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The Knickerbocker Hotel

The Knickerbocker Hotel is a hotel at Times Square, on the southeastern corner of Broadway and 42nd Street, in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. Built by John Jacob Astor IV, the hostelry was designed in 1901 and opened in 1906. Its location near the Theater District around Times Square was intended to attract not only residential guests but also theater visitors.

The Knickerbocker Hotel
Seen from across Broadway and 42nd Street, 2021
Former namesKnickerbocker Building, Newsweek Building, 6 Times Square
General information
TypeHotel
Architectural styleBeaux Arts
Location142 West 42nd Street
Manhattan, New York 10036
Coordinates40°45′19″N 73°59′12″W / 40.75528°N 73.98667°W / 40.75528; -73.98667
Construction started1901
Topped-outFebruary 1904
OpenedOctober 23, 1906
Renovated1920, 1980, 1999–2003, 2013–2015
OwnerFelCor Lodging Trust
Height195 feet (59 m)
Technical details
MaterialBrick, limestone, terracotta
Floor count15
Floor areaapproximately 300,000 square feet (28,000 m2)
Grounds19,800 square feet (1,840 m2)
Design and construction
Architect(s)Marvin & Davis (exterior)
Bruce Price (consultant)
Trowbridge & Livingston (original interior)
DeveloperInternational Realty and Construction Company
John Jacob Astor IV
Main contractorInternational Realty and Construction Company
Renovating team
Architect(s)Gabellini Sheppard Associates
Peter Poon Architects
Knickerbocker Hotel
Coordinates40°45′19″N 73°59′12″W / 40.75528°N 73.98667°W / 40.75528; -73.98667
Built1901–1906
ArchitectTrowbridge & Livingston; Marvin & Davis; Bruce Price
Architectural styleBeaux Arts
NRHP reference No.80002697
NYCL No.1556
Significant dates
Added to NRHPApril 11, 1980[2]
Designated NYCLOctober 18, 1988[1]

The Knickerbocker Hotel is largely designed in the Beaux-Arts style by Marvin & Davis, with Bruce Price as consultant. Its primary frontages are on Broadway and 42nd Street. These facades are constructed of red brick with terracotta details and a prominent mansard roof. The Knickerbocker Hotel also incorporates an annex on 41st Street, built in 1894 as part of the St. Cloud Hotel, which formerly occupied the site. The 41st Street facade contains a Romanesque Revival design by Philip C. Brown. Inside, the hotel contains 300 rooms, a restaurant, a coffee shop, and a roof bar. The original interior design was devised in 1905 by Trowbridge & Livingston. There are scattered remnants of the original interior design, including an entrance that formerly led from the New York City Subway's Times Square station to the hotel's basement.

The original hotel, which served as the home of Enrico Caruso and George M. Cohan, shuttered in 1920 following a decrease in business. The building was then converted to offices, becoming known as the Knickerbocker Building. It was the home of Newsweek magazine from 1940 to 1959 during which it was called the Newsweek Building. After major renovations in 1980, it became known as 1466 Broadway and was used as garment showrooms and offices. Following another renovation in 2001, it was known as 6 Times Square. The Knickerbocker was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 and was designated a New York City Landmark in 1988. It was converted back to a hotel from 2013 to 2015 under its original name.

Site edit

The Knickerbocker Hotel is on the southeastern corner of Broadway and 42nd Street, at the south end of Times Square, in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City.[1][3][4] It contains the alternate addresses 1462–1470 Broadway,[1][4][5] 6 Times Square,[5] and 142 West 42nd Street,[6] with a small annex extending south to 143 West 41st Street.[1][4] The building occupies a land lot covering 19,800 square feet (1,840 m2),[3] with frontages of about 135 feet (41 m) on Broadway to the west and about 185 feet (56 m) on 42nd Street to the north.[7][8][9] The frontage on 41st Street is only 17 feet (5.2 m) wide.[9]

The Knickerbocker Hotel wraps around 8 Times Square at the corner of Broadway and 41st Street. The site is adjacent to 5 Times Square and Times Square Tower to the west, One Times Square to the northwest, 4 Times Square to the north, the Bank of America Tower to the northeast, and the Bush Tower to the east.[3] An entrance to the New York City Subway's Times Square–42nd Street station, served by the 1, ​2, ​3​, 7, <7>​​, N, ​Q, ​R, ​W, and S trains, is immediately outside the hotel;[10] a direct entrance originally led from the basement (see The Knickerbocker Hotel § Basements).[11]

The site was previously occupied by the Hotel St. Cloud,[12][13] which opened in 1868 at Broadway and 42nd Street.[13] At the time, it was relatively far from the developed portions of Manhattan.[14][15] Grand Central Depot, predecessor of Grand Central Terminal, was developed nearby in 1871, resulting in the growth of the surrounding neighborhood.[13][14] In 1892, John Jacob Astor IV acquired the lease of the Hotel St. Cloud for $850,000.[i][16] With transit improvements in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, New York City's theater district relocated from further south in Manhattan to modern-day Times Square. The construction of theaters led to the development of other entertainment facilities such as hotels, dance halls, and restaurants.[14][15] Furthermore, the Knickerbocker site was adjacent to the city's first subway line, providing access from the rest of the city.[9]

Architecture edit

The Knickerbocker Hotel, completed in 1906, was designed by Marvin & Davis with consulting architect Bruce Price.[1][4][17] The structure was largely designed in the Beaux-Arts style. The annex on 143 West 41st Street, which was built in 1894 as an addition to the Hotel St. Cloud, contains a Romanesque Revival facade designed by Philip C. Brown.[1][4] The 41st Street annex was intentionally incorporated into the current hotel building.[18] The interiors were designed by Trowbridge & Livingston.[1][4][17] The hotel measures 195 feet (59 m) tall.[19]

Facade edit

Broadway and 42nd Street edit

 
The 42nd Street (left) and Broadway (right) facades of the Knickerbocker Hotel, seen in 2008. In the background can be seen 1095 Avenue of the Americas and the Bush Tower.

