]

Empire State Building Run-Up

The Empire State Building Run-Up, a foot race from ground level to the 86th-floor observation deck, has been held annually since 1978.[445] It is organized by NYCRUNS.[446] Its participants are referred to both as runners and as climbers, and are often tower running enthusiasts. The race covers a vertical distance of 1,050 ft (320 m) and takes in 1,576 steps. The record time is 9 minutes and 33 seconds, achieved by Australian professional cyclist Paul Crake in 2003, at a climbing rate of 6,593 ft (2,010 m) per hour.[447][448]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ The tenants' entrance is located at 350 Fifth Avenue, while the visitors' entrance is located at 20 West 34th Street.[1]
  2. ^ a b The Empire State Building is located within the 10001 zip code area,[23] but 10118 has been assigned as the building's own zip code by the United States Postal Service[20][21] since 1980.[24]
  3. ^ a b Most sources state that there are 102 floors,[5][6][7] but some give a figure of 103 floors due to the presence of a balcony above the 102nd floor.[15][16] See § Opening and early years and § Above the 102nd floor for a detailed explanation.
  4. ^ a b Per the 1916 Zoning Act, the wall of any given tower that faces a street could only rise to a certain height, proportionate to the street's width, at which point the building had to be set back by a given proportion. This system of setbacks would continue until the tower reaches a floor level in which that level's floor area was 25% that of the ground level's area. After that 25% threshold was reached, the building could rise without restriction.[42][43][44] The 1916 Zoning Act was amended in 1961 so that buildings erected thereafter could not exceed a floor area ratio that was calculated for each zoning district.[45] The maximum ratio for the Empire State Building's district is 15, unless it includes a public plaza.[46] A grandfather clause permits preexisting structures to continue under the old rule. Therefore, the Empire State Building's floor area ratio of 25 cannot be duplicated, or even approached, by a new building in that district.[47]
  5. ^ a b See Landmarks Preservation Commission Interior 1981, PDF page 26, for a diagram of the lobby.
  6. ^ a b c d The 101st floor was later renamed the 102nd floor and is 101 floors above ground. The former 102nd floor, now the 103rd floor, is now a balcony that is off-limits to the public, and is 102 floors above ground.[273]
  7. ^ These proposals included the 100-story Metropolitan Life North Building; a 1,050-foot (320 m) tower built by Abraham E. Lefcourt at Broadway and 49th Street; a 100-story tower developed by the Fred F. French Company on Sixth Avenue between 43rd and 44th streets; an 85-story tower to be developed on the site of the Belmont Hotel near Grand Central Terminal; and the Noyes-Schulte Company's proposed tower on Broadway between Duane and Worth streets. Only one of these projects was even partially completed: the base of the Metropolitan Life North Building.[180]

Citations

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  14. ^ a b c Landmarks Preservation Commission Interior 1981, p. 1.
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    • "Top of the Empire State To Get New Floodlights". The New York Times. January 21, 1964. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved October 26, 2017.
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    • "ESB to light up with NYCFC, Red Bulls colors". am New York. May 20, 2016. Retrieved October 26, 2017.
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Not to be confused with Empire Building Manhattan The Empire State Building is a 102 story c Art Deco skyscraper in Midtown Manhattan New York City The building was designed by Shreve Lamb amp Harmon and built from 1930 to 1931 Its name is derived from Empire State the nickname of the state of New York The building has a roof height of 1 250 feet 380 m and stands a total of 1 454 feet 443 2 m tall including its antenna The Empire State Building was the world s tallest building until the first tower of the World Trade Center was topped out in 1970 following the September 11 attacks in 2001 the Empire State Building was New York City s tallest building until it was surpassed in 2012 by One World Trade Center As of 2022 update the building is the seventh tallest building in New York City the ninth tallest completed skyscraper in the United States and the 54th tallest in the world Empire State BuildingAerial view in 2012Record heightTallest in the world from 1931 to 1970 I Preceded byChrysler BuildingSurpassed byWorld Trade CenterGeneral informationStatusCompletedTypeOffice building observation decksArchitectural styleArt DecoLocation350 Fifth Avenue a New York NY 10118 b Coordinates40 44 54 N 73 59 07 W 40 74833 N 73 98528 W 40 74833 73 98528Construction startedMarch 17 1930 93 years ago 1930 03 17 2 Topped out19 September 1930 93 years ago 1930 09 19 CompletedApril 11 1931 92 years ago 1931 04 11 3 OpenedMay 1 1931 92 years ago May 1 1931 4 Cost 40 948 900 8 equivalent to 637 million in 2022 9 OwnerEmpire State Realty TrustHeightTip1 454 ft 443 2 m 5 Antenna spire204 ft 62 2 m 5 Roof1 250 ft 381 0 m 5 Top floor1 224 ft 373 1 m 5 Observatory80th 86th and 102nd top floors 5 DimensionsOther dimensions424 ft 129 2 m east west 187 ft 57 0 m north south 6 Technical detailsFloor count102 5 6 7 c Floor area2 248 355 sq ft 208 879 m2 5 Lifts elevators73 5 Design and constructionArchitect s Shreve Lamb and HarmonDeveloperEmpire State Inc including John J Raskob and Al SmithStructural engineerHomer Gage BalcomMain contractorStarrett Brothers and EkenWebsiteesbnyc wbr comU S National Historic LandmarkDesignatedJune 24 1986Reference no 82001192U S National Register of Historic PlacesDesignatedNovember 17 1982Reference no 82001192New York State Register of Historic PlacesDesignatedSeptember 27 1982 12 Reference no 06101 001691New York City LandmarkDesignatedMay 19 1981 13 Reference no 2000 13 Designated entityFacadeNew York City LandmarkDesignatedMay 19 1981 14 Reference no 2001 14 Designated entityInterior LobbyReferencesI Empire State Building Emporis Archived from the original on April 5 2015 5 10 11 The site of the Empire State Building in Midtown South on the west side of Fifth Avenue between West 33rd and 34th Streets was developed in 1893 as the Waldorf Astoria Hotel In 1929 Empire State Inc acquired the site and devised plans for a skyscraper there The design for the Empire State Building was changed fifteen times until it was ensured to be the world s tallest building Construction started on March 17 1930 and the building opened thirteen and a half months afterward on May 1 1931 Despite favorable publicity related to the building s construction because of the Great Depression and World War II its owners did not make a profit until the early 1950s The building s Art Deco architecture height and observation decks have made it a popular attraction Around four million tourists from around the world annually visit the building s 86th and 102nd floor observatories an additional indoor observatory on the 80th floor opened in 2019 The Empire State Building is an international cultural icon it has been featured in more than 250 television series and films since the film King Kong was released in 1933 The building s size has become the global standard of reference to describe the height and length of other structures A symbol of New York City the building has been named as one of the Seven Wonders of the Modern World by the American Society of Civil Engineers It was ranked first on the American Institute of Architects List of America s Favorite Architecture in 2007 Additionally the Empire State Building and its ground floor interior were designated city landmarks by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1980 and were added to the National Register of Historic Places as a National Historic Landmark in 1986 Contents 1 Site 2 Architecture 2 1 Form 2 2 Facade 2 3 Lights 2 4 Interior 2 4 1 Lobby 2 4 2 Elevators 2 4 3 Observation decks 2 4 4 New York Skyride 2 5 Spire 2 5 1 Above the 102nd floor 2 5 2 Broadcast stations 3 History 3 1 Planning 3 1 1 Early plans 3 1 2 Design changes 3 2 Construction 3 2 1 Hotel demolition 3 2 2 Steel structure 3 2 3 Completion and scale 3 3 Opening and early years 3 3 1 Tenants and tourism 3 3 2 Other events 3 4 Profitability 3 5 Loss of tallest building title 3 6 1980s and 1990s 3 7 21st century 3 7 1 2000s 3 7 2 2010s to present 4 Height records 5 Notable tenants 6 Incidents 6 1 1945 plane crash 6 2 2000 elevator plunge 6 3 Suicide attempts 6 4 Shootings 7 Impact 7 1 Contemporary reception 7 2 As icon 7 3 In media 7 4 Empire State Building Run Up 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksSiteThe Empire State Building is located on the west side of Fifth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan between 33rd Street to the south and 34th Street to the north 17 Tenants enter the building through the Art Deco lobby located at 350 Fifth Avenue Visitors to the observatories use an entrance at 20 West 34th Street prior to August 2018 visitors entered through the Fifth Avenue lobby 1 Although physically located in South Midtown 18 a mixed residential and commercial area 19 the building is so large that it was assigned its own ZIP Code 10118 20 21 as of 2012 update it is one of 43 buildings in New York City that have their own ZIP codes 22 b The areas surrounding the Empire State Building are home to other major points of interest including Macy s at Herald Square on Sixth Avenue and 34th Street 25 and Koreatown on 32nd Street between Madison and Sixth avenues 25 26 To the east of the Empire State Building is Murray Hill 27 a neighborhood with a mix of residential commercial and entertainment activity 28 The block directly to the northeast contains the B Altman and Company Building which houses the City University of New York s Graduate Center while the Demarest Building is directly across Fifth Avenue to the east 29 The nearest New York City Subway stations are 34th Street Herald Square one block west and 33rd Street at Park Avenue two blocks east there is also a PATH station at 33rd Street and Sixth Avenue 27 ArchitectureThe Empire State Building was designed by Shreve Lamb and Harmon in the Art Deco style 30 The Empire State Building is 1 250 ft 381 m tall to its 102nd floor or 1 453 feet 8 9 16 inches 443 092 m including its 203 foot 61 9 m pinnacle 31 It was the first building in the world to be more than 100 stories tall 32 though only the lowest 86 stories are usable The first through 85th floors contain 2 158 million square feet 200 500 m2 of commercial and office space while the 86th floor contains an observatory 33 31 34 The remaining 16 stories are part of the spire which is capped by an observatory on the 102nd floor the spire does not contain any intermediate levels and is used mostly for mechanical purposes 31 Atop the 102nd story is the 203 ft 61 9 m pinnacle much of which is covered by broadcast antennas and surmounted with a lightning rod 35 Form nbsp The five story base as seen from Fifth Avenue with the main entrance at center The Empire State Building sets back significantly above the base The Empire State Building has a symmetrical massing because of its large lot and relatively short base Its articulation consists of three horizontal sections similar to the components of a column namely a base shaft and capital 33 The five story base occupies the entire lot while the 81 story shaft above it is set back sharply from the base 36 37 38 The setback above the 5th story is 60 feet 18 m deep on all sides 33 There are smaller setbacks on the upper stories allowing sunlight to illuminate the interiors of the top floors while also positioning these floors away from the noisy streets below 39 40 The setbacks are located at the 21st 25th 30th 72nd 81st and 85th stories 41 The setbacks correspond to the tops of elevator shafts allowing interior spaces to be at most 28 feet 8 5 m deep see Interior 33 The setbacks were mandated by the 1916 Zoning Resolution which was intended to allow sunlight to reach the streets as well d Normally a building of the Empire State s dimensions would be permitted to build up to 12 stories on the Fifth Avenue side and up to 17 stories on the 33rd Street and 34th Street sides before it would have to utilize setbacks 37 However with the largest setback being located above the base the tower stories could contain a uniform shape 48 49 42 According to architectural writer Robert A M Stern the building s form contrasted with the nearly contemporary similarly designed 500 Fifth Avenue eight blocks north which had an asymmetrical massing on a smaller lot 36 Facade The Empire State Building s Art Deco design is typical of pre World War II architecture in New York City 30 The facade is clad in Indiana limestone panels made by the Indiana Limestone Company 50 and sourced from a quarry in south central Indiana 51 the panels give the building its signature blonde color 52 According to official fact sheets the facade uses 200 000 cubic feet 5 700 m3 of limestone and granite ten million bricks and 730 short tons 650 long tons of aluminum and stainless steel 53 The building also contains 6 514 windows 54 The decorative features on the facade are largely geometric in contrast with earlier buildings whose decorations often were intended to represent a specific narrative 55 nbsp A pair of sculpted concrete eagles above the Fifth Avenue entranceThe main entrance composed of three sets of metal doors is at the center of the facade s Fifth Avenue elevation flanked by molded piers that are topped with eagles Above the main entrance is a transom a triple height transom window with geometric patterns and the golden letters Empire State above the fifth floor windows 56 38 57 There are two entrances each on 33rd and 34th streets with modernistic stainless steel canopies projecting from the entrances on 33rd and 34th streets there Above the secondary entrances are triple windows less elaborate in design than those on Fifth Avenue 30 38 57 The storefronts on the first floor contain aluminum framed doors and windows within a black granite cladding 38 57 The second through fourth stories consist of windows alternating with wide stone piers and narrower stone mullions The fifth story contains windows alternating with wide and narrow mullions and is topped by a horizontal stone sill 38 The facade of the tower stories is split into several vertical bays on each side with windows projecting slightly from the limestone cladding The bays are arranged into sets of one two or three windows on each floor 56 58 The bays are separated by alternating narrow and wide piers the inclusion of which may have been influenced by the design of the contemporary Daily News Building 59 The windows in each bay are separated by vertical nickel chrome steel mullions and connected by horizontal aluminum spandrels between each floor 41 57 The windows are placed within stainless steel frames which saved money by eliminating the need to apply a stone finish around the windows In addition the use of aluminum spandrels obviated the need for cross bonding which would have been required if stone had been used instead 56 Lights nbsp Lights representing the Democratic and Republican parties as results are tabulated in the 2012 presidential electionThe building was originally equipped with white searchlights at the top They were first used in November 1932 when they lit up to signal Roosevelt s victory