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W New York Union Square

The W New York Union Square is a 270-room, 21-story boutique hotel operated by W Hotels at the northeast corner of Park Avenue South and 17th Street, across from Union Square in Manhattan, New York. Originally known as the Germania Life Insurance Company Building, it was designed by Albert D'Oench and Joseph W. Yost and built in 1911 in the Beaux-Arts style.

W New York Union Square
(2009)
Former names
  • Germania Life Insurance Company Building (1911–1917)
  • Guardian Life Insurance Company Building (1917–1999)
Hotel chainW Hotels
General information
StatusOpen
TypeHotel, office
Architectural styleBeaux-Arts (original building)
European Modernism (annex)
Address50 Union Square East
201 Park Avenue South
Town or cityNew York City
CountryUnited States
Coordinates40°44′12″N 73°59′19″W / 40.73667°N 73.98861°W / 40.73667; -73.98861
Completed1911 (original building)
1961 (annex)
Renovated2000
ManagementMarriott International
Height281 feet (86 m)
Technical details
Floor count21 (original building)
4 (annex)
Lifts/elevators8
Design and construction
Architect(s)Albert D'Oench & Joseph W. Yost (original building)
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (annex)
Other information
Number of rooms270
Germania Life Insurance Company Building
New York City Landmark No. 1541, 2247
Location50 Union Square East, New York City
Coordinates40°44′12″N 73°59′21″W / 40.73667°N 73.98917°W / 40.73667; -73.98917
Area0.5 acres (0.20 ha)
Built1910–1911
ArchitectAlbert D'Oench & Joseph W. Yost
Architectural styleBeaux Arts
NRHP reference No.01000556[1]
NYCL No.1541, 2247
Significant dates
Added to NRHPMay 25, 2001 (original building only)
Designated NYCLSeptember 6, 1988 (original building, No. 1541)[2]
November 18, 2008 (annex, No. 2247)[3]

The W New York Union Square building was initially the headquarters of the Germania Life Insurance Company. In 1917, when the company became the Guardian Life Insurance Company of America, the building was renamed the Guardian Life Insurance Company Building. A four-story annex to the east was designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and was completed in 1961. Guardian Life moved its offices out of the building in 1999, and the W New York Union Square opened the following year.

The main building, part of the hotel, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2001, and was designated a city landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1988. The Guardian Life annex, not part of the current hotel, was designated as a city landmark in 2007.

Site edit

The W New York Union Square building's site measures 80 feet (24 m) along Park Avenue South and 115 feet (35 m) along 17th Street.[4][5][6] The building is located at the northeast corner of that intersection, diagonally across from Union Square to the southwest.[4][5] Its immediate neighbors include the four-story International Style Guardian annex and several rowhouses to the east; the former Tammany Hall building at 44 Union Square to the south; the Everett Building across Park Avenue to the west; and a five-story commercial building and a twenty-story loft structure to the north.[4] The building is one of the few remaining major insurance company "home office" structures in New York City.[7][a]

Architecture edit

 
Seen from Union Square, to the southwest

The W New York Union Square building is designed in the Beaux-Arts style.[8] It is 21 stories tall, with the 18th through 21st stories being located within the mansard roof. A "light court" on the north side of the building gives it a U-shaped footprint.[5] According to building plans, D'Oench and Yost considered the Germania Life Building's main roof to be a flat roof above the 17th floor.[4] The building is divided into three horizontal sections: a three-story base with a ground floor and two-story "transitional section"; a 12-story "shaft" below another 2-story "transitional section"; and the four-story roof.[9] The building rises 290 feet (88 m) above ground level. Two basement levels are located below ground level, and there is a mezzanine between the second and third floors.[6]

The interior structure is supported by steel plate girders below the fourth floor. Above that level, the structure is composed primarily of 24-inch (61 cm) I-beams, with flange plates at their tops and bottoms.[4][5] The building also incorporates curtain walls in its design.[4]

According to critic A. C. David, the optimal building design included high ceilings and large windows to maximize natural light coverage.[10] The Germania Life Building not only included these features, but also had a corner location that was conducive toward the maximization of natural light.[4] However, unlike many buildings being built on Park Avenue in the 1900s and 1910s, the Germania Life Building also retained traditional design features.[9] For instance, the building used masonry instead of a terracotta-clad metal structure for fireproofing.[9][11]

Facade edit

The W New York Union Square building facade is composed mostly of gray Concord granite interspersed with brick,[4][5] except for the red Numidian-granite water table, and the red Spanish-tile mansard roof.[5] The foundation walls are made of brick, mortar, and cement.[4] On all floors, there are eight architectural bays, three facing Park Avenue to the west and five facing 17th Street to the south.[5][12]

The ground floor facade is rusticated with several rows of beveled masonry blocks, and deep crevices between each row of blocks. In each of the ground-floor bays, there are rusticated arches with foliate keystones.[5][12] The arches formerly contained storefronts until the building's conversion into a hotel.[5] The main entrance is from the northernmost arch on Park Avenue South. A belt course runs on the facade between the ground and second floors.[5][12] The second and third floor facades are also rusticated with beveled blocks but have shallower crevices between each row. The center bay on Park Avenue South and the center three bays on 17th Street contain double-story arched openings with keystones at top, while each of the bay at the ends of each facade contain two windows per floor.[12][13] On the Park Avenue South side, there is a small iron balcony projecting from the third story of the double arch, with the initials "G" and "L" on the iron railing.[5][12] The third floor facade is topped by a denticulated (tooth-like) cornice.[12][13] Signs with the company name were formerly located above the third floor on both the Park Avenue South and 17th Street sides.[12]