The Knickerbocker Hotel's Broadway and 42nd Street facades are articulated into three horizontal sections: a two-story base, a ten-story shaft, and a three-story mansard roof. The ground and second stories serve as a commercial base and have seen numerous design changes since 1920.[20] The vertical limestone piers are the only portions of the original design that remain at the base. Originally, a ground-level portico projected from the center seven bays of the 42nd Street facade, with seven round arches topped by a balustrade.[21] This portico was removed by 1911.[22] There was a similar portico at the center five bays on Broadway, which was flush with the rest of the facade. The second floor contained round-arched windows.[21] The Broadway facade originally contained a secondary entrance to the cafe.[9]

On the third through twelfth floors, the building is clad in red brick with decorative elements made of Indiana Limestone and terracotta.[20] Some of the limestone and terracotta ornamentation has been replaced with similar-looking concrete.[11] Along 42nd Street, the outermost four bays are grouped into slightly projecting "corner pavilions", flanking the center seven bays. The two center bays on each corner pavilion are paired. The Broadway facade is nine bays wide and lacks projecting corner pavilions. Each window is flanked by stone quoins. The fourth, sixth, seventh, and eleventh-story windows contain either decorative iron balcony rails or stone balustrades. The pediments atop windows on each story are variously made of segmental arches, sculptured decorations, or swans' necks.[20]

A small cornice runs above the fourth story, while more substantial cornices run above the ninth and eleventh stories.[21] At Broadway, the center bay contains an arched pediment above the fourth-story window that interrupts the cornice above it.[23] The ninth story cornice is supported by decorative brackets while the eleventh story cornice is supported by modillions.[21] All three cornices have lost some of their original decorative elements.[24]

The thirteenth through fifteenth stories are part of the mansard roof, which is clad in green copper. There are also urns at the corners of the roof.[20] Originally, the dormer windows from the mansard roof contained elaborate pediments, although these were likely removed by 1920. The thirteenth floor windows' pediments were either triangular or segmentally arched. The fourteenth floor windows' pediments were round-arched.[21] A penthouse on the fifteenth floor was added between 1908 and 1910 to designs by C. H. Cullen.[22]

41st Street edit

 
41st Street facade

The 41st Street facade of the Knickerbocker Hotel is eight stories tall and is designed in the Romanesque Revival style, with some ornament in the Beaux-Arts style. The facade is made of buff brick and terracotta.[25] It was intended as a service entrance to the main Knickerbocker Hotel.[12]

The annex previously contained a second story with three bays of windows, above which runs a classical-style cornice.[25] When the Knickerbocker was re-converted back into a hotel in the 2010s, the double-height first story was altered for a service entrance that takes up the entire width of the 41st Street facade.[26] The third floor was skipped. The fourth and fifth stories are topped by an arch that spans the entire width of the annex. The sixth through eighth stories are flanked by pilasters, with two bays each on the sixth and seventh stories and three bays on the eighth stories. The attic, on the ninth story, was constructed in 1906 and contains two dormer windows with triangular copper pediments.[25]

Features edit

The modern Knickerbocker Hotel contains 330 guestrooms.[5][27][28] Twenty-seven of the rooms are advertised as junior suites while four are labeled as signature suites.[29] The modern Knickerbocker Hotel also contains a restaurant, a coffee shop, and a roof bar overlooking Times Square.[28][30] The hotel's total interior space is about 300,000 square feet (28,000 m2).[5]

The first Hotel Knickerbocker originally had 556 guestrooms, 400 of which contained baths.[31][32] The Knickerbocker was described in Architects and Builders Magazine as having "magnificent equipment and excellent service".[33] The Knickerbocker's various artworks were a prominent part of the original interior design,[34][35][36] having been installed as a way to enhance the interior character at a relatively low cost.[34] A critic for the Architectural Record praised the interior design, saying: "There are few hotels in the country in the appearance of which such uniform good taste has been displayed", although the same critic took issue with the interior layout.[37][38] Connecting the various floors were four passenger elevators and four freight and service elevators.[39] The original hotel even had five hundred clocks, which were made in Paris and maintained by an employee who was specifically tasked with winding them each day.[33][40]

Little evidence remains of the original design, particularly after the first version of the hotel had been converted into an office building in 1920.[25] On the upper stories, the only remnants of the original design were radiators and terrazzo floors.[41]

Basements edit

 
Original floor plans for the basement and subbasement
 
The closed doorway to the original hotel, part of the subway station's fare-control area

Below the lobby is a basement and subbasement, which retain their wall paneling, herringbone-patterned floors, and hexagonal white tile decorations.[11] The basement had a grillroom, bar, broker's office, barber and manicure parlors, and the kitchen.[42] The grillroom contained an English design with plain oak walls and a Gothic oak ceiling.[9][43] Displayed in the basement bar was a Frederic Remington painting entitled "The United States Cavalry Charge".[38][43][44] The kitchen had refrigerating plants, heating plants, and glass and silver chests, accessed by four dumbwaiters from the kitchen.[31]

The subbasement contained the mechanical plant with boilers, coal storage bins, electrical generators, water filters, an ice-making plant, and an engine room. The wine vault, cigar vault, baggage room, and laundry facility were also in the subbasement.[45]

At the time of the hotel's opening in 1906, the hotel's management advertised two direct subway entrances from the Times Square station,[11][32] with one entrance intended for ladies.[9] One doorway still exists on the platform adjacent to the 42nd Street Shuttle's track 1, topped by a lintel containing the carved word "Knickerbocker".[11][46] Before the station opened as part of the city's first subway line in 1904,[47] John Jacob Astor IV had given permission for the subway to be constructed through part of his property only if the station included a hotel entrance.[48] The hotel entrance was rearranged when the platform was lengthened in 1909.[49] While the entrance was closed after the original iteration of the hotel was shuttered, the passageway to the entrance has retained much of its ornamentation, such as painted roundels.[50] In 2019, as part of the remodeling of the modern shuttle station, the damaged Knickerbocker marble lintel was to be replaced with a replica.[51][52] The modern doorway leads to a subway manhole with mechanical equipment rather than to the Knickerbocker's basement.[53]

Ground and second stories edit

 
Original floor plan for the main and banquet floors (the present first and second floors)