over Hoover in the presidential election of that year 60 These were later swapped for four Freedom Lights in 1956 60 In February 1964 flood lights were added on the 72nd floor 61 to illuminate the top of the building at night so that the building could be seen from the World Fair later that year 62 The lights were shut off from November 1973 to July 1974 because of the energy crisis at the time 63 In 1976 the businessman Douglas Leigh suggested that Wien and Helmsley install 204 metal halide lights which were four times as bright as the 1 000 incandescent lights they were to replace 64 New red white and blue metal halide lights were installed in time for the country s bicentennial that July 63 65 After the bicentennial Helmsley retained the new lights due to the reduced maintenance cost about 116 a year 64 Since October 12 1977 the spire has been lit in colors chosen to match seasonal events and holidays 56 Organizations are allowed to make requests through the building s website 66 The building is also lit in the colors of New York based sports teams on nights when they host games for example orange blue and white for the New York Knicks red white and blue for the New York Rangers 67 The spire can also be lit to commemorate events including disasters anniversaries or deaths as well as for celebrations such as Pride and Halloween In 1998 the building was lit in blue after the death of singer Frank Sinatra who was nicknamed Ol Blue Eyes 68 nbsp The Empire State Building is bathed annually in rainbow colored lighting during the Pride Month of June evoking the international LGBT icon as seen in this 2015 image The structure was lit in red white and blue for several months after the collapse of the World Trade Center on September 11 2001 69 On January 13 2012 the building was lit in red orange and yellow to honor the 60th anniversary of the NBC program The Today Show 70 After retired basketball player Kobe Bryant s January 2020 death the building was lit in purple and gold signifying the colors of his former team the Los Angeles Lakers 71 In addition to lightings the Empire State Building is able to do immersive visual projections on the building s exterior Most recently partnering with Netflix in May 2022 to celebrate the return of Stranger Things fourth season by projecting the Upside Down onto the Empire State Building 72 In 2012 the building s four hundred metal halide lamps and floodlights were replaced with 1 200 LED fixtures increasing the available colors from nine to over 16 million 73 The computer controlled system allows the building to be illuminated in ways that were unable to be done previously with plastic gels 74 For instance CNN used the top of the Empire State Building as a scoreboard during the 2012 United States presidential election using red and blue lights to represent Republican and Democratic electoral votes respectively 75 Also on November 26 2012 the building had its first synchronized light show using music from recording artist Alicia Keys 76 Artists such as Eminem and OneRepublic have been featured in later shows including the building s annual Holiday Music to Lights Show 77 The building s owners adhere to strict standards in using the lights for instance they do not use the lights to play advertisements 74 Interior nbsp One of several elevator lobbiesAccording to official fact sheets the Empire State Building weighs 365 000 short tons 331 122 t and has an internal volume of 37 million cubic feet 1 000 000 m3 53 The interior required 1 172 miles 1 886 km of elevator cable and 2 million feet 609 600 m of electrical wires 78 It has a total floor area of 2 768 591 sq ft 257 211 m2 and each of the floors in the base cover 2 acres 1 ha 79 This gives the building capacity for 20 000 tenants and 15 000 visitors 48 The riveted steel frame of the building was originally designed to handle all of the building s gravitational stresses and wind loads 80 The amount of material used in the building s construction resulted in a very stiff structure when compared to other skyscrapers with a structural stiffness of 42 pounds per square foot 2 0 kPa versus the Willis Tower s 33 pounds per square foot 1 6 kPa and the John Hancock Center s 26 pounds per square foot 1 2 kPa 81 A December 1930 feature in Popular Mechanics estimated that a building with the Empire State s dimensions would still stand even if hit with an impact of 50 short tons 45 long tons 48 Utilities are grouped in a central shaft 37 On the 6th through 86th stories the central shaft is surrounded by a main corridor on all four sides 42 Per the final specifications of the building the corridor is surrounded in turn by office space 28 feet 8 5 m deep maximizing office space at a time before air conditioning became commonplace 82 83 33 Each of the floors has 210 structural columns that pass through it which provide structural stability but limits the amount of open space on these floors 42 The relative dearth of stone in the Empire State Building allows for more space overall with a 1 200 stone to building ratio compared to a 1 50 ratio in similar buildings 84 Lobby nbsp Fifth Avenue lobbyThe original main lobby is accessed from Fifth Avenue on the building s east side and is the only place in the building where the design contains narrative motifs 55 It contains an entrance with one set of double doors between a pair of revolving doors At the top of each doorway is a bronze motif depicting one of three crafts or industries used in the building s construction Electricity Masonry and Heating 85 The three story high space runs parallel to 33rd and 34th Streets 86 The lobby contains two tiers of marble a wainscoting of darker marble topped by lighter marble There is a pattern of zigzagging terrazzo tiles on the lobby floor which leads from east to west 86 To the north and south are storefronts which are flanked by tubes of dark rounded marble and topped by a vertical band of grooves set into the marble 86 Until the 1960s there was a Longchamps restaurant next to the lobby with six oval murals designed by Winold Reiss these murals were placed in storage when the Longchamps closed 87 88 The western ends of the north and south walls include escalators to a mezzanine level 86 e At the west end of the lobby behind the security desk is an aluminum relief of the skyscraper as it was originally built without the antenna 89 The relief which was intended to provide a welcoming effect 14 contains an embossed outline of the building with rays radiating from the spire and the sun behind it 90 In the background is a state map of New York with the building s location marked by a medallion in the very southeast portion of the outline A compass is depicted in the bottom right and a plaque to the building s major developers is on the bottom left 91 90 A scale model of the building was also placed south of the security desk 91 nbsp Aluminum relief of the buildingThe plaque at the western end of the lobby is on the eastern interior wall of a one story tall rectangular shaped corridor that surrounds the banks of escalators with a similar design to the lobby 92 The rectangular shaped corridor actually consists of two long hallways on the northern and southern sides of the rectangle 93 as well as a shorter hallway on the eastern side and another long hallway on the western side 92 At both ends of the northern and southern corridors there is a bank of four low rise elevators in between the corridors 91 55 94 The western side of the rectangular elevator bank corridor extends north to the 34th Street entrance and south to the 33rd Street entrance It borders three large storefronts and leads to escalators originally stairs which go both to the second floor and to the basement Going from west to east there are secondary entrances to 34th and 33rd Streets from the northern and southern corridors respectively 86 e The side entrances from 33rd and 34th Street lead to two story high corridors around the elevator core crossed by stainless steel and glass enclosed bridges at the mezzanine floor 30 38 91 Until the 1960s an Art Deco mural inspired by both the sky and the Machine Age was installed in the lobby ceilings 89 Subsequent damage to these murals designed by artist Leif Neandross resulted in reproductions being installed Renovations to the lobby in 2009 such as replacing the clock over the information desk in the Fifth Avenue lobby with an anemometer and installing two chandeliers intended to be part of the building when it originally opened revived much of its original grandeur 95 The north corridor contained eight illuminated panels created in 1963 by Roy Sparkia and Renee Nemorov in time for the 1964 World s Fair depicting the building as the Eighth Wonder of the World alongside the traditional seven 94 96 The building s owners installed a series of paintings by the New York artist Kysa Johnson in the concourse level Johnson later filed a federal lawsuit in January 2014 under the Visual Artists Rights Act alleging the negligent destruction of the paintings and damage to her reputation as an artist 97 As part of the building s 2010 renovation Denise Amses commissioned a work consisting of 15 000 stars and 5 000 circles superimposed on a 13 by 5 foot 4 0 by 1 5 m etched glass installation in the lobby 98 Elevators The Empire State Building has 73 elevators in all including service elevators 99 Its original 64 elevators built by the Otis Elevator Company 79 in a central core and are of varying heights with the longest of these elevators reaching from the lobby to the 80th floor 37 100 As originally built there were four express elevators that connected the lobby 80th floor and several landings in between the other 60 local elevators connected the landings with the floors above these intermediate landings 49 Of the 64 total elevators 58 were for passenger use comprising the four express elevators and 54 local elevators and eight were for freight deliveries 42 The elevators were designed to move at 1 200 feet per minute 366 m min At the time of the skyscraper s construction their practical speed was limited to 700 feet per minute 213 m min per city law but this limit was removed shortly after the building opened 79 42 Additional elevators connect the 80th floor to the six floors above it as the six extra floors were built after the original 80 stories were approved 31 101 The elevators were mechanically operated until 2011 when they were replaced with automatic elevators during the 550 million renovation of the building 102 An additional elevator connects the 86th and 102nd floor observatories which allows visitors access the 102nd floor observatory after having their tickets scanned It also allows employees to access the mechanical floors located between the 87th and 101st floors 80 Observation decks nbsp 80th floor observation deckThe 80th 86th and 102nd floors contain observatories 103 89 104 The latter two observatories saw a combined average of four million visitors per year in 2010 105 106 107 Since opening the observatories have been more popular than similar observatories at 30 Rockefeller Plaza the Chrysler Building the first One World Trade Center or the Woolworth Building despite being more expensive 106 There are variable charges to enter the observatories one ticket allows visitors to go as high as the 86th floor and there is an additional charge to visit the 102nd floor Other ticket options for visitors include scheduled access to view the sunrise from the observatory a premium guided tour with VIP access and the AM PM package which allows for two visits in the same day 108 nbsp nbsp Interior and exterior observation decks at the 86th floor The 86th floor observatory contains both an enclosed viewing gallery and an open air outdoor viewing area allowing for it to remain open 365 days a year regardless of the weather The 102nd floor observatory is completely enclosed and much smaller in size The 102nd floor observatory was closed to the public from the late 1990s to 2005 due to limited viewing capacity and long lines 109 110 The observation decks were redesigned in mid 1979 111 The 102nd floor was again redesigned in a project that was completed in 2019 allowing the windows to be extended from floor to ceiling and widening the space in the observatory overall 112 113 An observatory on the 80th floor opened in 2019 includes various exhibits as well as a mural of the skyline drawn by British artist Stephen Wiltshire 114 104 An interactive multimedia museum with multiple hands on exhibitions about the building s history was added during this project 115 The design of the 10 000 sq ft 930 m2 Observatory Experience was inspired by the plans and designs of the original Empire State Building 116 According to a 2010 report by Concierge com the five lines to enter the observation decks are as legendary as the building itself Concierge com stated that there were five lines the sidewalk line the lobby elevator line the ticket purchase line the second elevator line and the line to get off the elevator and onto the observation deck 117 In 2016 New York City s official tourism website made note of only three lines the security check line the ticket purchase line and the second elevator line 118 Following renovations completed in 2019 designed to streamline queuing and reduce wait times guests enter from a single entrance on 34th Street where they make their way through 10 000 square foot 930 m2 exhibits on their way up to the observatories Guests were offered a variety of ticket packages including a package that enables them to skip the lines throughout the duration of their stay 113 The Empire State Building garners significant revenue from ticket sales for its observation decks making more money from ticket sales than it does from renting office space during some years 106 119 nbsp A 360 panoramic view of New York City from the 86th floor observation deck in spring 2005 East River is to the left Hudson River to the right south is near center New York Skyride In early 1994 a motion simulator attraction was built on the 2nd floor 120 as a complement to the observation deck 121 The original cinematic presentation lasted approximately 25 minutes while the simulation was about eight minutes 122 The ride had two incarnations The original version which ran from 1994 until around 2002 featured James Doohan Star Trek s Scotty as the airplane s pilot who humorously tried to keep the flight under control during a storm 123 124 After the September 11 attacks in 2001 the ride was closed 121 An updated version debuted in mid 2002 featuring actor Kevin Bacon as the pilot with the new flight also going haywire 125 This new version served a more informative goal as opposed to the old version s main purpose of entertainment and contained details about the 9 11 attacks 126 The simulator received mixed reviews with assessments of the ride ranging from great to satisfactory to corny 127 Spire Above the 102nd floor The final stage of the building was the installation of a hollow mast a 158 foot 48 m steel shaft fitted with elevators and utilities above the 86th floor At the top would be a conical roof and the 102nd floor docking station 128 129 Inside the elevators would ascend 167 feet 51 m from the 86th floor ticket offices to a 33 foot wide 10 m 101st floor f waiting room 130 131 From there stairs would lead to the 102nd floor f where passengers would enter the airships 128 The airships would have been moored to the spire at the equivalent of the building s 106th floor 131 132 As constructed the mast contains four rectangular tiers topped by a cylindrical