The facades of the fourth through fifteenth floors are largely uniform, with shallow belt courses and quoins in the spaces between each set of windows. Shallow balconies on the fourth floor, with stone colonnades, are located above the denticulated third-floor cornices on the Park Avenue South and 17th Street sides, and run across nearly the entire width of both facades. On the west and east facades, the fenestration or window arrangement is in a 2-3-2 format, i.e. there are two windows per floor on the side bays and three windows per floor in the central bay. On the south facade, the fenestration is in a 2-2-2-2-2 format, i.e. five bays with two windows each.[12][13] The beige-brick-clad north facade contains the recessed "light court" and is divided into two asymmetric sections, both with simple window openings.[14][5] The center bays on the west and south facades contain projecting windowsills on the fourth through fourteenth floors. Above the 15th and 17th stories are stone cornices.[12][13] The 16th story also used to have a cornice above it, but the cornice was replaced around 1940 with a fascia of sheet metal.[14][13] The 16th floor contains panels depicting torches and shields in the spaces between each bay, while the 17th floor facade is unadorned.[13]

Roof edit

 
Mansard roof detail, seen from the ground at Union Square

The W New York Union Square building's most prominent feature is its four-story mansard roof, which contains dormer windows, escutcheons, and five decorative keystones with garlands.[15][16]: 158  On the 18th story, the west and east facades contain fenestration in a 2-3-2 format and the south facade contains fenestration in a 2-3-3-3-2 format. On the 19th story, the west and east facades' fenestration is in a 1-3-1 format and the south facade's fenestration is in a 1-3-3-3-1 format.[13][17] There are carved scallops atop each of the window groupings on the 18th and 19th stories.[13] On the 20th story, the west and east facades contain a triple window in the center, topped by a large triangular pediment, while there are two standalone dormer windows on each side of the triple window, all with smaller pediments. The south side of the 20th story contains ten dormer windows, all with pediments. On the 21st story, there are five round-arched dormer windows on the west and east facades, and eight round-arched dormer windows on the south facade. A horizontal band runs at the top of the 21st story facade, below a cornice, while vertical acroteria run along the roof's corners.[13][17]

The roof was influenced by both 19th-century French architecture and the Second Empire style.[15][16]: 22  Inspiration also came from the now-demolished New York Tribune Building (completed 1905) in Civic Center, Manhattan, which was topped by a three-story mansard roof.[15] In addition, during the 1870s, Germania had added a mansard roof to their otherwise unadorned Italianate headquarters in the Financial District.[18][19] D'Oench and Yost had decided to retain this feature in their design for the new building.[9][20] The roof also incorporates several features of German architectural styles because of the company's and D'Oench's German roots. For example, the designs of the dormer windows are different for each floor, and there is elaborate decoration, consistent with 16th-century German architecture.[9]

On top of the roof is a horizontal lighted sign with white letters. It originally contained the letters "Germania Life". The sign was changed to "Guardian Life" in 1917 upon the company's renaming.[15][21] Most of the letters seem to have been reused when the sign was replaced, while the letters "E" and "M" were replaced with a "U" and "D".[9] The sign was later replaced with a "W Union Square" sign.[22]

Interior edit

The floors are made of multicolored marble pattern on the ground-floor main entrance, tile on the ground-floor retail area, terrazzo with mosaic borders on the second through fourth floors, and cement on the fifth through 20th stories and in the basements. The ground-floor entrance area also contains white English veined marble on the walls, capped by stucco decoration. The restrooms are designed with hexagonal-tiled floors, tile wainscoting, and stalls made with marble barriers.[11] Inside the building are eight elevators, five for passenger use and three for freight transport. There are also two enclosed hallways on each floor, and two enclosed staircases within the building.[9][23]

One particularly heavily-ornamented interior space is the second-story elevator lobby, which contains a marble floor and English marble walls and ceilings.[14][11] The elevator lobby is supported by round arches that divide it into an arcade with five domes. Directly to the south, accessed through three sets of openings,[14] is a 66-by-35-foot (20 by 11 m), double-height space, originally used for selling insurance before being converted into the W Hotel ballroom.[24] The lower halves of the ballroom's walls contain marble wainscoting.[14] Various ornaments, cartouches, and motifs are located throughout the ballroom, including several instances of Guardian Life's initials.[25]

Guardian Life annex edit

The Guardian Life Insurance Company Annex, also known as 105 East 17th Street, was completed in 1961.[14][26] It is located just to the east of the 20-story hotel tower, between Irving Place to the east and Park Avenue South to the west. It contains two 4-story facades: the southern facade abuts 17th Street to the south while the northern facade is adjacent to 18th Street to the north.[27] The 17th Street facade is slightly wider, measuring 159 feet (48 m) long with nineteen architectural bays, while the 18th Street facade is 124 feet (38 m) long and contains twelve bays.[28] On both sides, the facades contain aluminum spandrels and thin projecting mullions between each architectural bay. There is a rolldown metal gate and a revolving door on the western portion of the annex's 17th Street facade, on the portion adjacent to the hotel. The western portion of the annex's 18th Street facade contains a recessed brick portion with metal emergency doors.[27]

History edit

Context and planning edit

Union Square was first laid out in the Commissioners' Plan of 1811, expanded in 1832, and then made into a public park in 1839.[29][30] By the first decade of the 20th century, Union Square had grown into a major transportation hub with several elevated and surface railroad lines running nearby, and the New York City Subway's 14th Street–Union Square station opening in 1904.[30][31]