The original design had a lobby facing 42nd Street, with marble columns, bronze pendant lanterns, and red-and-gold foyer decorations.[32][42][54] The lobby had a statue of Father Knickerbocker,[32][42] a political-cartoon personification of New York City.[55] Leading off the lobby were safe deposit boxes, and a bookstand and ticket office.[32][42][56] The cafe west of the lobby had white and gold decorations.[32][42][57] For the attached bar southwest of the lobby, artist Maxfield Parrish was commissioned to paint "Old King Cole and His Fiddlers Three", a mural of Old King Cole[44][56][58] measuring 30 feet (9.1 m) wide.[59] An "L"-shaped restaurant, with a flower room. ran east and south of the lobby.[57] It had a Caen stone cladding; a 22-foot-high (6.7 m) beamed ceiling modeled after the Palace of Fontainebleau; marble statues and tapestries on the walls; and two bronze-and-marble electric fountains by Frederick MacMonnies.[9][37][57] Hung in the Flower Room was the mural "Masque of Flowers".[60][b]

The second floor was devoted to dining rooms in the original design.[63] At the center of the second floor was a double-height ballroom measuring 50 by 105 feet (15 by 32 m).[64] The ballroom had hardwood floors; copies of old portraits on the walls; and white, blue, and silver decorations. The adjoining foyer had satin velvet decoration with gold-painted pillars and a gold-leaf ornamented ceiling.[63] There was also a nurse's hall and eight private dining rooms on that story, including a "gold room" with gold cutlery for 48 guests.[31]

During the 1920 alterations, the lobby spaces were removed, but a pink marble-clad elevator lobby was added on the ground floor.[65] The lowest two stories were also converted to a retail condominium.[5] Remnants from the original design include a vaulted ceiling above the elevator lobby, decorated with rosettes, but hidden above a dropped ceiling.[11] When the hotel reopened in 2015, Charlie Palmer was hired to operate Jake's @ The Knick, a "grab-and-go" takeout eatery on the ground level.[66] The rebuilt ground floor has a 16-foot-tall (4.9 m) vaulted ceiling with decorative tiles similar to those installed in the subway.[48]

Upper stories edit

Original floor plans for the upper floors
 
Third floor (labeled as first[c])
 
Fourth through twelfth floors (labeled as second through tenth[c])
 
Fifteenth floor (labeled as thirteenth[c])

The third through fifteenth stories were originally devoted to residences and suites.[c][67] The original third story contained suites, a ballroom, and a musician's gallery. The fourth through twelfth stories were designed nearly identically, while the thirteenth and fourteenth stories were slightly different in arrangement. The fifteenth story also contained a large women's dormitory and sitting room, a valet's room, a linen room, a bundle laundry room, a fan ventilator, and a storage and upholstery department.[67] As floor number 13 is skipped, the thirteenth story is actually labeled as floor 14.[68]

During much of the 20th century, these stories were used as office space, but by 2015 these stories were converted back to hotel suites.[5] The fourth floor of the reconverted hotel contains Charlie Palmer at the Knick, a 100-seat full-service restaurant.[66] The sixteenth floor contains a 7,500-square-foot (700 m2) bar called St. Cloud, also operated by Palmer, with a rooftop terrace measuring 4,000 square feet (370 m2).[27][69] The bar, named after the former hotel on the same site,[70] is used for viewings of the Times Square Ball drop, which takes place at the neighboring One Times Square during New Year's Eve. Due to the proximity of the ball, which is only about 150 feet (46 m) from the Knickerbocker's rooftop, tickets to the New Year's Eve ball drop viewings can cost tens of thousands of dollars per person.[48][71][72]

History edit

Original hotel edit

Construction edit

In 1901, the New York City Department of Buildings received plans for three hotels, one theater, and fourteen apartment buildings on Times Square.[14] Among those plans was a 14-story hotel designed by Bruce Price and Martin & Davis, to be built on the site of the St. Cloud Hotel at Broadway and 42nd Street.[7] The new hotel, known as the Knickerbocker, was intended as a rival to the Hotel Astor, also owned by the Astor family.[15][34] The Knickerbocker was to be a Renaissance Revival hotel with a similar arrangement to other hotels of the time. In addition to service facilities across two basement levels and dining and banquet facilities on the first and second floors, the Hotel Knickerbocker was planned with 600 suites and 300 baths.[73] At the time, the section of Broadway between 34th and 42nd Streets was quickly being developed with theaters and hotels.[74] Consequently, the Hotel Knickerbocker's construction spurred the development of other hostelries nearby.[75]

John Jacob Astor IV leased the hotel to the International Realty and Construction Company (IRCC) of Philadelphia, organized by J.E. and A.L. Pennock.[7][15] Astor stipulated that the hotel had to be completed for at least $2 million.[15][64] The IRCC received the contract for the hotel's construction in December 1901,[76] and Astor loaned $1.65 million to the IRCC in March 1902.[ii][77] Under the IRCC, the project began in 1901[17] or 1902.[61] Under the contract between Astor and the IRCC, Astor reserved the right to name the hotel operator when it was complete.[78] James B. Regan, former manager of the adjacent Pabst Hotel, leased the site from the IRCC for seventeen years in July 1902.[79] Regan had formed the Knickerbocker Hotel Company (KHC), serving as the KHC's managing director with Jesse Lewisohn and Godfrey Hyams as co-directors.[78] Astor contracted Regan to be the hotel's manager when it was finished, but Regan resigned from the KHC over disputes with the other directors.[61][78]

In February 1904, just as the facade and steel skeleton was completed, construction was halted after the IRCC defaulted on its payments.[17][78] Contractually, the IRCC was given a year to repay its outstanding obligations should it choose to resume construction. In the meantime, Astor commissioned new plans for the interior design.[78] During this time, the only revenue from the Hotel Knickerbocker was coming from the billboards around it.[13] At the time, the public did not know why work had stopped.[80] The IRCC never returned to the project and, in May 1905, Astor hired Trowbridge & Livingston to complete the interiors, with work resuming the following month.[17][64][81] Regan also agreed to lease the hotel for twenty years at $300,000 per year.[61] The new plans cost $1 million more than the original proposal and included an additional story.[17][64] Part of the third story was demolished to make way for the double-story ballroom.[43][64] The 42nd Street facade was also modified to include a portico.[61]