shaft with a conical pinnacle 129 On the 102nd floor formerly the 101st floor there is a door with stairs ascending to the 103rd floor formerly the 102nd f This was built as a disembarkation floor for airships tethered to the building s spire and has a circular balcony outside 16 It is now an access point to reach the spire for maintenance The room now contains electrical equipment but celebrities and dignitaries may also be given permission to take pictures there 133 134 Above the 103rd floor there is a set of stairs and a ladder to reach the spire for maintenance work 133 The mast s 480 windows were all replaced in 2015 135 The mast serves as the base of the building s broadcasting antenna 129 Broadcast stations nbsp Antennas for broadcast stations located at the top of the buildingBroadcasting began at the Empire State Building on December 22 1931 when NBC and RCA began transmitting experimental television broadcasts from a small antenna erected atop the mast with two separate transmitters for the visual and audio data They leased the 85th floor and built a laboratory there 136 In 1934 RCA was joined by Edwin Howard Armstrong in a cooperative venture to test his FM system from the building s antenna 137 138 This setup which entailed the installation of the world s first FM transmitter 138 continued only until October of the next year due to disputes between RCA and Armstrong 136 137 Specifically NBC wanted to install more TV equipment in the room where Armstrong s transmitter was located 138 After some time the 85th floor became home to RCA s New York television operations initially as experimental station W2XBS channel 1 then from 1941 as commercial station WNBT channel 1 now WNBC channel 4 NBC s FM station W2XDG began transmitting from the antenna in 1940 136 139 NBC retained exclusive use of the top of the building until 1950 when the Federal Communications Commission FCC ordered the exclusive deal be terminated The FCC directive was based on consumer complaints that a common location was necessary for the seven extant New York area television stations to transmit from so that receiving antennas would not have to be constantly adjusted Other television broadcasters would later join RCA at the building on the 81st through 83rd floors often along with sister FM stations 136 Construction of a dedicated broadcast tower began on July 27 1950 140 with TV and FM transmissions starting in 1951 The 200 foot 61 m broadcast tower was completed in 1953 129 52 141 From 1951 six broadcasters agreed to pay a combined 600 000 per year for the use of the antenna 142 In 1965 a separate set of FM antennae was constructed ringing the 103rd floor observation area to act as a master antenna 136 The placement of the stations in the Empire State Building became a major issue with the construction of the World Trade Center s Twin Towers in the late 1960s and early 1970s The greater height of the Twin Towers would reflect radio waves broadcast from the Empire State Building eventually resulting in some broadcasters relocating to the newer towers instead of suing the developer the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey 143 Even though the nine stations who were broadcasting from the Empire State Building were leasing their broadcast space until 1984 most of these stations moved to the World Trade Center as soon as it was completed in 1971 The broadcasters obtained a court order stipulating that the Port Authority had to build a mast and transmission equipment in the North Tower as well as pay the broadcasters leases in the Empire State Building until 1984 144 Only a few broadcasters renewed their leases in the Empire State Building 145 The September 11 attacks destroyed the World Trade Center and the broadcast centers atop it leaving most of the city s stations without a transmitter for ten days until the Armstrong Tower in Alpine New Jersey was re activated temporarily 146 By October 2001 nearly all of the city s commercial broadcast stations both television and FM radio were again transmitting from the top of the Empire State Building In a report that Congress commissioned about the transition from analog television to digital television it was stated that the placement of broadcast stations in the Empire State Building was considered problematic due to interference from nearby buildings In comparison the congressional report stated that the former Twin Towers had very few buildings of comparable height nearby thus signals suffered little interference 147 In 2003 a few FM stations were relocated to the nearby Conde Nast Building to reduce the number of broadcast stations using the Empire State Building 148 Eleven television stations and twenty two FM stations had signed 15 year leases in the building by May 2003 It was expected that a taller broadcast tower in Bayonne New Jersey or Governors Island would be built in the meantime with the Empire State Building being used as a backup since signal transmissions from the building were generally of poorer quality 149 Following the construction of One World Trade Center in the late 2000s and early 2010s some TV stations began moving their transmitting facilities there 150 As of 2021 update the Empire State Building is home to the following stations 151 Television WABC 7 WPIX 11 WXTV 41 Paterson and WFUT 68 Newark FM WINS 92 3 WPAT 93 1 Paterson WNYC 93 9 WPLJ 95 5 WXNY 96 3 WQHT 97 1 WSKQ 97 9 WEPN 98 7 WHTZ 100 3 Newark WCBS 101 1 WFAN 101 9 WNEW FM 102 7 WKTU 103 5 Lake Success WAXQ 104 3 WWPR 105 1 WQXR 105 9 Newark WLTW 106 7 and WBLS 107 5 NOAA Weather Radio station KWO35 broadcasts at a frequency of 162 550 MHz from the National Weather Service in Upton New York 152 HistoryThe site was previously owned by John Jacob Astor of the prominent Astor family who had owned the site since the mid 1820s 153 154 In 1893 John Jacob Astor Sr s grandson William Waldorf Astor opened the Waldorf Hotel on the site 155 156 Four years later his cousin John Jacob Astor IV opened the 16 story Astoria Hotel on an adjacent site 63 155 157 The two portions of the Waldorf Astoria hotel had 1 300 bedrooms making it the largest hotel in the world at the time 158 After the death of its founding proprietor George Boldt in early 1918 the hotel lease was purchased by Thomas Coleman du Pont 159 160 By the 1920s the old Waldorf Astoria was becoming dated and the elegant social life of New York had moved much farther north 161 36 162 Additionally many stores had opened on Fifth Avenue north of 34th Street 163 164 The Astor family decided to build a replacement hotel on Park Avenue 155 165 and sold the hotel to Bethlehem Engineering Corporation in 1928 for 14 16 million 161 The hotel closed shortly thereafter on May 3 1929 63 Planning Early plans nbsp The Waldorf Astoria in 1901Bethlehem Engineering Corporation originally intended to build a 25 story office building on the Waldorf Astoria site The company s president Floyd De L Brown paid 100 000 of the 1 million down payment required to start construction on the building with the promise that the difference would be paid later 155 Brown borrowed 900 000 from a bank but defaulted on the loan 166 167 After Brown was unable to secure additional funding 36 the land was resold to Empire State Inc a group of wealthy investors that included Louis G Kaufman Ellis P Earle John J Raskob Coleman du Pont and Pierre S du Pont 166 167 168 The name came from the state nickname for New York 52 169 Alfred E Smith a former Governor of New York and U S presidential candidate whose 1928 campaign had been managed by Raskob 165 170 was appointed head of the company 36 166 167 The group also purchased nearby land so they would have the 2 acres 1 ha needed for the base with the combined plot measuring 425 feet 130 m wide by 200 feet 61 m long 169 171 The Empire State Inc consortium was announced to the public in August 1929 172 173 171 Concurrently Smith announced the construction of an 80 story building on the site to be taller than any other buildings in existence 171 174 Empire State Inc contracted William F Lamb of architectural firm Shreve Lamb and Harmon to create the building design 2 169 175 Lamb produced the building drawings in just two weeks using the firm s earlier designs for the Reynolds Building in Winston Salem North Carolina as the basis 52 He had also been inspired by Raymond Hood s design for the Daily News Building which was being constructed at the same time 169 Concurrently Lamb s partner Richmond Shreve created bug diagrams of the project requirements 176 The 1916 Zoning Act forced Lamb to design a structure that incorporated setbacks resulting in the lower floors being larger than the upper floors d Consequently the building was designed from the top down 177 giving it a pencil like shape 39 The plans were devised within a budget of 50 million and a stipulation that the building be ready for occupancy within 18 months of the start of construction 36 Design changes nbsp Architectural sketch of heights and allowed building areasThe original plan of the building was 50 stories 42 but was later increased to 60 and then 80 stories 171 Height restrictions were placed on nearby buildings 171 to ensure that the top fifty floors of the planned 80 story 1 000 foot tall 300 m building 31 178 would have unobstructed views of the city 171 The New York Times lauded the site s proximity to mass transit with the Brooklyn Manhattan Transit s 34th Street station and the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad s 33rd Street terminal one block away as well as Penn Station two blocks away and Grand Central Terminal nine blocks away at its closest It also praised the 3 000 000 square feet 280 000 m2 of proposed floor space near one of the busiest sections in the world 171 The Empire State Building was to be a typical office building but Raskob intended to build it better and in a bigger way according to architectural writer Donald J Reynolds 165 While plans for the Empire State Building were being finalized an intense competition in New York for the title of world s tallest building was underway 40 Wall Street then the Bank of Manhattan Building and the Chrysler Building in Manhattan both vied for this distinction and were already under construction when work began on the Empire State Building 31 The Race into the Sky as popular media called it at the time was representative of the country s optimism in the 1920s fueled by the building boom in major cities 179 The race was defined by at least five other proposals although only the Empire State Building would survive the Wall Street Crash of 1929 36 g The 40 Wall Street tower was revised in April 1929 from 840 feet 260 m to 925 feet 282 m making it the world s tallest 181 The Chrysler Building added its 185 foot 56 m steel tip to its roof in October 1929 thus bringing it to a height of 1 046 feet 319 m and greatly exceeding the height of 40 Wall Street 31 The Chrysler Building s developer Walter Chrysler realized that his tower s height would exceed the Empire State Building s as well having instructed his architect William Van Alen to change the Chrysler s original roof from a stubby Romanesque dome to a narrow steel spire 181 Raskob wishing to have the Empire State Building be the world s tallest reviewed the plans and had five floors added as well as a spire however the new floors would need to be set back because of projected wind pressure on the extension 182 On November 18 1929 Smith acquired a lot at 27 31 West 33rd Street adding 75 feet 23 m to the width of the proposed office building s site 183 184 Two days later Smith announced the updated plans for the skyscraper The plans included an observation deck on the 86th floor roof at a height of 1 050 feet 320 m higher than the Chrysler s 71st floor observation deck 182 185 The 1 050 foot Empire State Building would only be 4 feet 1 2 m taller than the Chrysler Building 182 186 187 and Raskob was afraid that Chrysler might try to pull a trick like hiding a rod in the spire and then sticking it up at the last minute 42 188 186 The plans were revised one last time in December 1929 to include a 16 story 200 foot 61 m metal crown and an additional 222 foot 68 m mooring mast intended for dirigibles The roof height was now 1 250 feet 380 m making it the tallest building in the world by far even without the antenna 189 42 190 The addition of the dirigible station meant that another floor the now enclosed 86th floor would have to be built below the crown 190 however unlike the Chrysler s spire the Empire State s mast would serve a practical purpose 188 A revised plan was announced to the public in late December 1929 just before the start of construction 36 162 The final plan was sketched within two hours the night before the plan was supposed to be presented to the site s owners in January 1930 36 The New York Times reported that the spire was facing some technical problems but they were no greater than might be expected under such a novel plan 37 By this time the blueprints for the building had gone through up to fifteen versions before they were approved 42 191 192 Lamb described the other specifications he was given for the final approved plan The program was short enough a fixed budget no space more than 28 feet from window to corridor as many stories of such space as possible an exterior of limestone and completion date of May 1 1931 which meant a year and six months from the beginning of sketches 83 42 Construction The contractors were Starrett Brothers and Eken which were composed of Paul and William A Starrett and Andrew J Eken 193 The project was financed primarily by Raskob and Pierre du Pont 194 while James Farley s General Builders Supply Corporation supplied the building materials 2 John W Bowser was the construction superintendent of the project 195 and the structural engineer of the building was Homer G Balcom 175 196 The tight completion schedule necessitated the commencement of construction even though the design had yet to be finalized 197 Hotel demolition Demolition of the old Waldorf Astoria began on October 1 1929 198 Stripping the building down was an arduous process as the hotel had been constructed using more rigid material than earlier buildings had been Furthermore the old hotel s granite wood chips and precious metals such as lead brass and zinc were not in high demand resulting in issues with disposal 199 Most of the wood was deposited into a woodpile on nearby 30th Street or was burned in a swamp elsewhere Much of the other materials that made up the old hotel including the granite and bronze were dumped into the Atlantic Ocean near Sandy Hook New Jersey 200 201 By the time the hotel s demolition started Raskob had secured the required funding for the construction of the building 202 The plan was to start construction later that year but on October 24 the New York Stock Exchange experienced the major and sudden Wall Street Crash marking the beginning of the decade long Great Depression Despite the economic downturn Raskob refused to cancel the project because of the progress that had been made up to that point 172 Neither Raskob who had ceased speculation in the stock market the previous year nor Smith who had no stock investments suffered financially in the crash 202 However most of the investors were affected and as a result in December 1929 Empire State Inc obtained a 27 5 million loan from Metropolitan Life Insurance Company so construction could begin 203 The stock market crash resulted in no demand for new office space Raskob and Smith nonetheless started construction 204 as canceling the project