In August 1909, the Real Estate Record and Guide announced that D'Oench & Yost had been hired to build a new 20-story headquarters for the Germania Life Insurance Company at the northeast corner of Fourth Avenue (now Park Avenue South) and 17th Streets.[32][33] The company, founded in 1860 to serve New York City's German community,[34][35] occupied several successive buildings before settling at a six-story building at Cedar and Nassau Streets in Manhattan's Financial District.[36][37] The Nassau Street building had suffered from structural problems, the most serious being a sinking foundation,[38] and it was sold to the Fourth National Bank of New York in March 1909.[36][39] The company also could no longer rent out its vacant space at Nassau Street at a profit, and its directors sought to build a new headquarters in advance of its 50th anniversary. When Germania's directors decided to buy the Park Avenue site in mid-1909 at a cost of $350,000 (equivalent to $11,869,000 in 2023), the directors wanted to ensure that their headquarters would not be overshadowed by its neighbors, so they directed D'Oench & Yost to build a structure of at least 16 stories. The four-story mansard roof was added to the plans later.[37]

At the time of the Guardian Life Building's construction, life insurance companies generally had their own buildings for their offices and branch locations. According to architectural writer Kenneth Gibbs, these buildings allowed each individual company to instill "not only its name but also a favorable impression of its operations" in the general public.[19][40] This had been a trend since 1870,[19][41] with the completion of the former Equitable Life Building in Manhattan's Financial District.[19][42] Furthermore, life insurance companies of the late 19th and early 20th centuries generally built massive buildings to fit their large clerical and records-keeping staff.[43]

Use as office building edit

 
After conversion into W New York Union Square; the Everett Building can be seen at far left

Germania Life moved to its new Union Square headquarters on April 24, 1911.[36] When the building was completed the following month, the total cost of the structure was about $1.45 million (equal to $46 million in 2023).[37] Germania Life made additional profit by leasing out its unused space at its headquarters.[37] In 1918, during World War I, the company was renamed the Guardian Life Insurance Company to avoid associations with Germany, which had become one of the Central Powers against which the United States was fighting.[33][34] The company then changed the large "Germania Life Insurance Company" sign on the headquarters' roof to read "Guardian Life Insurance Company".[15][21] Several other alterations took place over the years, including the removal of the 16th-story cornice in 1940 and replacement of the storefront windows in 1957.[14] Further, the entrance lobby from Park Avenue South was renovated in the 1960s and the 1980s.[14]

By the mid-20th century, Guardian Life had grown significantly, with $2 billion in assets by 1960 (equal to $16 billion in 2023).[44] Guardian had also occupied all of its vacant space in the building,[26] and to alleviate the shortage of space, considered moving uptown to Midtown Manhattan or further north to Westchester County.[44] Sites in White Plains and New Rochelle in Westchester were considered, but both proposals faced opposition from residents and Guardian Life employees, leading the company to decide to expand its Union Square location.[34][45] In 1959, the company announced that it would build an adjacent 27,000-square-foot (2,500 m2), four-story annex at 105 East 17th Street.[46] The annex, designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill,[45] was completed in 1961.[14][26] Unlike the original structure, the annex occupied the full width of the block to 18th Street.[45]

During the 1980s, Guardian Life expanded again to 225/233 Park Avenue South, signing a lease for 44,000 square feet (4,100 m2). Guardian signed a lease for 23,000 square feet (2,100 m2) in a fourth building, 215 Park Avenue South, in the early 1990s.[26][27]

Conversion to hotel edit

In 1998, Guardian Life moved its headquarters to the Financial District of Manhattan, with plans to sell their old headquarters.[27][47] The next year, The Related Companies announced that the Guardian Life Insurance Company Building would be renovated into a 250-room hotel operated by Starwood.[48] The hotel would be the first in the Union Square neighborhood.[49] As part of the conversion, Related planned to remove the red neon "Guardian Life Insurance Company" sign and replace it with "W New York Union Square", the name of the W Hotels resort that would occupy the building. Workers removed the last two letters of the sign before the city announced that the removal had been illegal and saying that the Landmarks Preservation Commission had to approve the action, thereby temporarily halting the process.[50] The hotel opened in December 2000, with 270 rooms,[51] and the "W Union Square" sign was added to the roof.[22] The basement was used by several event spaces,[52] including Rande Gerber's Underbar lounge and Todd English's Olives restaurant.[53] The annex was not included in the hotel conversion and continued to be used as offices.[27]

The W New York Union Square was sold in 2006 for $285 million to Istithmar World, a Dubai government-owned investment group. The sales of the W New York Union Square and the Four Seasons Resort Hualalai in Hawaii, both at rates of over $1 million per room, at the time were the highest-ever selling rates for hotels that were not scheduled for renovation.[53] In 2014, Gerber Group took over the Olives restaurant at the W New York Union Square and renovated it into a restaurant called the Irvington, after Washington Irving, the namesake of nearby Irving Place.[52] Marriott Hotels & Resorts purchased the W New York Union Square in October 2019 for $206 million, with plans to renovate the building.[22][54] The next year, the LPC reviewed a proposal for a seasonal rooftop garden, designed by Beyer Blinder Belle.[55]

Landmark designations edit

In 1988, the Guardian Life Building was designated a New York City landmark.[56] The building, along with the Everett Building at the northwest corner of Park Avenue South and 17th Street, were described by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission as forming an "imposing terminus to Park Avenue South".[2] The W New York Union Square building was added to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) on May 25, 2001.[1] The annex, not part of the present hotel and not on the NRHP, was also made a city landmark in 2007.[3]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The others include:

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988, p. 1.
  3. ^ a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 2008, p. 1.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988, p. 9.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l National Park Service 2001, p. 3.
  6. ^ a b Architecture & Building 1911, p. 425.
  7. ^ a b Presa, Donald G. (October 24, 2000). "New York Life Insurance Company Building" (PDF). New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. p. 4.
  8. ^ An Architectural Guidebook to Brooklyn. Gibbs Smith. May 8, 2024. p. 5. ISBN 978-1-4236-1911-6.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988, p. 8.
  10. ^ David, A. C. (December 24, 1910). "The New Architecture: The First American Type of Real Value Represented by the Group of Commercial Buildings on Fourth Avenue" (PDF). The Real Estate Record: Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide. Vol. 86, no. 2232. p. 1085 – via columbia.edu.
  11. ^ a b c Architecture & Building 1911, p. 428.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988, p. 10.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i National Park Service 2001, p. 4.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988, p. 12.
  15. ^ a b c d e Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988, p. 6.
  16. ^ a b Stern, Robert A. M.; Gilmartin, Patrick; Mellins, Thomas (1987). New York 1930: Architecture and Urbanism Between the Two World Wars. New York: Rizzoli. ISBN 978-0-8478-3096-1. OCLC 13860977.
  17. ^ a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988, p. 11.
  18. ^ Gibbs 1984, p. 28.
  19. ^ a b c d Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988, p. 7.
  20. ^ Gibbs 1984, pp. 118, 120.
  21. ^ a b National Park Service 2001, p. 11.
  22. ^ a b c "Marriott to make over W Union Square hotel". Real Estate Weekly. October 24, 2019. Retrieved November 20, 2019.
  23. ^ Architecture & Building 1911, p. 434.
  24. ^ Dunlap, David W. (September 10, 2000). "From Front Office to Front Desk". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
  25. ^ National Park Service 2001, p. 6.
  26. ^ a b c d "Posting: Guardian Life Grows; Faithful to Union Square". The New York Times. March 15, 1992. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
  27. ^ a b c d e Landmarks Preservation Commission 2008, p. 6.
  28. ^ Landmarks Preservation Commission 2008, p. 4.
  29. ^ "The Century Building" (PDF). New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. October 7, 1986. p. 2. Retrieved November 18, 2019.
  30. ^ a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988, p. 2.
  31. ^ "Plans for Everett House Site Improvement" (PDF). The Real Estate Record: Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide. Vol. 81, no. 2101. June 20, 1908. p. 1178 – via columbia.edu.
  32. ^ "Office Building for 4th Ave. & 17th St" (PDF). The Real Estate Record: Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide. Vol. 84, no. 2160. August 7, 1909. p. 63 – via columbia.edu.
  33. ^ a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988, p. 3.
  34. ^ a b c Kesslinger, J. M. (May 8, 1960). Guardian of a century, 1860-1960. Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America. Retrieved November 19, 2019 – via HathiTrust Digital Library.
  35. ^ National Park Service 2001, p. 8.
  36. ^ a b c Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988, p. 4.
  37. ^ a b c d National Park Service 2001, p. 9.
  38. ^ Miller, Tom (September 2, 2011). "The 1910 Germania (Guardian) Life Insurance Building – 201 Park Avenue So.". Daytonian in Manhattan.
  39. ^ "Bank Buys Fine Plot". New-York Tribune. March 14, 1909. p. 7. Retrieved November 19, 2019 – via newspapers.com  .
  40. ^ Gibbs 1984, p. 25.
  41. ^ Gibbs 1984, p. 24.
  42. ^ Gibbs 1984, p. 39.
  43. ^ Moudry, Roberta (2005). "The Corporate and the Civic: Metropolitan Life's Home Office Building". In Moudry, Roberta (ed.). The American Skyscraper: Cultural Histories. Cambridge University Press. p. 122. ISBN 978-0-52162-421-3.
  44. ^ a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 2008, p. 2.
  45. ^ a b c Landmarks Preservation Commission 2008, p. 3.
  46. ^ "New Wing Slated By Guardian Life; 3-Story Addition to Home Building Will Rise on 17th St. at 4th Ave". The New York Times. April 16, 1959. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  47. ^ Ravo, Nick (August 20, 1998). "Metro Budiness; Guardian Life Moves Farther Downtown". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
  48. ^ Stamler, Bernard (February 14, 1999). "New Yorkers & Co; Full Circle at Union Square". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
  49. ^ Garbarine, Rachelle (December 10, 1999). "Residential Real Estate; 14th St. Revival Is Picking Up Pace With Union Square Project". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  50. ^ Kilgannon, Corey (January 23, 2000). "Neighborhood Report: Union Square; Life of a Landmarked Sign Is Cut Short (by 2 Letters)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
  51. ^ Louie, Elaine (December 7, 2000). "Currents: Hotels; On Union Square, a Sweeping Staircase With a Ballroom to Match". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
  52. ^ a b Heyman, Marshall (March 23, 2015). "Irvington Replaces Todd English's Olives NY". WSJ. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  53. ^ a b Gregor, Alison (October 29, 2006). "Luxury Hotels Breaking a Million-Dollar Barrier". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  54. ^ Wallis, Gregg (October 17, 2019). "Marriott Buys W New York – Union Square to Create Next-Generation Flagship". Hotel Business. Retrieved November 20, 2019.
  55. ^ Morris, Sebastian (September 13, 2020). "Beyer Blinder Belle Designs Seasonal Rooftop Venue at W New York in Union Square". New York YIMBY. Retrieved July 21, 2022.
  56. ^ New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission; Dolkart, Andrew S.; Postal, Matthew A. (2009). Postal, Matthew A. (ed.). Guide to New York City Landmarks (4th ed.). New York: John Wiley & Sons. p. 76. ISBN 978-0-470-28963-1.