Operation edit

 
Seen from Seventh Avenue circa 1909

The Knickerbocker opened to private guests on October 23, 1906, and to the general public the following day.[31][82] At the time of the hotel's opening, a room for one person averaged about $3.25 per day,[iii] while suites cost about $15–20 per day.[iv][31] The hotel quickly became part of the city's social scene.[83] One week after the hotel's opening, it was receiving an influx of guests from the subway.[84] By early 1907, Architectural Record said the hotel "has proved to be a huge popular success".[36] Architectural historian Robert A. M. Stern wrote the Hotel Knickerbocker, along with the nearby Astor and Rector hotels, "created something of an architectural ensemble clustered around Times Square".[34]

The Armenonville restaurant, a 600-seat cafe on the ground floor, opened in June 1908.[85] The 42nd Street frontage was slightly rebuilt two years later when 42nd Street was widened,[86] and the Armenonville restaurant was renovated.[87] Also in 1911, the Knickerbocker expanded into the neighboring Ryan Hotel, adding about one hundred more suites.[38] After John Jacob Astor IV died on the Titanic in 1912, his son Vincent Astor inherited the hotel, which continued to run successfully under James B. Regan.[13]

The Hotel Knickerbocker's residents included Metropolitan Opera singer Enrico Caruso, who took up a suite on half a story[35] because of the hotel's proximity to the Metropolitan Opera House.[40] When the end of World War I was falsely announced on November 8, 1918, Caruso led the crowd outside his suite in singing "The Star-Spangled Banner";[88] he repeated the performance on Armistice Day three days later, when the war actually ended.[89] The actor and composer George M. Cohan also lived there.[38][90] Other guests and residents included opera singer Geraldine Farrar, baritone Antonio Scotti, film director and producer D. W. Griffith, novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald, as well as numerous politicians and diplomats.[55][91] The Tammany Hall political organization often held its meetings at the Hotel Knickerbocker, and media magnate William Randolph Hearst launched his failed campaign for the 1909 New York City mayoral election at the Knickerbocker.[55]

The popular hotel bar gained the nickname "The 42nd Street Country Club".[38] According to a legend, the martini was invented at the Knickerbocker in 1912 by Martini di Arma di Taggia, a hotel bartender who mixed dry vermouth and gin for John D. Rockefeller. The legend was subsequently debunked as having originated from a 1972 book by John Doxat.[48] The Hotel Knickerbocker was also rumored to be where the velvet rope line was invented.[55] During dinnertime, staff used a red velvet rope to create a queue, then handed out plates to guests waiting outside.[48][55] During Easter celebrations, the hotel's chef put live chicks in sugar eggs, and guests would dine while the chicks hatched onto the table.[48]

The Hotel Knickerbocker was also the site of some high-profile incidents during its history.[50] For instance, a chimpanzee dressed in human clothing walked into the lobby in 1918, prompting a panic.[92][93] The next year, two men stole gems from a guest and attempted to escape through the basement, squirting tabasco sauce into the eyes of the responding patrolmen, who arrested the burglars anyway.[94][95] There were also several murders at the Knickerbocker, including in 1912, when the hotel's in-house violinist Albert de Brahms killed his wife and tried to seal her body in plaster.[48][55]

Office use edit

 
Broadway facade detail

The enactment of Prohibition in 1919 resulted in a marked decline in business at the Knickerbocker's restaurants and bars.[34][40] By late 1919, Regan had given over operation of the hotel to his son, James E. Regan Jr., though the senior Regan retained the lease.[91] In May 1920, the junior Regan announced the hotel would be closed at the end of the month and converted to an office building. Although the senior Regan's lease had more than fifteen years left to run, he surrendered it to Vincent Astor.[91][96] At the time, the residents included James Regan Jr. and his wife Alice Joyce, as well as Caruso and his family.[91] Immediately upon the announcement of the hotel's closure, several commercial tenants made bids for space in the Hotel Knickerbocker, and some applicants sought the entire building. At the time, the surrounding section of Broadway was quickly being developed for commercial purposes.[97] The Hotel Knickerbocker closed on May 28, 1920.[98][99]

1920s to 1960s edit

Vincent Astor, Nicholas Biddle, and S. B. Thorn formed the Knickerbocker Holding Company on June 14, 1920, two weeks after the hotel's closure.[38][100] The Bank for Savings loaned the company $3 million in October 1920 for the conversion of the old Hotel Knickerbocker into an office building. Astor hired architect Charles A. Platt to design the office conversion.[101][102] The hotel interiors were completely gutted and the ground level was converted to fourteen storefronts.[103] The rest of the building was rebuilt as an office building, with rents from $4 to $5 per square foot ($43 to $54/m2).[v][40] The walls of the old suites were moved or removed.[103] The grill room in the basement was leased in December 1920 and continued to operate after the hotel's closure.[104] The Old King Cole painting was loaned to the Racquet and Tennis Club on Park Avenue by 1925[105] before being installed permanently at the St. Regis Hotel in 1935.[40]

By early 1921, the old Hotel Knickerbocker had become known as the Knickerbocker Building.[103] While the storefront at the corner of Broadway and 42nd Street was quickly leased to a location of the National Drug Stores Corporation,[106] the rest of the first floor was not leased until 1924, when it became a clothing store.[107][108] The New York Society of Model Engineers' main room in the Knickerbocker Building housed a model train exhibition each year during the early 1930s.[109] Other tenants included advertising firms, attorneys, and insurance companies.[110] Over the years, the Knickerbocker Building's former function as a hotel was forgotten by the public; the name "Knickerbocker Hotel" even became associated with another subsequently shuttered hotel on 45th Street.[111]

 
The hotel at night in 2015

When the Knickerbocker Building became the headquarters of Newsweek magazine in October 1940, it was renamed the Newsweek Building.[112][113] Also in the 1940s, an employment agency and art office.[114] The Ryan Hotel structure at 140 West 42nd Street, which had been part of the original Knickerbocker Hotel but not the subsequent office building, was sold in 1944 to an investor who intended to modify that structure heavily.[115][116] Vincent Astor continued to own the Newsweek Building until 1957, until it was sold to a client of Bernard H. Kayden. The underlying land was simultaneously sold to Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance, a subsidiary of Harry Helmsley's Helmsley-Spear company and Irving S. Wolper, for $2.75 million.[117][118] In early 1959, Newsweek signed a lease for space on 444 Madison Avenue, with plans to move out of the Knickerbocker during the beginning of that May.[119][120]