would have resulted in greater losses for the investors 172 Steel structure nbsp A worker bolts beams in 1930 during construction the Chrysler Building can be seen in the background A structural steel contract was awarded on January 12 1930 205 with excavation of the site beginning ten days later on January 22 206 before the old hotel had been completely demolished 207 Two twelve hour shifts consisting of 300 men each worked continuously to dig the 55 foot 17 m deep foundation 206 Small pier holes were sunk into the ground to house the concrete footings that would support the steelwork 208 Excavation was nearly complete by early March 209 and construction on the building itself started on March 17 210 2 with the builders placing the first steel columns on the completed footings before the rest of the footings had been finished 211 Around this time Lamb held a press conference on the building plans He described the reflective steel panels parallel to the windows the large block Indiana Limestone facade that was slightly more expensive than smaller bricks and the building s vertical lines 189 Four colossal columns intended for installation in the center of the building site were delivered they would support a combined 10 000 000 pounds 4 500 000 kg when the building was finished 212 The structural steel was pre ordered and pre fabricated in anticipation of a revision to the city s building code that would have allowed the Empire State Building s structural steel to carry 18 000 pounds per square inch 120 000 kPa up from 16 000 pounds per square inch 110 000 kPa thus reducing the amount of steel needed for the building Although the 18 000 psi regulation had been safely enacted in other cities Mayor Jimmy Walker did not sign the new codes into law until March 26 1930 just before construction was due to commence 210 213 The first steel framework was installed on April 1 1930 214 From there construction proceeded at a rapid pace during one stretch of 10 working days the builders erected fourteen floors 215 2 This was made possible through precise coordination of the building s planning as well as the mass production of common materials such as windows and spandrels 216 On one occasion when a supplier could not provide timely delivery of dark Hauteville marble Starrett switched to using Rose Famosa marble from a German quarry that was purchased specifically to provide the project with sufficient marble 208 The scale of the project was massive with trucks carrying 16 000 partition tiles 5 000 bags of cement 450 cubic yards 340 m3 of sand and 300 bags of lime arriving at the construction site every day 217 There were also cafes and concession stands on five of the incomplete floors so workers did not have to descend to the ground level to eat lunch 3 218 Temporary water taps were also built so workers did not waste time buying water bottles from the ground level 3 219 Additionally carts running on a small railway system transported materials from the basement storage 3 to elevators that brought the carts to the desired floors where they would then be distributed throughout that level using another set of tracks 217 84 218 The 57 480 short tons 51 320 long tons of steel ordered for the project was the largest ever single order of steel at the time comprising more steel than was ordered for the Chrysler Building and 40 Wall Street combined 220 221 According to historian John Tauranac building materials were sourced from numerous and distant sources with limestone from Indiana steel girders from Pittsburgh cement and mortar from upper New York State marble from Italy France and England wood from northern and Pacific Coast forests and hardware from New England 215 The facade too used a variety of material most prominently Indiana limestone but also Swedish black granite terracotta and brick 222 By June 20 the skyscraper s supporting steel structure had risen to the 26th floor and by July 27 half of the steel structure had been completed 217 Starrett Bros and Eken endeavored to build one floor a day in order to speed up construction achieving a pace of 4 1 2 stories per week 223 105 prior to this the fastest pace of construction for a building of similar height had been 3 1 2 stories per week 223 While construction progressed the final designs for the floors were being designed from the ground up as opposed to the general design which had been from the roof down Some of the levels were still undergoing final approval with several orders placed within an hour of a plan being finalized 223 On September 10 as steelwork was nearing completion Smith laid the building s cornerstone during a ceremony attended by thousands The stone contained a box with contemporary artifacts including the previous day s New York Times a U S currency set containing all denominations of notes and coins minted in 1930 a history of the site and building and photographs of the people involved in construction 224 225 The steel structure was topped out at 1 048 feet 319 m on September 19 twelve days ahead of schedule and 23 weeks after the start of construction 226 Workers raised a flag atop the 86th floor to signify this milestone 223 227 Completion and scale nbsp During construction in October 1930 the USS Los Angeles ZMC 2 and a J class blimp seen overheadWork on the building s interior and crowning mast commenced after the topping out 227 The mooring mast topped out on November 21 two months after the steelwork had been completed 225 228 Meanwhile work on the walls and interior was progressing at a quick pace with exterior walls built up to the 75th floor by the time steelwork had been built to the 95th floor 229 The majority of the facade was already finished by the middle of November 3 Because of the building s height it was deemed infeasible to have many elevators or large elevator cabins so the builders contracted with the Otis Elevator Company to make 66 cars that could speed at 1 200 feet per minute 366 m min which represented the largest ever elevator order at the time 230 In addition to the time constraint builders had there were also space limitations because construction materials had to be delivered quickly and trucks needed to drop off these materials without congesting traffic This was solved by creating a temporary driveway for the trucks between 33rd and 34th Streets and then storing the materials in the building s first floor and basements Concrete mixers brick hoppers and stone hoists inside the building ensured that materials would be able to ascend quickly and without endangering or inconveniencing the public 229 At one point over 200 trucks made material deliveries at the building site every day 3 A series of relay and erection derricks placed on platforms erected near the building lifted the steel from the trucks below and installed the beams at the appropriate locations 231 The Empire State Building was structurally completed on April 11 1931 twelve days ahead of schedule and 410 days after construction commenced 3 Al Smith shot the final rivet which was made of solid gold 232 nbsp Photograph of a cable worker taken by Lewis HineThe project involved more than 3 500 workers at its peak 2 including 3 439 on a single day August 14 1930 233 Many of the workers were Irish and Italian immigrants 234 with a sizable minority of Mohawk ironworkers from the Kahnawake reserve near Montreal 234 235 236 According to official accounts five workers died during the construction 237 238 although the New York Daily News gave reports of 14 deaths 3 and a headline in the socialist magazine The New Masses spread unfounded rumors of up to 42 deaths 239 238 The Empire State Building cost 40 948 900 to build equivalent to 637 million in 2022 9 including demolition of the Waldorf Astoria This was lower than the 60 million budgeted for construction 8 Lewis Hine captured many photographs of the construction documenting not only the work itself but also providing insight into the daily life of workers in that era 206 240 241 Hine s images were used extensively by the media to publish daily press releases 242 According to the writer Jim Rasenberger Hine climbed out onto the steel with the ironworkers and dangled from a derrick cable hundreds of feet above the city to capture as no one ever had before or has since the dizzy work of building skyscrapers In Rasenberger s words Hine turned what might have been an assignment of corporate flak into exhilarating art 243 These images were later organized into their own collection 244 Onlookers were enraptured by the sheer height at which the steelworkers operated New York magazine wrote of the steelworkers Like little spiders they toiled spinning a fabric of steel against the sky 231 Opening and early years nbsp The Empire State Building in 1932 The building s antenna was installed 21 years later in 1953 The Empire State Building officially opened on May 1 1931 forty five days ahead of its projected opening date and eighteen months from the start of construction 57 2 245 The opening was marked with an event featuring United States President Herbert Hoover who turned on the building s lights with the ceremonial button push from Washington D C 246 247 4 Over 350 guests attended the opening ceremony and following luncheon at the 86th floor including Jimmy Walker Governor Franklin D Roosevelt and Al Smith 4 An account from that day stated that the view from the luncheon was obscured by a fog with other landmarks such as the Statue of Liberty being lost in the mist enveloping New York City 248 The Empire State Building officially opened the next day 248 195 Advertisements for the building s observatories were placed in local newspapers while nearby hotels also capitalized on the events by releasing advertisements that lauded their proximity to the newly opened building 249 According to The New York Times builders and real estate speculators predicted that the 1 250 foot tall 380 m Empire State Building would be the world s tallest building for many years thus ending the great New York City skyscraper rivalry At the time most engineers agreed that it would be difficult to build a building taller than 1 200 feet 370 m even with the hardy Manhattan bedrock as a foundation 250 Technically it was believed possible to build a tower of up to 2 000 feet 610 m but it was deemed uneconomical to do so especially during the Great Depression 84 251 As the tallest building in the world at that time and the first one to exceed 100 floors the Empire State Building became an icon of the city and ultimately of the nation 32 In 1932 the Fifth Avenue Association gave the building its 1931 gold medal for architectural excellence signifying that the Empire State had been the best designed building on Fifth Avenue to open in 1931 252 A year later on March 2 1933 the movie King Kong was released The movie which depicted a large stop motion ape named Kong climbing the Empire State Building made the still new building into a cinematic icon 253 254 Tenants and tourism At the beginning of 1931 Fifth Avenue was experiencing high demand for storefront space with only 12 of 224 stores being unoccupied The Empire State Building along with 500 Fifth Avenue and 608 Fifth Avenue were expected to add a combined 11 stores 255 256 The office space was less successful as the Empire State Building s opening had coincided with the Great Depression in the United States 244 In the first year only 23 percent of the available space was rented 257 258 as compared to the early 1920s where the average building would be 52 percent occupied upon opening and 90 percent occupied within five years 259 The lack of renters led New Yorkers to deride the building as the Empty State Building 244 260 or Smith s Folly 129 The earliest tenants in the Empire State Building were large companies banks and garment industries 129 Jack Brod one of the building s longest resident tenants 261 262 co established the Empire Diamond Corporation with his father in the building in mid 1931 263 and rented space in the building until he died in 2008 263 Brod recalled that there were only about 20 tenants at the time of opening including him 262 and that Al Smith was the only real tenant in the space above his seventh floor offices 261 Generally during the early 1930s it was rare for more than a single office space to be rented in the building despite Smith s and Raskob s aggressive marketing efforts in the newspapers and to anyone they knew 264 The building s lights were continuously left on even in the unrented spaces to give the impression of occupancy This was exacerbated by competition from Rockefeller Center 257 as well as from buildings on 42nd Street which when combined with the Empire State Building resulted in surplus of office space in a slow market during the 1930s 265 Aggressive marketing efforts served to reinforce the Empire State Building s status as the world s tallest 266 The observatory was advertised in local newspapers as well as on railroad tickets 267 The building became a popular tourist attraction with one million people each paying one dollar to ride elevators to the observation decks in 1931 268 In its first year of operation the observation deck made approximately 2 million in revenue as much as its owners made in rent that year 257 244 By 1936 the observation deck was crowded on a daily basis with food and drink available for purchase at the top 269 and by 1944 the building had received its five millionth visitor 270 In 1931 NBC took up tenancy leasing space on the 85th floor for radio broadcasts 271 136 From the outset the building was in debt losing 1 million per year by 1935 Real estate developer Seymour Durst recalled that the building was so underused in 1936 that there was no elevator service above the 45th floor as the building above the 41st floor was empty except for the NBC offices and the Raskob Du Pont offices on the 81st floor 272 Other events Per the original plans the Empire State Building s spire was intended to be an airship docking station Raskob and Smith had proposed dirigible ticketing offices and passenger waiting rooms on the 86th floor while the airships themselves would be tied to the spire at the equivalent of the building s 106th floor 131 132 An elevator would ferry passengers from the 86th to the 101st floor f after they had checked in on the 86th floor 130 after which passengers would have climbed steep ladders to board the airship 131 The idea however was impractical and dangerous due to powerful updrafts caused by the building itself 274 the wind currents across Manhattan 131 and the spires of nearby skyscrapers 275 Furthermore even if the airship were to successfully navigate all these obstacles its crew would have to jettison some ballast by releasing water onto the streets below in order to maintain stability and then tie the craft s nose to the spire with no mooring lines securing the tail end of the craft 16 131 275 On September 15 1931 a small commercial United States Navy airship circled 25 times in 45 mile per hour 72 km h winds 276 The airship then attempted to dock at the mast but its ballast spilled and the craft was rocked by unpredictable eddies 277 278 The near disaster scuttled plans to turn the building s spire into an airship terminal although one blimp did manage to make a single newspaper delivery afterward 36 131 On July 28 1945 a B 25 Mitchell bomber crashed into the north side of the Empire State Building between the 79th and 80th floors 35 One engine completely penetrated the building and landed in a neighboring block while the other engine and part of the landing gear plummeted