Sources edit

External links edit

  • W New York Union Square, Marriott website
  • . Emporis. Archived from the original on May 13, 2016.

york, union, square, room, story, boutique, hotel, operated, hotels, northeast, corner, park, avenue, south, 17th, street, across, from, union, square, manhattan, york, originally, known, germania, life, insurance, company, building, designed, albert, oench, j. The W New York Union Square is a 270 room 21 story boutique hotel operated by W Hotels at the northeast corner of Park Avenue South and 17th Street across from Union Square in Manhattan New York Originally known as the Germania Life Insurance Company Building it was designed by Albert D Oench and Joseph W Yost and built in 1911 in the Beaux Arts style W New York Union Square 2009 Former namesGermania Life Insurance Company Building 1911 1917 Guardian Life Insurance Company Building 1917 1999 Hotel chainW HotelsGeneral informationStatusOpenTypeHotel officeArchitectural styleBeaux Arts original building European Modernism annex Address50 Union Square East201 Park Avenue SouthTown or cityNew York CityCountryUnited StatesCoordinates40 44 12 N 73 59 19 W 40 73667 N 73 98861 W 40 73667 73 98861Completed1911 original building 1961 annex Renovated2000ManagementMarriott InternationalHeight281 feet 86 m Technical detailsFloor count21 original building 4 annex Lifts elevators8Design and constructionArchitect s Albert D Oench amp Joseph W Yost original building Skidmore Owings amp Merrill annex Other informationNumber of rooms270Germania Life Insurance Company BuildingU S National Register of Historic PlacesNew York City Landmark No 1541 2247Show map of New York CityShow map of New YorkShow map of the United StatesLocation50 Union Square East New York CityCoordinates40 44 12 N 73 59 21 W 40 73667 N 73 98917 W 40 73667 73 98917Area0 5 acres 0 20 ha Built1910 1911ArchitectAlbert D Oench amp Joseph W YostArchitectural styleBeaux ArtsNRHP reference No 01000556 1 NYCL No 1541 2247Significant datesAdded to NRHPMay 25 2001 original building only Designated NYCLSeptember 6 1988 original building No 1541 2 November 18 2008 annex No 2247 3 The W New York Union Square building was initially the headquarters of the Germania Life Insurance Company In 1917 when the company became the Guardian Life Insurance Company of America the building was renamed the Guardian Life Insurance Company Building A four story annex to the east was designed by Skidmore Owings amp Merrill and was completed in 1961 Guardian Life moved its offices out of the building in 1999 and the W New York Union Square opened the following year The main building part of the hotel was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2001 and was designated a city landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1988 The Guardian Life annex not part of the current hotel was designated as a city landmark in 2007 Contents 1 Site 2 Architecture 2 1 Facade 2 2 Roof 2 3 Interior 2 4 Guardian Life annex 3 History 3 1 Context and planning 3 2 Use as office building 3 3 Conversion to hotel 4 Landmark designations 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Sources 7 External linksSite editThe W New York Union Square building s site measures 80 feet 24 m along Park Avenue South and 115 feet 35 m along 17th Street 4 5 6 The building is located at the northeast corner of that intersection diagonally across from Union Square to the southwest 4 5 Its immediate neighbors include the four story International Style Guardian annex and several rowhouses to the east the former Tammany Hall building at 44 Union Square to the south the Everett Building across Park Avenue to the west and a five story commercial building and a twenty story loft structure to the north 4 The building is one of the few remaining major insurance company home office structures in New York City 7 a Architecture edit nbsp Seen from Union Square to the southwest The W New York Union Square building is designed in the Beaux Arts style 8 It is 21 stories tall with the 18th through 21st stories being located within the mansard roof A light court on the north side of the building gives it a U shaped footprint 5 According to building plans D Oench and Yost considered the Germania Life Building s main roof to be a flat roof above the 17th floor 4 The building is divided into three horizontal sections a three story base with a ground floor and two story transitional section a 12 story shaft below another 2 story transitional section and the four story roof 9 The building rises 290 feet 88 m above ground level Two basement levels are located below ground level and there is a mezzanine between the second and third floors 6 The interior structure is supported by steel plate girders below the fourth floor Above that level the structure is composed primarily of 24 inch 61 cm I beams with flange plates at their tops and bottoms 4 5 The building also incorporates curtain walls in its design 4 According to critic A C David the optimal building design included high ceilings and large windows to maximize natural light coverage 10 The Germania Life Building not only included these features but also had a corner location that was conducive toward the maximization of natural light 4 However unlike many buildings being built on Park Avenue in the 1900s and 1910s the Germania Life Building also retained traditional design features 9 For instance the building used masonry instead of a terracotta clad metal structure for fireproofing 9 11 Facade edit The W New York Union Square building facade is composed mostly of gray Concord granite interspersed with brick 4 5 except for the red Numidian granite water table and the red Spanish tile mansard roof 5 The foundation walls are made of brick mortar and cement 4 On all floors there are eight architectural bays three facing Park Avenue to the west and five facing 17th Street to the south 5 12 The ground floor facade is rusticated with several rows of beveled masonry blocks and deep crevices between each row of blocks In each of the ground floor bays there are rusticated arches with foliate keystones 5 12 The arches formerly contained storefronts until the building s conversion into a hotel 5 The main entrance is from the northernmost arch on Park Avenue South A belt course runs on the facade between the ground and second floors 5 12 The second and third floor facades are also rusticated with beveled blocks but have shallower crevices between each row The center bay on Park Avenue South and the center three bays on 17th Street contain double story arched openings with keystones at top while each of the bay at the ends of each facade contain two windows per floor 12 13 On the Park Avenue South side there is