1970s to 2000s edit

By the mid-1970s, the building was known as 150–152 West 42nd Street and 1462–1470 Broadway. Helmsley still operated the building, which contained offices, commercial shops, and a pornographic bookstore. The land was held by the Inch Corporation, a shell company representing the true owner, the British royal family.[121] Helmsley announced that he would drop his ownership of the Knickerbocker Building in 1975, raising concerns that the building would be demolished. The other option was to renovate the space for $2 million, which could then be rented for $4.50 per square foot ($48.4/m2).[122] Instead, the building deed was sold for a nominal sum of $1, despite the building being valued at $4.5 million.[123]

In 1979, with the office market in a slump, Helmsley, David Baldwin, and Jack Vickers were planning to convert the office building to residential lofts. As part of the project, Helmsley, Baldwin, and Vickers were to relocate the building's main entrance from 152 West 42nd Street to 1466 Broadway, constructing a new lobby on Broadway.[111] Libby, Ross & Whitehouse designed the new lobby and converted the interior to 113 units.[19][124] Stores and commercial space would have been on the lowest four stories while the other stories would have been residential lofts.[124][125] The commercial market quickly recovered and the space was instead rented as showrooms and studios for companies in the Garment District.[19][40] The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on April 11, 1980,[2] and the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the Knickerbocker Building as a landmark on October 18, 1988.[1][126][127]

SL Green bought 1466 Broadway, along with several other Manhattan buildings owned by the Helmsley estate, in 1998 for $165 million.[128][129] SL Green began renovating the building shortly afterward, in March 1999. At the time, the building contained a three-story location of The Gap at ground level;[130] The Gap's billboards were prominently displayed on the facade.[131] The Gap expanded its ground floor space from 15,000 to 35,000 square feet (1,400 to 3,300 m2) during this time, reopening in mid-2001.[68] SL Green sought to attract small office tenants to the top seven floors,[68] so the company decided in late 2001 to rebrand the building as 6 Times Square, which it believed was a more prominent address.[132] The facade was restored and the mansard roof was coated with greenish copper. Due to the complexities of the renovation, its costs increased to three times the original budget, and the renovation was completed in March 2003, three and a half years later than originally scheduled.[11]

Reuse as hotel edit

 
The pop up Toys "R" Us store at the building's base seen in 2018

In 2004, SL Green sold 6 Times Square to Sitt Asset Management for $160 million.[133][134] Sitt sold the building in 2006 to Istithmar Hotels, an investment group from the royal family of Dubai, for $300 million.[135][136][137] Istithmar announced plans to convert the building back into a five-star hotel with between 250 and 300 rooms.[135][136][138] However, by late 2009, Istithmar was unable to fulfill its debt obligation.[139] Istithmar surrendered the property to its lender, Danske Bank, in March 2010.[140][141][142] Danske subsequently resold the building to a joint venture of Highgate Holdings, Ashkenazy Acquisitions, and Stanley Chera.[143][144]

FelCor Lodging Trust, a Texas real estate investment trust, acquired a 95 percent stake in the third through sixteenth floors for $109 million.[145][146] The purchase took place in late 2011,[145] although the acquisition was not announced until February 2012.[147][148] The retail condominium on the first two floors was still owned by Ashkenazy.[5] FelCor renovated the property for an additional $115 million, completely gutting it, with the exception of the facade.[149] The hotel's new interior was designed by architecture and interior design firm Gabellini Sheppard Associates, with Peter Poon Architects as the architect of record.[150] The new design was intended to both evoke the original hotel and represent Times Square's 21st-century revival.[151] In a gesture to the hotel's history, the four signature suites were named the Caruso, Cohan, Martini, and Parrish suites, after prominent personalities of the old hotel.[55][152]

The hotel reopened on February 12, 2015, as the Knickerbocker Hotel.[153][154] The rooftop bar, the St. Cloud, opened in June 2015.[155] The old subway entrance in the basement remained shuttered,[50] and several of the original hotel's works of art, such as Old King Cole, were not restored in the renovated Knickerbocker Hotel.[55] The ground level of the Knickerbocker Hotel building continued to house commercial uses, such as one of the last-ever locations of Toys "R" Us, which operated as a pop-up location in 2017 and 2018.[156][157]

Critical reception edit

After the Knickerbocker Hotel reopened in 2015, it received mixed reviews. A critic for British newspaper The Daily Telegraph gave the Knickerbocker a 7/10 rating, saying that the hotel "adds a pinch of sophistication to Times Square. Yet, with its sleek, low-slung furnishings and neutral palette, the interiors are the antithesis of Beaux Arts, and Bellhops in baggy knickerbockers and chunky Doc Martens set the tone the moment you arrive."[158] A reviewer for Oyster.com also contrasted the hotel's Renaissance-style exterior and modern interior, saying: "Some guests find this minimalist style cold and uninviting, especially paired with the lack of seating in the lobby."[159] Conversely, a reviewer for Fodor's said the hotel provided a "serene counterpoint to the mass of people, lights, and excitement that converge at the crossroads of Broadway and 42nd Street".[160] A critic for Business Insider wrote in 2020: "It's comparable in price to other big brand hotels but offers a sleeker, more boutique vibe, with upscale rooms and five-star service."[161] Visitors also praised the hotel's central location, large rooms, and rooftop bar, but criticized the fact that it lacked a pool and a spa.[159][162]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ 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.
  2. ^ The artist is variously cited as Charles Finn[43][61] or James Wall Finn.[9][62]
  3. ^ a b c d These were characterized in Architects' and Builders' Magazine 1906, pp. 92–93, as being the first through thirteenth suite floors. The floor numbering excluded the two stories at the base, which contained no suites.[67]
  4. ^ a b c 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved May 28, 2023.