down an elevator shaft Fourteen people were killed in the incident 279 192 but the building escaped severe damage and was reopened two days later 279 280 Profitability nbsp A series of setbacks causes the building to taper with height By the 1940s the Empire State Building was 98 percent occupied 91 The structure broke even for the first time in the 1950s 244 281 At the time mass transit options in the building s vicinity were limited compared to the present day Despite this challenge the Empire State Building began to attract renters due to its reputation 282 A 222 foot 68 m radio antenna was erected on top of the towers starting in 1950 140 allowing the area s television stations to be broadcast from the building 141 Despite the turnaround in the building s fortunes Raskob listed it for sale in 1951 283 with a minimum asking price of 50 million 142 The property was purchased by business partners Roger L Stevens Henry Crown Alfred R Glancy and Ben Tobin 284 285 286 The sale was brokered by the Charles F Noyes Company a prominent real estate firm in upper Manhattan 142 for 51 million the highest price paid for a single structure at the time 287 By this time the Empire State had been fully leased for several years with a waiting list of parties looking to lease space in the building according to the Cortland Standard 288 That same year six news companies formed a partnership to pay a combined annual fee of 600 000 to use the building s antenna 142 which was completed in 1953 141 Crown bought out his partners ownership stakes in 1954 becoming the sole owner 289 The following year the American Society of Civil Engineers named the building one of the Seven Modern Civil Engineering Wonders 290 291 In 1961 Lawrence A Wien signed a contract to purchase the Empire State Building for 65 million with Harry B Helmsley acting as partners in the building s operating lease 284 292 This became the new highest price for a single structure 292 Over 3 000 people paid 10 000 for one share each in a company called Empire State Building Associates The company in turn subleased the building to another company headed by Helmsley and Wien raising 33 million of the funds needed to pay the purchase price 284 292 In a separate transaction 292 the land underneath the building was sold to Prudential Insurance for 29 million 284 293 Helmsley Wien and Peter Malkin quickly started a program of minor improvement projects including the first ever full building facade refurbishment and window washing in 1962 294 295 the installation of new flood lights on the 72nd floor in 1964 61 62 and replacement of the manually operated elevators with automatic units in 1966 296 The little used western end of the second floor was used as a storage space until 1964 at which point it received escalators to the first floor as part of its conversion into a highly sought retail area 297 298 Loss of tallest building title nbsp The World Trade Center s North Tower surpassed the Empire State Building in height by 1970 299 300 In 1961 the same year that Helmsley Wien and Malkin had purchased the Empire State Building the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey formally backed plans for a new World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan 301 The plan originally included 66 story twin towers with column free open spaces The Empire State s owners and real estate speculators were worried that the twin towers 7 6 million square feet 710 000 m2 of office space would create a glut of rentable space in Manhattan as well as take away the Empire State Building s profits from lessees 302 A revision in the World Trade Center s plan brought the twin towers to 1 370 feet 420 m each or 110 stories taller than the Empire State 303 Opponents of the new project included prominent real estate developer Robert Tishman as well as Wien s Committee for a Reasonable World Trade Center 303 In response to Wien s opposition Port Authority executive director Austin J Tobin said that Wien was only opposing the project because it would overshadow his Empire State Building as the world s tallest building 304 The World Trade Center s twin towers started construction in 1966 305 The following year the Ostankino Tower succeeded the Empire State Building as the tallest freestanding structure in the world 306 In 1970 the Empire State surrendered its position as the world s tallest building 307 when the World Trade Center s still under construction North Tower surpassed it on October 19 299 300 the North Tower was topped out on December 23 1970 300 308 In December 1975 the observation deck was opened on the 110th floor of the Twin Towers significantly higher than the 86th floor observatory on the Empire State Building 192 The latter was also losing revenue during this period particularly as a number of broadcast stations had moved to the World Trade Center in 1971 although the Port Authority continued to pay the broadcasting leases for the Empire State until 1984 144 The Empire State Building was still seen as prestigious having seen its forty millionth visitor in March 1971 309 1980s and 1990s By 1980 there were nearly two million annual visitors 268 although a building official had previously estimated between 1 5 million and 1 75 million annual visitors 111 The building received its own ZIP code in May 1980 in a roll out of 63 new postal codes in Manhattan At the time its tenants collectively received 35 000 pieces of mail daily 24 The Empire State Building celebrated its 50th anniversary on May 1 1981 with a much publicized but poorly received laser light show 310 as well as an Empire State Building Week that ran through to May 8 311 94 The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission LPC voted to designate the building and its lobby as city landmarks on May 19 1981 312 313 Capital improvements were made to the Empire State Building during the early to mid 1990s at a cost of 55 million 314 Because all of the building s windows were being replaced at the same time the LPC mandated a paint color test for the windows the test revealed that the Empire State Building s original windows were actually red 315 The improvements also entailed replacing alarm systems elevators windows and air conditioning making the observation deck compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 ADA and refurbishing the limestone facade 316 The observation deck renovation was added after disability rights groups and the United States Department of Justice filed a lawsuit against the building in 1992 in what was the first lawsuit filed by an organization under the new law 317 318 A settlement was reached in 1994 in which Empire State Building Associates agreed to add ADA compliant elements such as new elevators ramps and automatic doors during the renovation 318 319 Prudential sold the land under the building in 1991 for 42 million to a buyer representing hotelier Hideki Yokoi ja who was imprisoned at the time in connection with the deadly Hotel New Japan Fire ja at the Hotel New Japan ja in Tokyo 320 In 1994 Donald Trump entered into a joint venture agreement with Yokoi with a shared goal of breaking the Empire State Building s lease on the land in an effort to gain total ownership of the building so that if successful the two could reap the potential profits of merging the ownership of the building with the land beneath it 321 Having secured a half ownership of the land Trump devised plans to take ownership of the building itself so he could renovate it even though Helmsley and Malkin had already started their refurbishment project 314 He sued Empire State Building Associates in February 1995 claiming that the latter had caused the building to become a high rise slum 284 and a second rate rodent infested office tower 322 Trump had intended to have Empire State Building Associates evicted for violating the terms of their lease 322 but was denied 323 This led to Helmsley s companies countersuing Trump in May 324 This sparked a series of lawsuits and countersuits that lasted several years 284 partly arising from Trump s desire to obtain the building s master lease by taking it from Empire State Building Associates 316 Upon Harry Helmsley s death in 1997 the Malkins sued Helmsley s widow Leona Helmsley for control of the building 325 21st century 2000s Following the destruction of the World Trade Center during the September 11 attacks in 2001 the Empire State Building again became the tallest building in New York City but was only the second tallest building in the Americas after the Sears later Willis Tower in Chicago 306 326 327 As a result of the attacks transmissions from nearly all of the city s commercial television and FM radio stations were again broadcast from the Empire State Building 147 The attacks also led to an increase in security due to persistent terror threats against prominent sites in New York City 328 In 2002 Trump and Yokoi sold their land claim to the Empire State Building Associates now headed by Malkin in a 57 5 million sale 284 329 This action merged the building s title and lease for the first time in half a century 329 Despite the lingering threat posed by the 9 11 attacks the Empire State Building remained popular with 3 5 million visitors to the observatories in 2004 compared to about 2 8 million in 2003 330 Even though she maintained her ownership stake in the building until the post consolidation IPO in October 2013 Leona Helmsley handed over day to day operations of the building in 2006 to Peter Malkin s company 284 331 In 2008 the building was temporarily stolen by the New York Daily News to show how easy it was to transfer the deed on a property since city clerks were not required to validate the submitted information as well as to help demonstrate how fraudulent deeds could be used to obtain large mortgages and then have individuals disappear with the money The paperwork submitted to the city included the names of Fay Wray the famous star of King Kong and Willie Sutton a notorious New York bank robber The newspaper then transferred the deed back over to the legitimate owners who at that time were Empire State Land Associates 332 2010s to present nbsp Since 2009 the Empire State Building has been lit blue and white annually for commencement at Columbia University nbsp The current One World Trade Center seen in the distance surpassed the Empire State Building s height on April 30 2012 Starting in 2009 the building s public areas received a 550 million renovation with improvements to the air conditioning and waterproofing renovations to the observation deck and main lobby 95 and relocation of the gift shop to the 80th floor 333 334 About 120 million was spent on improving the energy efficiency of the building with the goal of reducing energy emissions by 38 within five years 334 99 For example all of the windows were refurbished onsite into film coated superwindows which block heat but pass light 99 335 336 Air conditioning operating costs on hot days were reduced saving 17 million of the project s capital cost immediately and partially funding some of the other retrofits 335 The Empire State Building won the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design LEED Gold for Existing Buildings rating in September 2011 as well as the World Federation of Great Towers Excellence in Environment Award for 2010 336 For the LEED Gold certification the building s energy reduction was considered as was a large purchase of carbon offsets Other factors included low flow bathroom fixtures green cleaning supplies and use of recycled paper products 337 On April 30 2012 One World Trade Center topped out taking the Empire State Building s record of tallest in the city 338 By 2014 the building was owned by the Empire State Realty Trust ESRT with Anthony Malkin as chairman CEO and president 339 The ESRT was a public company having begun trading publicly on the New York Stock Exchange the previous year 340 In August 2016 the Qatar Investment Authority QIA was issued new fully diluted shares equivalent to 9 9 of the trust this investment gave them partial ownership of the entirety of the ESRT s portfolio and as a result partial ownership of the Empire State Building 341 The trust s president John Kessler called it an endorsement of the company s irreplaceable assets 342 The investment has been described by the real estate magazine The Real Deal as an unusual move for a sovereign wealth fund as these funds typically buy direct stakes in buildings rather than real estate companies 343 Other foreign entities that have a stake in the ESRT include investors from Norway Japan and Australia 342 A renovation of the Empire State Building was commenced in the 2010s to further improve energy efficiency public areas and amenities 1 In August 2018 to improve the flow of visitor traffic the main visitor s entrance was shifted to 20 West 34th Street as part of a major renovation of the observatory lobby 344 The new lobby includes several technological features including large LED panels digital ticket kiosks in nine languages and a two story architectural model of the building surrounded by two metal staircases 1 344 The first phase of the renovation completed in 2019 features an updated exterior lighting system and digital hosts 344 The new lobby also features free Wi Fi provided for those waiting 1 345 A 10 000 square foot 930 m2 exhibit with nine galleries opened in July 2019 346 347 The 102nd floor observatory the third phase of the redesign reopened to the public on October 12 2019 112 113 115 That portion of the project included outfitting the space with floor to ceiling glass windows and a brand new glass elevator 348 The final portion of the renovations to be completed was a new observatory on the 80th floor which opened on December 2 2019 114 104 In total the renovation cost 160 million 115 or 165 million and took four years to finish 114 104 A comprehensive restoration of the building s mooring and antenna masts also began in June 2019 Antennas on the mooring mast were removed or relocated to the upper mast while the aluminum panels were cleaned and coated with silver paint 349 350 351 To minimize disruption to the observation decks the restoration work took place at night The project was completed by late 2020 351 Height records nbsp Height comparison of several New York City buildings with Empire State second from leftThe longest world record held by the Empire State Building was for the tallest skyscraper to structural height which it held for 42 years until it was surpassed by the North Tower of the World Trade Center in October 1970 306 326 352 The Empire State Building was also the tallest human made structure in the world before it was surpassed by the Griffin Television Tower Oklahoma KWTV Mast in 1954 353 and the tallest freestanding structure in the world until the completion of the Ostankino Tower in 1967 306 An early 1970s proposal to dismantle the spire and replace it with an additional 11 floors which would have brought the building s height to 1 494 feet 455 m and made it once again the world s tallest at the time was considered but ultimately rejected 354 With the destruction of the World Trade Center in the September 11 attacks the Empire State Building again became the tallest building in New York City and the second tallest building in the Americas surpassed only by the Willis Tower in Chicago The Empire State Building remained the tallest building in New York until the new One World Trade Center reached a greater height in April 2012 306 326 327 355 As of 2022 update it is the seventh tallest building in New York