a small iron balcony projecting from the third story of the double arch with the initials G and L on the iron railing 5 12 The third floor facade is topped by a denticulated tooth like cornice 12 13 Signs with the company name were formerly located above the third floor on both the Park Avenue South and 17th Street sides 12 The facades of the fourth through fifteenth floors are largely uniform with shallow belt courses and quoins in the spaces between each set of windows Shallow balconies on the fourth floor with stone colonnades are located above the denticulated third floor cornices on the Park Avenue South and 17th Street sides and run across nearly the entire width of both facades On the west and east facades the fenestration or window arrangement is in a 2 3 2 format i e there are two windows per floor on the side bays and three windows per floor in the central bay On the south facade the fenestration is in a 2 2 2 2 2 format i e five bays with two windows each 12 13 The beige brick clad north facade contains the recessed light court and is divided into two asymmetric sections both with simple window openings 14 5 The center bays on the west and south facades contain projecting windowsills on the fourth through fourteenth floors Above the 15th and 17th stories are stone cornices 12 13 The 16th story also used to have a cornice above it but the cornice was replaced around 1940 with a fascia of sheet metal 14 13 The 16th floor contains panels depicting torches and shields in the spaces between each bay while the 17th floor facade is unadorned 13 Roof edit nbsp Mansard roof detail seen from the ground at Union Square The W New York Union Square building s most prominent feature is its four story mansard roof which contains dormer windows escutcheons and five decorative keystones with garlands 15 16 158 On the 18th story the west and east facades contain fenestration in a 2 3 2 format and the south facade contains fenestration in a 2 3 3 3 2 format On the 19th story the west and east facades fenestration is in a 1 3 1 format and the south facade s fenestration is in a 1 3 3 3 1 format 13 17 There are carved scallops atop each of the window groupings on the 18th and 19th stories 13 On the 20th story the west and east facades contain a triple window in the center topped by a large triangular pediment while there are two standalone dormer windows on each side of the triple window all with smaller pediments The south side of the 20th story contains ten dormer windows all with pediments On the 21st story there are five round arched dormer windows on the west and east facades and eight round arched dormer windows on the south facade A horizontal band runs at the top of the 21st story facade below a cornice while vertical acroteria run along the roof s corners 13 17 The roof was influenced by both 19th century French architecture and the Second Empire style 15 16 22 Inspiration also came from the now demolished New York Tribune Building completed 1905 in Civic Center Manhattan which was topped by a three story mansard roof 15 In addition during the 1870s Germania had added a mansard roof to their otherwise unadorned Italianate headquarters in the Financial District 18 19 D Oench and Yost had decided to retain this feature in their design for the new building 9 20 The roof also incorporates several features of German architectural styles because of the company s and D Oench s German roots For example the designs of the dormer windows are different for each floor and there is elaborate decoration consistent with 16th century German architecture 9 On top of the roof is a horizontal lighted sign with white letters It originally contained the letters Germania Life The sign was changed to Guardian Life in 1917 upon the company s renaming 15 21 Most of the letters seem to have been reused when the sign was replaced while the letters E and M were replaced with a U and D 9 The sign was later replaced with a W Union Square sign 22 Interior edit The floors are made of multicolored marble pattern on the ground floor main entrance tile on the ground floor retail area terrazzo with mosaic borders on the second through fourth floors and cement on the fifth through 20th stories and in the basements The ground floor entrance area also contains white English veined marble on the walls capped by stucco decoration The restrooms are designed with hexagonal tiled floors tile wainscoting and stalls made with marble barriers 11 Inside the building are eight elevators five for passenger use and three for freight transport There are also two enclosed hallways on each floor and two enclosed staircases within the building 9 23 One particularly heavily ornamented interior space is the second story elevator lobby which contains a marble floor and English marble walls and ceilings 14 11 The elevator lobby is supported by round arches that divide it into an arcade with five domes Directly to the south accessed through three sets of openings 14 is a 66 by 35 foot 20 by 11 m double height space originally used for selling insurance before being converted into the W Hotel ballroom 24 The lower halves of the ballroom s walls contain marble wainscoting 14 Various ornaments cartouches and motifs are located throughout the ballroom including several instances of Guardian Life s initials 25 Guardian Life annex edit The Guardian Life Insurance Company Annex also known as 105 East 17th Street was completed in 1961 14 26 It is located just to the east of the 20 story hotel tower between Irving Place to the east and Park Avenue South to the west It contains two 4 story facades the southern facade abuts 17th Street to the south while the northern facade is adjacent to 18th Street to the north 27 The 17th Street facade is slightly wider measuring 159 feet 48 m long with nineteen architectural bays while the 18th Street facade is 124 feet 38 m long and contains twelve bays 28 On both sides the facades contain aluminum spandrels and thin projecting mullions between each architectural bay There is a rolldown metal gate and a revolving door on the western portion of the annex s 17th Street facade on the portion adjacent to the hotel The western portion of the annex s 18th Street facade contains a recessed brick portion with metal emergency doors 27 History editContext and planning edit Union Square was first laid out in the Commissioners Plan of 1811 expanded in 1832 and then made into a public park in 1839 29 30 By the first decade of the 20th century Union Square had grown into a major transportation hub with several elevated and surface railroad lines running nearby and the New York City Subway s 14th Street Union Square station opening in 1904 30 31 In August 1909 the Real Estate