Inflation figures

  1. ^ Equivalent to $25 million in 2022[a]
  2. ^ Equivalent to $43 million in 2022[a]
  3. ^ Equivalent to $106 in 2022[d]
  4. ^ Equivalent to between $130 and $163 in 2022[d]
  5. ^ Equivalent to between $58 and $73 per square foot ($620 and $790/m2) in 2022[d]

Citations edit

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Sources edit

  • Hutchins, William (November 1902). "The New York Hotels, Part II, The Modern Hotel" (PDF). Architectural Record. Vol. 16. pp. 630–633.
  • Knickerbocker Hotel (PDF) (Report). New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. October 18, 1988.
  • Knickerbocker Hotel (PDF) (Report). National Register of Historic Places, National Park Service. April 11, 1980.
  • "The Knickerbocker Hotel; A Novelty in Decoration" (PDF). Architectural Record. Vol. 21, no. 1. January 1907. pp. 1–17.
  • Wyndham-Gittens, Herbert (December 1906). "The Hotel Knickerbocker, Trowbridge & Livingston, Architects". Architects' and Builders' Magazine. Vol. 39. pp. 89–102.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Original floor plans (1902)

knickerbocker, hotel, confused, with, hollywood, knickerbocker, hotel, knickerbocker, hotel, milwaukee, wisconsin, hotel, times, square, southeastern, corner, broadway, 42nd, street, midtown, manhattan, neighborhood, york, city, built, john, jacob, astor, host. Not to be confused with Hollywood Knickerbocker Hotel or Knickerbocker Hotel Milwaukee Wisconsin The Knickerbocker Hotel is a hotel at Times Square on the southeastern corner of Broadway and 42nd Street in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City Built by John Jacob Astor IV the hostelry was designed in 1901 and opened in 1906 Its location near the Theater District around Times Square was intended to attract not only residential guests but also theater visitors The Knickerbocker HotelSeen from across Broadway and 42nd Street 2021Former namesKnickerbocker Building Newsweek Building 6 Times SquareGeneral informationTypeHotelArchitectural styleBeaux ArtsLocation142 West 42nd StreetManhattan New York 10036Coordinates40 45 19 N 73 59 12 W 40 75528 N 73 98667 W 40 75528 73 98667Construction started1901Topped outFebruary 1904OpenedOctober 23 1906Renovated1920 1980 1999 2003 2013 2015OwnerFelCor Lodging TrustHeight195 feet 59 m Technical detailsMaterialBrick limestone terracottaFloor count15Floor areaapproximately 300 000 square feet 28 000 m2 Grounds19 800 square feet 1 840 m2 Design and constructionArchitect s Marvin amp Davis exterior Bruce Price consultant Trowbridge amp Livingston original interior DeveloperInternational Realty and Construction CompanyJohn Jacob Astor IVMain contractorInternational Realty and Construction CompanyRenovating teamArchitect s Gabellini Sheppard AssociatesPeter Poon ArchitectsKnickerbocker HotelU S National Register of Historic PlacesNew York City Landmark No 1556Coordinates40 45 19 N 73 59 12 W 40 75528 N 73 98667 W 40 75528 73 98667Built1901 1906ArchitectTrowbridge amp Livingston Marvin amp Davis Bruce PriceArchitectural styleBeaux ArtsNRHP reference No 80002697NYCL No 1556Significant datesAdded to NRHPApril 11 1980 2 Designated NYCLOctober 18 1988 1 The Knickerbocker Hotel is largely designed in the Beaux Arts style by Marvin amp Davis with Bruce Price as consultant Its primary frontages are on Broadway and 42nd Street These facades are constructed of red brick with terracotta details and a prominent mansard roof The Knickerbocker Hotel also incorporates an annex on 41st Street built in 1894 as part of the St Cloud Hotel which formerly occupied the site The 41st Street facade contains a Romanesque Revival design by Philip C Brown Inside the hotel contains 300 rooms a restaurant a coffee shop and a roof bar The original interior design was devised in 1905 by Trowbridge amp Livingston There are scattered remnants of the original interior design including an entrance that formerly led from the New York City Subway s Times Square station to the hotel s basement The original hotel which served as the home of Enrico Caruso and George M Cohan shuttered in 1920 following a decrease in business The building was then converted to offices becoming known as the Knickerbocker Building It was the home of Newsweek magazine from 1940 to 1959 during which it was called the Newsweek Building After major renovations in 1980 it became known as 1466 Broadway and was used as garment showrooms and offices Following another renovation in 2001 it was known as 6 Times Square The Knickerbocker was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 and was designated a New York City Landmark in 1988 It was converted back to a hotel from 2013 to 2015 under its original name Contents 1 Site 2 Architecture 2 1 Facade 2 1 1 Broadway and 42nd Street 2 1 2 41st Street 2 2 Features 2 2 1 Basements 2 2 2 Ground and second stories 2 2 3 Upper stories 3 History 3 1 Original hotel 3 1 1 Construction 3 1 2 Operation 3 2 Office use 3 2 1 1920s to 1960s 3 2 2 1970s to 2000s 3 3 Reuse as hotel 4 Critical reception 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Sources 7 External linksSite editThe Knickerbocker Hotel is on the southeastern corner of Broadway and 42nd Street at the south end of Times Square in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City 1 3 4 It contains the alternate addresses 1462 1470 Broadway 1 4 5 6 Times Square 5 and 142 West 42nd Street 6 with a small annex extending south to 143 West 41st Street 1 4 The building occupies a land lot covering 19 800 square feet 1 840 m2 3 with frontages of about 135 feet 41 m on Broadway to the west and about 185 feet 56 m on 42nd Street to the north 7 8 9 The frontage on 41st Street is only 17 feet 5 2 m wide 9 The Knickerbocker Hotel wraps around 8 Times Square at the corner of Broadway and 41st Street The site is adjacent to 5 Times Square and Times Square Tower to the west One Times Square to the northwest 4 Times Square to the north the Bank of America Tower to the northeast and the Bush Tower to the east 3 An entrance to the New York City Subway s Times Square 42nd Street station served by the 1 2 3 7 lt 7 gt N Q R W and S trains is immediately outside the hotel 10 a direct entrance originally led from the basement see The Knickerbocker Hotel Basements 11 The site was previously occupied by the Hotel St Cloud 12 13 which opened in 1868 at Broadway and 42nd Street 13 At the time it was relatively far from the developed portions of Manhattan 14 15 Grand Central Depot predecessor of Grand Central Terminal was developed nearby in 1871 resulting in the growth of the surrounding neighborhood 13 14 In 1892 John Jacob Astor IV acquired the lease of the Hotel St Cloud for 850 000 i 16 With transit improvements in the late 19th and early 20th centuries New York City s theater district relocated from further south in Manhattan to modern day Times Square The construction of theaters led to the development of other entertainment facilities such as hotels dance halls and restaurants 14 15 Furthermore the Knickerbocker site was adjacent to the city s first subway line providing access from the rest of the city 9 Architecture editThe Knickerbocker Hotel completed in 1906 was designed