City and the tenth tallest in the United States 356 The Empire State Building is the 49th tallest in the world as of February 2021 update 357 It is also the eleventh tallest freestanding structure in the Americas behind the tallest U S buildings and the CN Tower 358 Notable tenantsAs of 2013 update the building houses around 1 000 businesses 359 Current tenants include Air China 360 Boy Scouts of America Greater New York Councils 361 Bulova 362 Corgan 363 Coty 364 Croatian National Tourist Board 365 Expedia Group 366 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 367 Global Brands Group 362 Filipino Reporter 365 Helios and Matheson 368 HNTB 369 Human Rights Foundation 370 Human Rights Watch 365 JCDecaux 362 Kaplan International Center 371 Li amp Fung 372 LinkedIn 373 Noven Pharmaceuticals 374 Palo Alto Networks 362 People s Daily 375 Qatar Airways 376 RaySearch Laboratories 377 Shutterstock 362 Skanska 362 Turkish Airlines 378 Workday Inc 379 World Monuments Fund 380 Former tenants include The National Catholic Welfare Council now Catholic Relief Services located in Baltimore 381 The King s College now located at 56 Broadway 382 China National Tourist Office 365 now located at 370 Lexington Avenue 383 National Film Board of Canada 365 now located at 1123 Broadway 384 Nathaniel Branden Institute 385 Schenley Industries 386 YWCA of the USA 387 relocated to Washington DC 388 Incidents1945 plane crash Main article B 25 Empire State Building crash nbsp Wreckage from the 1945 Empire State Building B 25 crashAt 9 40 am on July 28 1945 a B 25 Mitchell bomber piloted in thick fog by Lieutenant Colonel William Franklin Smith Jr 389 crashed into the north side of the Empire State Building between the 79th and 80th floors then the offices of the National Catholic Welfare Council 35 56 One engine completely penetrated the building landing on the roof of a nearby building where it started a fire that destroyed a penthouse 381 390 391 The other engine and part of the landing gear plummeted down an elevator shaft causing a fire that was extinguished in 40 minutes Fourteen people were killed in the incident 279 192 391 Elevator operator Betty Lou Oliver fell 75 stories and survived which still holds the Guinness World Record for the longest survived elevator fall recorded 392 Despite the damage and loss of life many floors were open two days later 279 280 The crash helped spur the passage of the long pending Federal Tort Claims Act of 1946 as well as the insertion of retroactive provisions into the law allowing people to sue the government for the incident 393 Also as a result of the crash the Civil Aeronautics Administration enacted strict regulations regarding flying over New York City setting a minimum flying altitude of 2 500 feet 760 m above sea level regardless of the weather conditions 394 279 A year later on July 24 1946 another airplane narrowly missed striking the building The unidentified twin engine plane scraped past the observation deck frightening the tourists there 395 2000 elevator plunge On January 24 2000 an elevator in the building suddenly descended 40 stories after a cable that controlled the cabin s maximum speed was severed 396 The elevator fell from the 44th floor to the fourth floor where a narrowed elevator shaft provided a second safety system Despite the 40 floor fall both of the passengers in the cabin at the time were only slightly injured After the fall building inspectors reviewed all of the building s elevators 397 Suicide attempts Because of the building s iconic status it and other Midtown landmarks are popular locations for suicide attempts 398 More than 30 people have attempted suicide over the years by jumping from the upper parts of the building with most attempts being successful 399 400 The first suicide from the building occurred on April 7 1931 before it was even completed when a carpenter who had been laid off went to the 58th floor and jumped 401 The first suicide after the building s opening occurred from the 86th floor observatory in February 1935 when Irma P Eberhardt fell 1 029 feet 314 m onto a marquee sign 402 On December 16 1943 William Lloyd Rambo jumped to his death from the 86th floor landing amidst Christmas shoppers on the street below 403 In the early morning of September 27 1946 shell shocked Marine Douglas W Brashear Jr jumped from the 76th floor window of the Grant Advertising Agency police found his shoes 50 feet 15 m from his body 404 On May 1 1947 Evelyn McHale leapt to her death from the 86th floor observation deck and landed on a limousine parked at the curb Photography student Robert Wiles took a photo of McHale s oddly intact corpse a few minutes after her death The police found a suicide note among possessions that she left on the observation deck He is much better off without me I wouldn t make a good wife for anybody The photo ran in the May 12 1947 edition of Life magazine 405 and is often referred to as The Most Beautiful Suicide It was later used by visual artist Andy Warhol in one of his prints entitled Suicide Fallen Body 406 A 7 foot 2 1 m mesh fence was put up around the 86th floor terrace in December 1947 after five people tried to jump during a three week span in October and November of that year 407 408 By then sixteen people had died from suicide jumps 407 Only one person has jumped from the upper observatory Frederick Eckert of Astoria ran past a guard in the enclosed 102nd floor gallery on November 3 1932 and jumped a gate leading to an outdoor catwalk intended for dirigible passengers He landed and died on the roof of the 86th floor observation promenade 409 Two people have survived falls by not falling more than a floor On December 2 1979 Elvita Adams jumped from the 86th floor only to be blown back onto a ledge on the 85th floor by a gust of wind and left with a broken hip 410 411 412 On April 25 2013 a man fell from the 86th floor observation deck but he landed alive with minor injuries on an 85th floor ledge where security guards brought him inside and paramedics transferred him to a hospital for a psychiatric evaluation 413 Shootings Two fatal shootings have occurred in the direct vicinity of the Empire State Building Abu Kamal a 69 year old Palestinian teacher shot seven people on the 86th floor observation deck during the afternoon of February 23 1997 He killed one person and wounded six others before committing suicide 414 Kamal reportedly committed the shooting in response to events happening in Palestine and Israel 415 On the morning of August 24 2012 58 year old Jeffrey T Johnson shot and killed a former co worker on the building s Fifth Avenue sidewalk He had been laid off from his job in 2011 Two police officers confronted the gunman and he aimed his firearm at them They responded by firing 16 shots killing him but also wounding nine bystanders Most of the injured were hit by bullet fragments although three took direct hits from bullets 15 416 Impact nbsp The Empire State Building Glenn Odem Coleman c 1931As the tallest building in the world and the first one to exceed 100 floors the Empire State Building immediately became an icon of the city and of the nation 244 32 309 In 2013 Time magazine noted that the Empire State Building seems to completely embody the city it has become synonymous with 417 The historian John Tauranac called it the twentieth century New York building despite the existence of taller and more modernist buildings 418 The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission voted to designate the building and its lobby as city landmarks on May 19 1981 312 313 citing the historic nature of the first and second floors as well as the fixtures and interior components of the upper floors 419 The New York City Planning Commission endorsed the landmark status 420 The building became a National Historic Landmark in 1986 10 421 422 in close alignment with the New York City Landmarks report 421 The Empire State Building was added to the National Register of Historic Places the following year due to its architectural significance 423 Contemporary reception Early architectural critics also focused on the Empire State Building s exterior ornamentation 36 Architectural critic Talbot Hamlin wrote in 1931 That it is the world s tallest building is purely incidental 424 George Shepard Chappell writing in The New Yorker under the pseudonym T Square wrote the same year that the Empire State Building had a palpably enormous appeal to the general public and that its difference and distinction lay in the extreme sensitiveness of its entire design 36 425 Edmund Wilson of The New Republic wrote that the building s neutral color palette made it New York s handsomest skyscraper 315 Architectural critics also wrote negatively of the mast especially in light of its failure to become a real air terminal Chappell called the mast a silly gesture and Lewis Mumford called it a public comfort station for migratory birds 36 Nevertheless architecture critic Douglas Haskell said the Empire State Building s appeal came from the fact that it was caught at the exact moment of transition caught between metal and stone between the idea of monumental mass and that of airy volume between handicraft and machine design and in the swing from what was essentially handicraft to what will be essentially industrial methods of fabrication 426 As icon Early in the building s history travel companies such as Short Line Motor Coach Service and New York Central Railroad used the building as an icon to symbolize the city 427 In a 1932 survey of 50 American architects fourteen ranked the Empire State Building as the United States best building the Empire State Building received more votes than any building except the Lincoln Memorial 428 429 After the construction of the first World Trade Center architect Paul Goldberger noted that the Empire State Building is famous for being tall but it is good enough to be famous for being good 111 As an icon of the United States it is also very popular among Americans In a 2007 survey the American Institute of Architects found that the Empire State Building was America s favorite building 430 The building was originally a symbol of hope in a country devastated by the Depression as well as a work of accomplishment by newer immigrants 244 The writer Benjamin Flowers states that the Empire State was a building intended to celebrate a new America built by men both clients and construction workers who were themselves new Americans 239 The architectural critic Jonathan Glancey refers to the building as an icon of American design 359 Additionally in 2007 the Empire State Building was first on the AIA s List of America s Favorite Architecture 431 The Empire State Building has been hailed as an example of a wonder of the world due to the massive effort expended during construction 418 The Washington Star listed it as part of one of the seven wonders of the modern world in 1931 while Holiday magazine wrote in 1958 that the Empire State s height would be taller than the combined heights of the Eiffel Tower and the Great Pyramid of Giza 418 The American Society of Civil Engineers also declared the building A Modern Civil Engineering Wonder of the United States in 1958 291 and one of the Seven Wonders of the Modern World in 1994 432 Ron Miller in a 2010 book also described the Empire State Building as one of the seven wonders of engineering 433 It has often been called the Eighth Wonder of the World as well an appellation that it has held since shortly after opening 191 277 434 The panels installed in the lobby in 1963 reflected this showing the seven original wonders alongside the Empire State Building 96 The Empire State Building also became the standard of reference to describe the height and length of other structures globally both natural and human made 435 The building has also inspired replicas The New York New York Hotel and Casino in Paradise Nevada contains the Empire Tower 436 a 47 story replica of the Empire State Building In addition the New York New York Hotel and Casino in Paradise Nevada contains the Chrysler Tower 436 a replica of the Chrysler Building measuring 35 or 40 stories tall 437 438 A portion of the hotel s interior was also designed to resemble the Empire State Building s interior 437 In media Main article Empire State Building in popular culture As an icon of New York City the Empire State Building has been featured in various films books TV shows and video games According to the building s official website more than 250 movies contain depictions of the Empire State Building 439 In his book about the building John Tauranac writes that its first documented appearance in popular culture was Swiss Family Manhattan a 1932 children s story by Christopher Morley 440 A year later the film King Kong depicted Kong a giant stop motion ape that climbs the Empire State Building during the film s climax 253 254 441 bringing the building into the popular imagination 56 441 Later movies such as An Affair to Remember 1957 Sleepless in Seattle 1993 and Independence Day 1996 also prominently featured the building 442 439 The building has also been featured in other works such as Daleks in Manhattan a 2007 episode of the TV series Doctor Who 442 and Empire an eight hour black and white silent film by Andy Warhol 442 which was later added to the Library of Congress s National Film Registry 443 Throughout its history the Empire State Building has welcomed celebrities royalty and dignitaries to visit the observation deck From celebrities like Taylor Swift and Zendaya to royalty such as Prince William the Empire State Building hosts notable figures every year 444 Empire State Building Run Up The Empire State Building Run Up a foot race from ground level to the 86th floor observation deck has been held annually since 1978 445 It is organized by NYCRUNS 446 Its participants are referred to both as runners and as climbers and are often tower running enthusiasts The race covers a vertical distance of 1 050 ft 320 m and takes in 1 576 steps The record time is 9 minutes and 33 seconds achieved by Australian professional cyclist Paul Crake in 2003 at a climbing rate of 6 593 ft 2 010 m per hour 447 448 See also nbsp New York City portal nbsp New York state portal nbsp Architecture portalEarly skyscrapers NTT Docomo Yoyogi Building List of buildings with 100 floors or more List of National Historic Landmarks in New York City List of New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan from 14th to 59th Streets List of tallest buildings by U S state List of tallest freestanding steel structures National Register of Historic Places listings in Manhattan from 14th to 59th StreetsReferencesNotes The tenants entrance is located at 350 Fifth Avenue while the visitors entrance is located at 20 West 34th Street 1 a b The Empire State Building is located within the 10001 zip code area 23 but 10118 has been assigned as the building s own zip code by the United States Postal Service 20 21 since 1980 24 a b Most sources state that there are 102 floors 5 6 7 but some give a figure of 103 floors due to the presence of a balcony above the 102nd floor 15 16 See Opening and early years and Above the 102nd floor for a detailed explanation a b Per the 1916 Zoning Act the wall of any given tower that faces a street could only rise to a certain height proportionate to the street s width at which point the building had to be set back by a given proportion This system of setbacks would continue until the tower reaches a floor level in which that level s floor area was 25 that of the ground level s area After that 25 