Record and Guide announced that D Oench amp Yost had been hired to build a new 20 story headquarters for the Germania Life Insurance Company at the northeast corner of Fourth Avenue now Park Avenue South and 17th Streets 32 33 The company founded in 1860 to serve New York City s German community 34 35 occupied several successive buildings before settling at a six story building at Cedar and Nassau Streets in Manhattan s Financial District 36 37 The Nassau Street building had suffered from structural problems the most serious being a sinking foundation 38 and it was sold to the Fourth National Bank of New York in March 1909 36 39 The company also could no longer rent out its vacant space at Nassau Street at a profit and its directors sought to build a new headquarters in advance of its 50th anniversary When Germania s directors decided to buy the Park Avenue site in mid 1909 at a cost of 350 000 equivalent to 11 869 000 in 2023 the directors wanted to ensure that their headquarters would not be overshadowed by its neighbors so they directed D Oench amp Yost to build a structure of at least 16 stories The four story mansard roof was added to the plans later 37 At the time of the Guardian Life Building s construction life insurance companies generally had their own buildings for their offices and branch locations According to architectural writer Kenneth Gibbs these buildings allowed each individual company to instill not only its name but also a favorable impression of its operations in the general public 19 40 This had been a trend since 1870 19 41 with the completion of the former Equitable Life Building in Manhattan s Financial District 19 42 Furthermore life insurance companies of the late 19th and early 20th centuries generally built massive buildings to fit their large clerical and records keeping staff 43 Use as office building edit nbsp After conversion into W New York Union Square the Everett Building can be seen at far left Germania Life moved to its new Union Square headquarters on April 24 1911 36 When the building was completed the following month the total cost of the structure was about 1 45 million equal to 46 million in 2023 37 Germania Life made additional profit by leasing out its unused space at its headquarters 37 In 1918 during World War I the company was renamed the Guardian Life Insurance Company to avoid associations with Germany which had become one of the Central Powers against which the United States was fighting 33 34 The company then changed the large Germania Life Insurance Company sign on the headquarters roof to read Guardian Life Insurance Company 15 21 Several other alterations took place over the years including the removal of the 16th story cornice in 1940 and replacement of the storefront windows in 1957 14 Further the entrance lobby from Park Avenue South was renovated in the 1960s and the 1980s 14 By the mid 20th century Guardian Life had grown significantly with 2 billion in assets by 1960 equal to 16 billion in 2023 44 Guardian had also occupied all of its vacant space in the building 26 and to alleviate the shortage of space considered moving uptown to Midtown Manhattan or further north to Westchester County 44 Sites in White Plains and New Rochelle in Westchester were considered but both proposals faced opposition from residents and Guardian Life employees leading the company to decide to expand its Union Square location 34 45 In 1959 the company announced that it would build an adjacent 27 000 square foot 2 500 m2 four story annex at 105 East 17th Street 46 The annex designed by Skidmore Owings amp Merrill 45 was completed in 1961 14 26 Unlike the original structure the annex occupied the full width of the block to 18th Street 45 During the 1980s Guardian Life expanded again to 225 233 Park Avenue South signing a lease for 44 000 square feet 4 100 m2 Guardian signed a lease for 23 000 square feet 2 100 m2 in a fourth building 215 Park Avenue South in the early 1990s 26 27 Conversion to hotel edit In 1998 Guardian Life moved its headquarters to the Financial District of Manhattan with plans to sell their old headquarters 27 47 The next year The Related Companies announced that the Guardian Life Insurance Company Building would be renovated into a 250 room hotel operated by Starwood 48 The hotel would be the first in the Union Square neighborhood 49 As part of the conversion Related planned to remove the red neon Guardian Life Insurance Company sign and replace it with W New York Union Square the name of the W Hotels resort that would occupy the building Workers removed the last two letters of the sign before the city announced that the removal had been illegal and saying that the Landmarks Preservation Commission had to approve the action thereby temporarily halting the process 50 The hotel opened in December 2000 with 270 rooms 51 and the W Union Square sign was added to the roof 22 The basement was used by several event spaces 52 including Rande Gerber s Underbar lounge and Todd English s Olives restaurant 53 The annex was not included in the hotel conversion and continued to be used as offices 27 The W New York Union Square was sold in 2006 for 285 million to Istithmar World a Dubai government owned investment group The sales of the W New York Union Square and the Four Seasons Resort Hualalai in Hawaii both at rates of over 1 million per room at the time were the highest ever selling rates for hotels that were not scheduled for renovation 53 In 2014 Gerber Group took over the Olives restaurant at the W New York Union Square and renovated it into a restaurant called the Irvington after Washington Irving the namesake of nearby Irving Place 52 Marriott Hotels amp Resorts purchased the W New York Union Square in October 2019 for 206 million with plans to renovate the building 22 54 The next year the LPC reviewed a proposal for a seasonal rooftop garden designed by Beyer Blinder Belle 55 Landmark designations editIn 1988 the Guardian Life Building was designated a New York City landmark 56 The building along with the Everett Building at the northwest corner of Park Avenue South and 17th Street were described by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission as forming an imposing terminus to Park Avenue South 2 The W New York Union Square building was added to the National Register of Historic Places NRHP on May 25 2001 1 The annex not part of the present hotel and not on the NRHP was also made a city landmark in 2007 3 See also editList of hotels in New York City List of New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan from 14th to 59th Streets National Register of Historic Places listings in Manhattan from 14th to 59th StreetsReferences editNotes edit The others include