by Marvin amp Davis with consulting architect Bruce Price 1 4 17 The structure was largely designed in the Beaux Arts style The annex on 143 West 41st Street which was built in 1894 as an addition to the Hotel St Cloud contains a Romanesque Revival facade designed by Philip C Brown 1 4 The 41st Street annex was intentionally incorporated into the current hotel building 18 The interiors were designed by Trowbridge amp Livingston 1 4 17 The hotel measures 195 feet 59 m tall 19 Facade edit Broadway and 42nd Street edit nbsp The 42nd Street left and Broadway right facades of the Knickerbocker Hotel seen in 2008 In the background can be seen 1095 Avenue of the Americas and the Bush Tower The Knickerbocker Hotel s Broadway and 42nd Street facades are articulated into three horizontal sections a two story base a ten story shaft and a three story mansard roof The ground and second stories serve as a commercial base and have seen numerous design changes since 1920 20 The vertical limestone piers are the only portions of the original design that remain at the base Originally a ground level portico projected from the center seven bays of the 42nd Street facade with seven round arches topped by a balustrade 21 This portico was removed by 1911 22 There was a similar portico at the center five bays on Broadway which was flush with the rest of the facade The second floor contained round arched windows 21 The Broadway facade originally contained a secondary entrance to the cafe 9 On the third through twelfth floors the building is clad in red brick with decorative elements made of Indiana Limestone and terracotta 20 Some of the limestone and terracotta ornamentation has been replaced with similar looking concrete 11 Along 42nd Street the outermost four bays are grouped into slightly projecting corner pavilions flanking the center seven bays The two center bays on each corner pavilion are paired The Broadway facade is nine bays wide and lacks projecting corner pavilions Each window is flanked by stone quoins The fourth sixth seventh and eleventh story windows contain either decorative iron balcony rails or stone balustrades The pediments atop windows on each story are variously made of segmental arches sculptured decorations or swans necks 20 A small cornice runs above the fourth story while more substantial cornices run above the ninth and eleventh stories 21 At Broadway the center bay contains an arched pediment above the fourth story window that interrupts the cornice above it 23 The ninth story cornice is supported by decorative brackets while the eleventh story cornice is supported by modillions 21 All three cornices have lost some of their original decorative elements 24 The thirteenth through fifteenth stories are part of the mansard roof which is clad in green copper There are also urns at the corners of the roof 20 Originally the dormer windows from the mansard roof contained elaborate pediments although these were likely removed by 1920 The thirteenth floor windows pediments were either triangular or segmentally arched The fourteenth floor windows pediments were round arched 21 A penthouse on the fifteenth floor was added between 1908 and 1910 to designs by C H Cullen 22 41st Street edit nbsp 41st Street facadeThe 41st Street facade of the Knickerbocker Hotel is eight stories tall and is designed in the Romanesque Revival style with some ornament in the Beaux Arts style The facade is made of buff brick and terracotta 25 It was intended as a service entrance to the main Knickerbocker Hotel 12 The annex previously contained a second story with three bays of windows above which runs a classical style cornice 25 When the Knickerbocker was re converted back into a hotel in the 2010s the double height first story was altered for a service entrance that takes up the entire width of the 41st Street facade 26 The third floor was skipped The fourth and fifth stories are topped by an arch that spans the entire width of the annex The sixth through eighth stories are flanked by pilasters with two bays each on the sixth and seventh stories and three bays on the eighth stories The attic on the ninth story was constructed in 1906 and contains two dormer windows with triangular copper pediments 25 Features edit The modern Knickerbocker Hotel contains 330 guestrooms 5 27 28 Twenty seven of the rooms are advertised as junior suites while four are labeled as signature suites 29 The modern Knickerbocker Hotel also contains a restaurant a coffee shop and a roof bar overlooking Times Square 28 30 The hotel s total interior space is about 300 000 square feet 28 000 m2 5 The first Hotel Knickerbocker originally had 556 guestrooms 400 of which contained baths 31 32 The Knickerbocker was described in Architects and Builders Magazine as having magnificent equipment and excellent service 33 The Knickerbocker s various artworks were a prominent part of the original interior design 34 35 36 having been installed as a way to enhance the interior character at a relatively low cost 34 A critic for the Architectural Record praised the interior design saying There are few hotels in the country in the appearance of which such uniform good taste has been displayed although the same critic took issue with the interior layout 37 38 Connecting the various floors were four passenger elevators and four freight and service elevators 39 The original hotel even had five hundred clocks which were made in Paris and maintained by an employee who was specifically tasked with winding them each day 33 40 Little evidence remains of the original design particularly after the first version of the hotel had been converted into an office building in 1920 25 On the upper stories the only remnants of the original design were radiators and terrazzo floors 41 Basements edit nbsp Original floor plans for the basement and subbasement nbsp The closed doorway to the original hotel part of the subway station s fare control area Below the lobby is a basement and subbasement which retain their wall paneling herringbone patterned floors and hexagonal white tile decorations 11 The basement had a grillroom bar broker s office barber and manicure parlors and the kitchen 42 The grillroom contained an English design with plain oak walls and a Gothic oak ceiling 9 43 Displayed in the basement bar was a Frederic Remington painting entitled The United States Cavalry Charge 38 43 44 The kitchen had refrigerating plants heating plants and glass and silver chests accessed by four dumbwaiters from the kitchen 31 The subbasement contained the mechanical plant with boilers coal storage bins electrical generators water filters an ice making plant and an engine room The wine vault cigar vault baggage room and laundry facility were also in the subbasement 45 At the time of the hotel s opening in 1906 the hotel s management advertised two direct subway entrances from the Times Square station 11 32 with one entrance intended for ladies 9 One doorway still exists on the platform adjacent to the 42nd Street Shuttle s track 1 topped by a lintel containing the carved word Knickerbocker 11 46 Before the station opened as part of the city s first subway line in 1904 47 John Jacob Astor IV had