threshold was reached the building could rise without restriction 42 43 44 The 1916 Zoning Act was amended in 1961 so that buildings erected thereafter could not exceed a floor area ratio that was calculated for each zoning district 45 The maximum ratio for the Empire State Building s district is 15 unless it includes a public plaza 46 A grandfather clause permits preexisting structures to continue under the old rule Therefore the Empire State Building s floor area ratio of 25 cannot be duplicated or even approached by a new building in that district 47 a b See Landmarks Preservation Commission Interior 1981 PDF page 26 for a diagram of the lobby a b c d The 101st floor was later renamed the 102nd floor and is 101 floors above ground The former 102nd floor now the 103rd floor is now a balcony that is off limits to the public and is 102 floors above ground 273 These proposals included the 100 story Metropolitan Life North Building a 1 050 foot 320 m tower built by Abraham E Lefcourt at Broadway and 49th Street a 100 story tower developed by the Fred F French Company on Sixth Avenue between 43rd and 44th streets an 85 story tower to be developed on the site of the Belmont Hotel near Grand Central Terminal and the Noyes Schulte Company s proposed tower on Broadway between Duane and Worth streets Only one of these projects was even partially completed the base of the Metropolitan Life North Building 180 Citations a b c d e Empire State Building unveils new entrance lobby am New York August 22 2018 Retrieved October 11 2018 a b c d e f g Jackson 2010 p 413 a b c d e f g h Langmead 2009 p 86 a b c Empire State Tower Tallest In World Is Opened By Hoover The Highest Structure Raised By The Hand Of Man PDF The New York Times May 2 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 23 2017 a b c d e f g h i j Empire State Building The Skyscraper Center Retrieved March 27 2023 a b c Emporis GmbH Empire State Building New York City emporis com Archived from the original on January 28 2012 a b Empire State Building New York City SkyscraperPage com Retrieved March 27 2023 a b Fodor s Sinclair M 1998 Exploring New York City Fodor s Exploring Guides Fodor s Travel Publications p 101 ISBN 978 0 679 03559 6 Retrieved October 25 2017 a b Johnston Louis Williamson Samuel H 2023 What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved November 30 2023 United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series a b Empire State Building National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service September 11 2007 Archived from the original on August 5 2011 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 Cultural Resource Information System CRIS New York State Office of Parks Recreation and Historic Preservation November 7 2014 Retrieved July 20 2023 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 1 a b c Landmarks Preservation Commission Interior 1981 p 1 a b Branigin William August 24 2012 Gunman shoots former co worker near Empire State Building is shot by police Washington Post Retrieved October 30 2013 The 103 floor Empire State Building draws a b c Rothstein Edward July 15 2011 A View Inside King Kong s Perch The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 1 2022 Retrieved May 27 2013 Jackson 2010 p 414 Tarquinio J Alex September 9 2009 South of Midtown Manhattan Bargain Commercial Rents The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 22 2017 Kravitz Derek October 23 2015 Midtown South Living Where the Action Is Wall Street Journal Retrieved October 22 2017 a b Verrill Courtney May 1 2016 14 weird facts that you probably didn t know about the Empire State Building Business Insider Retrieved October 22 2017 a b The plane crash of 45 more Empire State Building secrets am New York Newsday April 25 2016 Retrieved October 22 2017 Sederstrom Jonathan September 18 2012 One World Trade Center Won t Get an Exclusive Zip Code USPS Officials Commercial Observer Retrieved October 22 2017 Manhattan Zip Code Map nyc gov New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development Archived from the original on January 7 2021 Retrieved October 22 2017 a b Manhattan Adding 63 ZIP Codes Empire State Gets Own Code PDF The New York Times May 1 1980 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 31 2017 a b MTA Neighborhood Maps neighborhood Metropolitan Transportation Authority 2018 Retrieved October 1 2018 Baldwin Deborah October 17 2008 Living in Koreatown Exotic Flavor Beyond Just the Food The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 25 2011 a b MTA Neighborhood Maps Herald Square Murray Hill PDF mta info Metropolitan Transportation Authority 2015 Retrieved December 11 2015 Jackson 2010 p 866 White Norval Willensky Elliot Leadon Fran 2010 AIA Guide to New York City 5th ed New York Oxford University Press pp 266 267 ISBN 978 0 19538 386 7 a b c d White Norval amp Willensky Elliot 2000 AIA Guide to New York City 4th ed New York Three Rivers Press p 226 ISBN 978 0 8129 3107 5 a b c d e f g Willis amp Friedman 1998 p 14 a b c Willis amp Friedman 1998 p 56 a b c d e Reynolds 1994 p 290 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 14 a b c Jackson 2010 pp 413 414 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Stern Gilmartin amp Mellins 1987 p 612 a b c d e Smith Skyscraper Has a Novel Design Setbacks of the Empire State Building Will Begin With the Sixth Story PDF The New York Times 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 8 2017 a b c d e f Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 15 a b Tauranac 2014 p 157 Kayden amp Municipal Art Society 2000 pp 8 9 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 16 a b c d e f g h i j k Langmead 2009 p 81 Kayden amp Municipal Art Society 2000 p 8 Willis 1995 p 67 Kayden amp Municipal Art Society 2000 pp 11 12 Zoning Districts amp Tools C6 DCP www1 nyc gov Willis Carol 1992 Ward David Zunz Olivier eds Form follows finance The Empire State Building Landscape of Modernity Essays on New York City 1900 1940 p 181 a b c Popular Mechanics amp December 1930 p 920 a b Willis 1995 p 96 Tipton Derrek June 22 2017 Oolitic s Empire Quarry a source of pride The Herald Times Retrieved December 30 2023 Peterson Iver November 10 1981 Limestone Center Turns to Tourism The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 5 2016 a b c d Al Kodmany 2017 p 72 a b Empire State Building Fact Sheet PDF Empire State Realty p 1 Lombardi Candace October 14 2010 Empire State Building refaced for savings CNET com CNET Retrieved May 23 2019 a b c Reynolds 1994 p 292 a b c d e f Reynolds 1994 p 291 a b c d e Stern Gilmartin amp Mellins 1987 p 613 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 pp 16 17 Reynolds 1994 pp 291 292 a b Melina Remy August 24 2010 What Do the Empire State Building s Lights Mean Live Science Retrieved October 26 2017 a b Tauranac 2014 p 353 a b Top of the Empire State To Get New Floodlights The New York Times January 21 1964 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 26 2017 Lelyveld Joseph February 23 1964 The Empire State to Glow at Night PDF The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 10 2010 a b c d Hotel history Waldorfnewyork com Archived from the original on November 27 2013 Retrieved May 30 2014 a b City Lights New York Magazine New York Media LLC May 22 1989 p 35 Berman amp Museum of New York City 2003 p 108 Tower Lights Empire State Building Retrieved October 25 2017 See for example ESB to light up with NYCFC Red Bulls colors am New York May 20 2016 Retrieved October 26 2017 Peters Chris April 25 2016 LOOK Empire State Building lights up blue and orange for Islanders win WCBS TV Retrieved October 26 2017 Empire State Building turns blue as silent tribute BBC News May 15 1998 Retrieved October 23 2017 Lighting Schedule Empire State Building Archived from the original on September 20 2001 Retrieved July 10 2010 TODAY celebrates 60 years NBC News January 13 2012 Retrieved October 26 2017 Irick Whitney January 27 2020 Photos Landmarks Light Up Purple Gold to Remember Lifelong Laker Kobe Bryant NBC Los Angeles Retrieved May 2 2023 How Netflix and Giant Spoon turned the Empire State Building Upside Down Marketing Brew Retrieved December 18 2023 Taub Eric A May 8 2012 Bathed in New Lights Empire State Building Will Star in More Vivid Show City Room Retrieved October 23 2017 a b Santora Marc July 6 2013 The Empire State Building Now in 16 Million Colors The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 9 2013 Retrieved October 23 2017 Wells Charlie November 6 2012 Empire State Building lights up to broadcast election results New York Daily News Retrieved November 27 2012 Empire State Building Light Show LED Display Synchronized To Two Alicia Keys Songs Over Manhattan Huffington Post November 27 2012 Retrieved November 27 2012 Wagmeister Elizabeth October 17 2018 How Eminem and Jimmy Kimmel Took Over the Empire State Building Variety Retrieved January 15 2019 Nash Eric August 1999 Manhattan Skyscrapers Princeton Architectural Press pp 75 ISBN 978 1 56898 181 9 a b c Tauranac 2014 p 183 a b Taranath 2016 p 459 Taranath 2016 p 527 Stern Gilmartin amp Mellins 1987 pp 612 614 a b Willis 1995 p 95 a b c Popular Mechanics amp December 1930 p 922 Landmarks Preservation Commission Interior 1981 p 13 a b c d e Landmarks Preservation Commission Interior 1981 p 15 Collins Charlotte May 8 2023 Lost Art Deco Treasures From the Empire State Building Rediscovered Architectural Digest Retrieved May 10 2023 Kahn Eve M May 7 2023 Vanished Murals From the Empire State Building Rediscovered The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 10 2023 a b c Lepik Andres 2008 Skyscrapers Prestel pp 53 54 ISBN 978 3 7913 3992 4 Retrieved October 23 2017 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission Interior 1981 p 14 a b c d e Reynolds 1994 p 293 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission Interior 1981 pp 12 15 Landmarks Preservation Commission Interior 1981 p 12 a b c Landmarks Preservation Commission Interior 1981 p 16 a b Barron James September 22 2009 Overhead a Lobby Is Restored to Old Glory The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 24 2020 a b Bosworth Patricia 1984 Diane Arbus A Biography W W Norton amp Company p 215 ISBN 9780393326611 Artist Files Suit Over Missing Empire State Building Paintings The New York Times January 31 2014 Retrieved February 1 2014 Barron James February 13 2011 Restored Lobby s Crowning Touch The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 6 2017 a b c Navarro Mireya April 7 2009 Empire State Building Plans Environmental Retrofit The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 27 2017 Bonnier Corporation April 1931 Popular Science Bonnier Corporation p 44 Popular Mechanics amp December 1930 p 921 Empire State Building To Get Modernized Elevators CBS June 16 2011 Retrieved December 16 2017 Al Kodmany 2017 p 71 a b c d Empire State Building s 80th floor renovations offer new visitor experience CBS News November 27 2019 Retrieved January 24 2020 a b Empire State Building Fast Facts CNN Retrieved November 27 2018 a b c Bagli Charles V December 24 2011 Empire State Building Observation Decks Generate Startling Profits The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 1 2022 Retrieved October 24 2017 Bagli Charles V May 28 2016 3 3 Million Were Expected at Trade Center Attraction a Million Haven t Shown Up The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 1 2022 Retrieved October 24 2017 ESB Tickets Empire State Building Retrieved July 10 2010 Fodor s 2010 p 154 Mates Rich October 12 2003 City That Never Sleeps is Full of Unexpected Treasures The Citizens Voice Retrieved April 12 2020 via newspapers com a b c Mouat Lucia November 28 1979 No Longer The Tallest Most Famous Building in World PDF Olean Times Herald Monitor News Service p 14 Retrieved October 29 2017 via fultonhistory com a b Wallace Elizabeth October 11 2019 The Empire State Building s view just got even better CNN Travel Retrieved November 5 2019 a b c Russell James S September 19 2019 The Empire State Building Renewing the Affair The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 1 2022 Retrieved November 5 2019 a b c Ricciulli Valeria December 2 2019 Empire State Building completes 165M revamp with new observatory Curbed NY Retrieved January 24 2020 a b c Exclusive look inside the Empire State Building s 160 million makeover CBS News October 11 2019 Retrieved September 29 2023 Mayes Osterman Cybele July 29 2019 Inside the Empire State Building s New Interactive Museum the Observatory Experience Untapped New York Retrieved October 6 2023 Ten Things Not to Do in New York Concierge com Archived from the original on March 16 2010 Retrieved October 23 2010 Empire State Building Tickets Observatory and Optional Skip the Line Tickets The Official Guide to New York City May 10 2016 Retrieved December 11 2017 Robertson David April 23 2012 No threat from large gorillas The Times Retrieved April 21 2012 According to details prepared for the proposed initial public offering of Empire State Realty Trust the skyscraper earned 62 9 million from its observation deck in nine months last year compared with 62 6 million from the rental of office space Trucco Terry January 1 1995 Travel Advisory Empire State Building New York on One Floor The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 31 2017 a b A Curious Flight Path The New Yorker November 5 2001 Retrieved October 24 2017 Rosenberg A Dunford M 2011 The Rough Guide to New York Rough Guides p 128 ISBN 978 1 84836 590 2 Retrieved October 24 2017 VR World Mecklermedia 1994 p 32 Retrieved October 24 2017 Michelin Tire Corporation 2002 New York City Michelin green guides Michelin Tire Corporation p 82 ISBN 978 2 06 100408 1 Retrieved October 24 2017 Fodor s New York City Fodor s Travel Guides Fodor s Travel 2016 ISBN 978 0 8041 4370 7 Retrieved October 24 2017 Quay Sara E Damico Amy M 2010 September 11 in Popular Culture A Guide Greenwood p 12 ISBN 978 0 313 35505 9 Retrieved October 31 2017 Kleinfield N R June 16 2011 Feud Over Views From the Empire State Building The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 1 2022 Retrieved October 24 2017 a b Tauranac 2014 p 186 a b c d e f Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 17 a b Hearst Magazines May 1931 Popular Mechanics Hearst Magazines p 812 a b c d e f g Langmead 2009 p 82 a b Jackson 2010 pp 1344 a b Inaccessible New York Up To The 103rd Floor Of The Empire State Building CBS New York June 6 2011 Retrieved October 22 2017 Carlson Jen February 2 2016 Here s The View From The Private 103rd Balcony of the Empire State Building Gothamist Archived from the original on November 5 2017 Retrieved October 22 2017 Morris Keiko August 31 2015 Raising the Glass at the Empire State Building Wall Street Journal Retrieved October 25 2017 a b c d e f Haskett Thomas R August 1967 Broadcast Antennas On The Empire State Building Broadcast Engineering Magazine pp 24 31 a b Zarkin K Zarkin M J 2006 The Federal Communications Commission Front Line in the Culture and Regulation Wars Understanding our government Greenwood Press pp 109 110 ISBN 978 0 313 33416 0 Retrieved October 23 2017 a b c Lessing L 1956 Man of High Fidelity Edwin Howard Armstrong A Biography Lippincott p 20 Retrieved October 23 2017 Radio Corporation of America 1943 Radio Age Radio Corporation of America p 6 Retrieved October 23 2017 a b O Dwyer Starts TV Tower Work PDF Buffalo Courier Express Associated Press July 28 1950 Retrieved October 27 2017 via fultonhistory com a b c Kinney Harrison Gill Brendan April 1 1953 