Former New York Life Insurance Company Building at 346 Broadway Home Life Insurance Company Building at 256 Broadway New York Life Building at 50 Madison Avenue Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower at 1 Madison Avenue Equitable Building at 120 Broadway 7 Citations edit a b National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 1 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 2008 p 1 a b c d e f g h i Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l National Park Service 2001 p 3 a b Architecture amp Building 1911 p 425 a b Presa Donald G October 24 2000 New York Life Insurance Company Building PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission p 4 An Architectural Guidebook to Brooklyn Gibbs Smith May 8 2024 p 5 ISBN 978 1 4236 1911 6 a b c d e f g Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 8 David A C December 24 1910 The New Architecture The First American Type of Real Value Represented by the Group of Commercial Buildings on Fourth Avenue PDF The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Vol 86 no 2232 p 1085 via columbia edu a b c Architecture amp Building 1911 p 428 a b c d e f g h i Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 10 a b c d e f g h i National Park Service 2001 p 4 a b c d e f g h i Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 12 a b c d e Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 6 a b Stern Robert A M Gilmartin Patrick Mellins Thomas 1987 New York 1930 Architecture and Urbanism Between the Two World Wars New York Rizzoli ISBN 978 0 8478 3096 1 OCLC 13860977 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 11 Gibbs 1984 p 28 a b c d Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 7 Gibbs 1984 pp 118 120 a b National Park Service 2001 p 11 a b c Marriott to make over W Union Square hotel Real Estate Weekly October 24 2019 Retrieved November 20 2019 Architecture amp Building 1911 p 434 Dunlap David W September 10 2000 From Front Office to Front Desk The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 19 2019 National Park Service 2001 p 6 a b c d Posting Guardian Life Grows Faithful to Union Square The New York Times March 15 1992 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 19 2019 a b c d e Landmarks Preservation Commission 2008 p 6 Landmarks Preservation Commission 2008 p 4 The Century Building PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission October 7 1986 p 2 Retrieved November 18 2019 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 2 Plans for Everett House Site Improvement PDF The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Vol 81 no 2101 June 20 1908 p 1178 via columbia edu Office Building for 4th Ave amp 17th St PDF The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Vol 84 no 2160 August 7 1909 p 63 via columbia edu a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 3 a b c Kesslinger J M May 8 1960 Guardian of a century 1860 1960 Guardian Life Insurance Co of America Retrieved November 19 2019 via HathiTrust Digital Library National Park Service 2001 p 8 a b c Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 4 a b c d National Park Service 2001 p 9 Miller Tom September 2 2011 The 1910 Germania Guardian Life Insurance Building 201 Park Avenue So Daytonian in Manhattan Bank Buys Fine Plot New York Tribune March 14 1909 p 7 Retrieved November 19 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Gibbs 1984 p 25 Gibbs 1984 p 24 Gibbs 1984 p 39 Moudry Roberta 2005 The Corporate and the Civic Metropolitan Life s Home Office Building In Moudry Roberta ed The American Skyscraper Cultural Histories Cambridge University Press p 122 ISBN 978 0 52162 421 3 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 2008 p 2 a b c Landmarks Preservation Commission 2008 p 3 New Wing Slated By Guardian Life 3 Story Addition to Home Building Will Rise on 17th St at 4th Ave The New York Times April 16 1959 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 21 2019 Ravo Nick August 20 1998 Metro Budiness Guardian Life Moves Farther Downtown The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 19 2019 Stamler Bernard February 14 1999 New Yorkers amp Co Full Circle at Union Square The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 19 2019 Garbarine Rachelle December 10 1999 Residential Real Estate 14th St Revival Is Picking Up Pace With Union Square Project The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 21 2019 Kilgannon Corey January 23 2000 Neighborhood Report Union Square Life of a Landmarked Sign Is Cut Short by 2 Letters The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 19 2019 Louie Elaine December 7 2000 Currents Hotels On Union Square a Sweeping Staircase With a Ballroom to Match The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 19 2019 a b Heyman Marshall March 23 2015 Irvington Replaces Todd English s Olives NY WSJ Retrieved November 21 2019 a b Gregor Alison October 29 2006 Luxury Hotels Breaking a Million Dollar Barrier The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 21 2019 Wallis Gregg October 17 2019 Marriott Buys W New York Union Square to Create Next Generation Flagship Hotel Business Retrieved November 20 2019 Morris Sebastian September 13 2020 Beyer Blinder Belle Designs Seasonal Rooftop Venue at W New York in Union Square New York YIMBY Retrieved July 21 2022 New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission Dolkart Andrew S Postal Matthew A 2009 Postal Matthew A ed Guide to New York City Landmarks 4th ed New York John Wiley amp Sons p 76 ISBN 978 0 470 28963 1 Sources edit Comparative Types in Office and Loft Buildings Architecture amp Building Vol 43 no 10 July 1911 via HathiTrust Germania Life Insurance Company Building PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission September 6 1988 Guardian Life Insurance Company of America Annex PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission November 18 2008 Gibbs Kenneth 1984 Business architectural imagery in America 1870 1930 Ann Arbor Mich UMI Research Press ISBN 978 0 8357 1575 1 OCLC 10754074 Historic Structures Report Germania Life Insurance Company Building PDF National Register of Historic Places National Park Service April 18 2001 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to W New York Union Square Hotel W New York Union Square Marriott website Emporis building ID 115362 Emporis Archived from the original on May 13 2016 Portals nbsp Architecture nbsp Hotels nbsp NRHP nbsp New York City Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title W New York Union Square amp oldid 1223286455 Guardian Life annex, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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