The Talk of the Town The New Yorker p 19 a b c d Appraiser s Inside Helped Sell Empire State Building PDF Jamestown Journal Jamestown New York Associated Press June 22 1951 p 1 Retrieved October 23 2017 via fultonhistory com Tauranac 2014 p 356 a b Tauranac 2014 pp 356 357 Tauranac 2014 p 357 Guerrero et al 2002 p 36 a b Guerrero et al 2002 p 37 Cianci P J 2013 High Definition Television The Creation Development and Implementation of HDTV Technology McFarland Incorporated Publishers p 254 ISBN 978 0 7864 8797 4 Retrieved October 23 2017 Bagli Charles V May 12 2003 Broadcasters Put Antennas in Midtown The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 26 2017 One World Trade Center readies for broadcasters Radio amp Television Business Report October 1 2013 Retrieved March 4 2020 Radio stations in New York NY World Radio Map Archived from the original on October 27 2017 Retrieved October 26 2017 US Department of Commerce NOAA NWR Transmitter Propagation www weather gov Retrieved March 21 2023 Craven Wayne 2009 Gilded Mansions Grand Architecture and High Society W W Norton amp Company p 35 ISBN 978 0 393 06754 5 Lewis N P 1916 The Planning of the Modern City A Review of the Principles Governing City Planning John Wiley amp Sons Incorporated p 400 Retrieved October 21 2017 a b c d Douglas 2004 p 108 McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 p 23 McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 p 77 The American Architect and Building News Company 1898 American Architect and Architecture Vol 59 62 Public domain ed The American Architect and Building News Company p 3 Tauranac 2014 p 117 Coleman Du Pont Purchases The Waldorf Astoria Sale of Hotel Announced by George C Boldt Who Relinquishes Control Today PDF The New York Times February 3 1918 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 24 2017 a b Tauranac 2014 p 118 a b Largest Office Building to Replace Waldorf Astoria The New York Times December 23 1928 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 20 2020 Reynolds 1994 p 286 Catharine Street as Select Shopping Centre Recalled in Lord amp Taylor s Coming Removal The New York Times November 3 1912 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 11 2019 a b c Reynolds 1994 p 287 a b c Douglas 2004 p 109 a b c Willis amp Friedman 1998 pp 85 87 FACTBOX History of New York s Empire State Building chicagotribune com Reuters Retrieved November 27 2018 a b c d Reynolds 1994 p 288 Langmead 2009 p 79 a b c d e f g Smith To Help Build Highest Skyscraper Ex Governor Heads Group That Will Put 80 Story Office Building on Waldorf Site PDF The New York Times August 30 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 22 2017 a b c Langmead 2009 p 80 Willis 1995 p 90 Stern Gilmartin amp Mellins 1987 p 610 a b Langmead 2009 p 89 Bascomb 2004 pp 246 247 Wagner 2003 p 12 Tauranac 2014 p 129 Rasenberger 2009 pp 388 389 Stern Gilmartin amp Mellins 1987 pp 610 612 a b Tauranac 2014 p 130 a b c Tauranac 2014 p 131 Bascomb 2004 p 230 Enlarges Site For 1 000 foot Building Empire State Adds 75 Feet in 33d Street to the Waldorf Hotel Plot PDF The New York Times November 19 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 24 2017 Willis 1995 p 100 a b Goldman 1980 pp 31 32 Willis 1995 pp 98 99 a b Bascomb 2004 p 235 a b Bascomb 2004 p 247 a b Tauranac 2014 p 185 a b Dupre Judith 2013 Skyscrapers A History of the World s Most Extraordinary Buildings Hachette Books pp 38 39 ISBN 978 1 57912 942 2 Retrieved October 23 2017 a b c d Bartlett Kay March 14 1976 Empire State Building Challenged PDF Utica Observer Utica New York Associated Press p 9E Retrieved October 23 2017 via fultonhistory com Langmead 2009 p 90 Flowers 2001 p 17 a b Willis amp Friedman 1998 p 46 Homer G Balcom engineer Is Dead PDF The New York Times July 5 1938 Retrieved August 8 2011 Langmead 2009 p 84 Razing Of Waldorf Started By Smith Ceremony on Roof Marks the Beginning of Demolition of Historic Hotel PDF The New York Times October 2 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 22 2017 Tauranac 2014 pp 198 199 Tauranac 2014 p 200 Douglas 2004 p 111 a b Tauranac 2014 p 268 Approves 27 500 000 For Smith Project Metropolitan Life Grants Loan to the Empire State Building Company PDF The New York Times December 14 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 22 2017 Rasenberger 2009 pp 394 395 Steel Contract Let Empire State Building to Require Total of 50 000 Tons PDF The New York Times January 12 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 27 2017 a b c Langmead 2009 p 85 Tauranac 2014 p 203 a b Tauranac 2014 p 205 Excavating Finished For Smith Building Steel Construction on Empire State Structure Here Will Begin on March 15 PDF The New York Times March 6 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 27 2017 a b Tauranac 2014 p 207 Tauranac 2014 p 206 Bascomb 2004 p 248 Standards For Steel Eased In New City Law Bill Signed by Walker Allows 18 000 Pound Stress to the Square Inch PDF The New York Times March 26 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 27 2017 Start Empire State Building Frame PDF The New York Times April 1 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 27 2017 a b Tauranac 2014 p 204 Tauranac 2014 pp 204 205 a b c Poore C G July 27 1930 Greatest Skyscraper Rises On A Clockwork Schedule The Empire State Building Soars Upward as a Modern Army Daily Defeats Time Far Above the Throngs on Fifth Avenue PDF The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 23 2017 a b Tauranac 2014 p 222 Tauranac 2014 p 223 Bascomb 2004 p 246 Rasenberger 2009 p 396 Tauranac 2014 p 149 a b c d Tauranac 2014 p 212 Smith Lays Stone For Tallest Tower 5 000 Witness Ceremony as Former Governor Wields Trowel at Empire State Building PDF The New York Times September 10 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 27 2017 a b Tauranac 2014 p 213 Willis amp Friedman 1998 p 164 a b Workers Raise Flag 1 048 Feet Above Fifth Av As Steel Frame of Smith Building Is Finished PDF The New York Times September 20 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 27 2017 Empire State Tower Mast Up Steel Workers Raise Flag PDF The New York Times November 22 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 28 2017 a b Tauranac 2014 p 214 Tauranac 2014 p 215 a b Tauranac 2014 p 208 Tauranac 2014 pp 213 214 Willis amp Friedman 1998 pp 130 133 a b Willis amp Friedman 1998 p 204 Rasenberger 2009 pp 390 391 Weitzman D 2014 Skywalkers Mohawk Ironworkers Build the City Roaring Brook Press pp 85 87 88 ISBN 978 1 4668 6981 3 Retrieved October 23 2017 Rasenberger 2009 p 398 a b Tauranac 2014 p 221 a b Flowers 2001 p 72 Lewis Wickes Hine The Construction of the Empire State Building 1930 31 New York Public Library Photography Collection New York Public Library Archived from the original on February 21 2009 Retrieved October 11 2010 Tauranac 2014 p 283 Tauranac 2014 pp 283 284 Rasenberger 2009 pp 398 399 a b c d e f g Young William H Young Nancy K 2007 The Great Depression in America A Cultural Encyclopedia Greenwood Press pp 144 145 ISBN 978 0 313 33522 8 Retrieved October 25 2017 Willis 1995 pp 100 101 Langmead 2009 p 87 Tauranac 2014 pp 227 228 a b Empire State Building Open PDF Cortland Standard Cortland New York May 2 1931 p 1 Retrieved October 23 2017 via fultonhistory com Tauranac 2014 p 231 Rivalry For Height Is Seen As Ended PDF The New York Times May 2 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 23 2017 75 Story Buildings Found Economical PDF The New York Times September 22 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 23 2017 Empire Tower Wins 1931 Fifth Av Prize Association Gives Its Medal and Diploma for Building s Architectural Excellence PDF The New York Times February 24 1932 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 25 2017 a b Tauranac 2014 p 25 a b Langmead 2009 p 72 Few Shops Vacant on Fifth Avenue Survey Discloses Only Twelve Stores Available in the Business Blocks The New York Times February 8 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 15 2022 Retrieved March 15 2022 Dailey John A February 8 1931 Fifth Avenue Still Leading Shopping Center Few Stores Are Available North of Forty Second St Recent Survey Indicates 3 750 Foot Top Rental Shoe Healers Predominate There Being 28 Such Shops New York Herald Tribune p E1 ProQuest 1114167981 a b c Willis amp Friedman 1998 p 48 Tauranac 2014 p 273 Tauranac 2014 p 271 See Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 17 Willis 1995 p 90 Willis amp Friedman 1998 p 48 Schleier Merrill 1990 The skyscraper in American art 1890 1931 New York N Y Da Capo Press p 120 ISBN 0 306 80385 2 OCLC 20671553 Smith Adam August 18 2008 A Renters Market in London Time Archived from the original on April 19 2010 Retrieved July 10 2010 a b Winters Patricia July 17 1994 To Oldest Tenant Empire State A Jewel New York Daily News Retrieved October 31 2017 via Chicago Tribune a b Ramirez Anthony June 30 1996 Neighborhood Report Midtown A Fixture at the Empire State The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 31 2017 a b Martin Douglas January 13 2008 Jack Brod Early Tenant of Skyscraper Dies at 98 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 31 2017 Tauranac 2014 pp 273 274 276 279 280 Tauranac 2014 p 311 Tauranac 2014 pp 286 289 Tauranac 2014 pp 290 291 a b Jackson 2010 p 1326 Tauranac 2014 p 291 British Flier on Wedding Trip Gets Bond As 5 000 000th Empire State Tower Visitor PDF The New York Times September 9 1944 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 24 2017 Tauranac 2014 pp 294 295 Tauranac 2014 p 295 Tauranac 2014 p 237 Goldman 1980 p 44 a b Reingold Lester A July 2000 Airships and the Empire State Building Fact and fiction Air amp Space Smithsonian Throng Strains Necks as Blimp Tries to Kiss Empire State Mast Brooklyn Daily Eagle September 15 1931 p 3 Retrieved October 26 2017 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com a b Blimp Moored to Tower of Empire State Building PDF Daily Sentinel Rome New York Associated Press September 15 1931 p 1 Retrieved October 23 2017 via fultonhistory com Moors to Empire State Small Dirigible Makes Brief Contact While Traffic Is Jammed Below PDF The New York Times September 16 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 24 2017 a b c d e Berman amp Museum of New York City 2003 p 86 a b Army Pushes Bomber Crash Investigation Brooklyn Daily Eagle July 30 1945 p 1 Retrieved October 26 2017 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com Tauranac 2014 p 332 Jackson 2010 pp 1188 Empire State Tower Reported Near Sale The New York Times December 18 1951 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 21 2017 a b c d e f g h Bagli Charles V April 28 2013 Empire State Building Has a Tangled History The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 1 2022 Retrieved September 21 2017 Saxon Wolfgang June 16 1996 Ben Tobin 92 Investor in Hotels And in Real Estate The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 16 2019 Nitkin David June 9 1996 Ben Tobin Bought Or Built Notable Broward Buildings Sun Sentinel com Retrieved January 16 2019 Tauranac 2014 p 366 Empire State Building Will Change Hands PDF Cortland Standard Cortland New York Associated Press May 26 1951 p 1 Retrieved October 23 2017 via fultonhistory com Deal Is Closed On Empire State Col Henry Crown Increases His Ownership to 100 in Famed Office Structure The New York Times October 15 1954 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 21 2017 Empire State Building Given Special Award Chicago Tribune December 29 1955 p 28 Retrieved October 26 2017 via Chicago Tribune newspapers com a b Empire State Building ASCE Metropolitan Section Retrieved October 26 2017 a b c d Empire State Sold Price Is 65 Million Empire State Building Bought By Syndicate for 65 000 000 PDF The New York Times August 23 1961 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 21 2017 New Buyer to Sell Empire State To Prudential in Leaseback Deal PDF The New York Times August 24 1961 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 21 2017 Tauranac 2014 p 351 Tower at Empire State Getting First Cleaning PDF The New York Times August 3 1962 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 27 2017 Tauranac 2014 pp 352 353 Tauranac 2014 p 352 The Empire State Gets Escalators The New York Times December 24 1964 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 26 2017 a b World Trade Center Becomes World s Highest Building By 4 Feet The New York Times October 20 1970 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 26 2017 a b c Trade Center Topped Out With Steel Column 1 370 Feet Above Street The New York Times December 24 1970 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 26 2017 355 Million World Trade Center Backed by Port Authority Study 355 Million World Trade Center Backed by Port Authority Study PDF The New York Times March 12 1961 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 26 2017 Tauranac 2014 pp 353 354 a b Tauranac 2014 p 354 Ennis Thomas W February 15 1964 Critics Impugned On Trade Center The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 26 2017 Jackhammers Bite Pavement to Start Trade Center Job PDF The New York Times August 6 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 26 2017 a b c d e World Trade Center tower surpasses Empire State CBS News April 30 2012 Retrieved October 22 2017 Berman amp Museum of New York City 2003 pp 105 106 Timeline World Trade Center chronology PBS American Experience Archived from the original on May 2 2007 Retrieved May 15 2007 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 18 Phelps Timothy M May 1 1981 Light Show More Like a Flicker The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 29 2017 Empire State celebrates 50th year PDF Auburn Citizen Advertiser United Press International April 30 1981 p 1 Retrieved October 29 2017 via fultonhistory com a b Haberman Clyde May 20 1981 Panel Creates a Historic District in Manhattan s East 60 s and 70 s The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 7 2022 a b Sutton Larry May 20 1981 Puttin fix on Upper East Side ritz New York Daily News p 141 Retrieved May 7 2022 a b Dunlap David W July 8 1994 Trump Plans Revitalization of Empire State Building The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 31 2017 a b Gray Christopher June 14 1992 Streetscapes The Empire State Building A Red Reprise for a 31 Wonder The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 26 2022 a b Oser Alan S July 21 1996 Perspectives The Empire State Building s Two Front Campaign The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 21 2017 Andrews Edmund L January 28 1992 Advocates of Disabled File Complaint About the Empire State Building The New York Times Retrieved October 31 2017 a b Hamilton Andrea March 4 1994 Empire State Building to provide better access for disabled The Buffalo News p 11 Retrieved December 26 2022 US v Empire State Building of NYC TXT file Press release United States Department of Justice March 3 1994 Retrieved October 31 2017 Company News Empire State Buyer Found The New York Times November 1 1991 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 21 2017 Donald Trump s Failed and Fraught Attempt to Own the Empire State Building 6sqft April 18 2016 Retrieved January 29 2019 a b Gilpin Kenneth N February 17 1995 Company News Trump Sues Empire State Building Management Company The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 21 2017 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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