given permission for the subway to be constructed through part of his property only if the station included a hotel entrance 48 The hotel entrance was rearranged when the platform was lengthened in 1909 49 While the entrance was closed after the original iteration of the hotel was shuttered the passageway to the entrance has retained much of its ornamentation such as painted roundels 50 In 2019 as part of the remodeling of the modern shuttle station the damaged Knickerbocker marble lintel was to be replaced with a replica 51 52 The modern doorway leads to a subway manhole with mechanical equipment rather than to the Knickerbocker s basement 53 Ground and second stories edit nbsp Original floor plan for the main and banquet floors the present first and second floors The original design had a lobby facing 42nd Street with marble columns bronze pendant lanterns and red and gold foyer decorations 32 42 54 The lobby had a statue of Father Knickerbocker 32 42 a political cartoon personification of New York City 55 Leading off the lobby were safe deposit boxes and a bookstand and ticket office 32 42 56 The cafe west of the lobby had white and gold decorations 32 42 57 For the attached bar southwest of the lobby artist Maxfield Parrish was commissioned to paint Old King Cole and His Fiddlers Three a mural of Old King Cole 44 56 58 measuring 30 feet 9 1 m wide 59 An L shaped restaurant with a flower room ran east and south of the lobby 57 It had a Caen stone cladding a 22 foot high 6 7 m beamed ceiling modeled after the Palace of Fontainebleau marble statues and tapestries on the walls and two bronze and marble electric fountains by Frederick MacMonnies 9 37 57 Hung in the Flower Room was the mural Masque of Flowers 60 b The second floor was devoted to dining rooms in the original design 63 At the center of the second floor was a double height ballroom measuring 50 by 105 feet 15 by 32 m 64 The ballroom had hardwood floors copies of old portraits on the walls and white blue and silver decorations The adjoining foyer had satin velvet decoration with gold painted pillars and a gold leaf ornamented ceiling 63 There was also a nurse s hall and eight private dining rooms on that story including a gold room with gold cutlery for 48 guests 31 During the 1920 alterations the lobby spaces were removed but a pink marble clad elevator lobby was added on the ground floor 65 The lowest two stories were also converted to a retail condominium 5 Remnants from the original design include a vaulted ceiling above the elevator lobby decorated with rosettes but hidden above a dropped ceiling 11 When the hotel reopened in 2015 Charlie Palmer was hired to operate Jake s The Knick a grab and go takeout eatery on the ground level 66 The rebuilt ground floor has a 16 foot tall 4 9 m vaulted ceiling with decorative tiles similar to those installed in the subway 48 Upper stories edit Original floor plans for the upper floors nbsp Third floor labeled as first c nbsp Fourth through twelfth floors labeled as second through tenth c nbsp Fifteenth floor labeled as thirteenth c The third through fifteenth stories were originally devoted to residences and suites c 67 The original third story contained suites a ballroom and a musician s gallery The fourth through twelfth stories were designed nearly identically while the thirteenth and fourteenth stories were slightly different in arrangement The fifteenth story also contained a large women s dormitory and sitting room a valet s room a linen room a bundle laundry room a fan ventilator and a storage and upholstery department 67 As floor number 13 is skipped the thirteenth story is actually labeled as floor 14 68 During much of the 20th century these stories were used as office space but by 2015 these stories were converted back to hotel suites 5 The fourth floor of the reconverted hotel contains Charlie Palmer at the Knick a 100 seat full service restaurant 66 The sixteenth floor contains a 7 500 square foot 700 m2 bar called St Cloud also operated by Palmer with a rooftop terrace measuring 4 000 square feet 370 m2 27 69 The bar named after the former hotel on the same site 70 is used for viewings of the Times Square Ball drop which takes place at the neighboring One Times Square during New Year s Eve Due to the proximity of the ball which is only about 150 feet 46 m from the Knickerbocker s rooftop tickets to the New Year s Eve ball drop viewings can cost tens of thousands of dollars per person 48 71 72 History editOriginal hotel edit Construction edit In 1901 the New York City Department of Buildings received plans for three hotels one theater and fourteen apartment buildings on Times Square 14 Among those plans was a 14 story hotel designed by Bruce Price and Martin amp Davis to be built on the site of the St Cloud Hotel at Broadway and 42nd Street 7 The new hotel known as the Knickerbocker was intended as a rival to the Hotel Astor also owned by the Astor family 15 34 The Knickerbocker was to be a Renaissance Revival hotel with a similar arrangement to other hotels of the time In addition to service facilities across two basement levels and dining and banquet facilities on the first and second floors the Hotel Knickerbocker was planned with 600 suites and 300 baths 73 At the time the section of Broadway between 34th and 42nd Streets was quickly being developed with theaters and hotels 74 Consequently the Hotel Knickerbocker s construction spurred the development of other hostelries nearby 75 John Jacob Astor IV leased the hotel to the International Realty and Construction Company IRCC of Philadelphia organized by J E and A L Pennock 7 15 Astor stipulated that the hotel had to be completed for at least 2 million 15 64 The IRCC received the contract for the hotel s construction in December 1901 76 and Astor loaned 1 65 million to the IRCC in March 1902 ii 77 Under the IRCC the project began in 1901 17 or 1902 61 Under the contract between Astor and the IRCC Astor reserved the right to name the hotel operator when it was complete 78 James B Regan former manager of the adjacent Pabst Hotel leased the site from the IRCC for seventeen years in July 1902 79 Regan had formed the Knickerbocker Hotel Company KHC serving as the KHC s managing director with Jesse Lewisohn and Godfrey Hyams as co directors 78 Astor contracted Regan to be the hotel s manager when it was finished but Regan resigned from the KHC over disputes with the other directors 61 78 In February 1904 just as the facade and steel skeleton was completed construction was halted after the IRCC defaulted on its payments 17 78 Contractually the IRCC was given a year to repay its outstanding obligations should it choose to resume construction In the meantime Astor commissioned new plans for the interior design 78 During this time the only revenue from the Hotel Knickerbocker was coming from the billboards around it 13 At the time the public did not know why work had stopped 80 The IRCC never returned to the project and in May 1905 Astor hired Trowbridge amp Livingston to complete the interiors with work resuming the following month 17 64 81 Regan also agreed to lease the hotel for twenty years at 300 000 per year 61 The new plans cost 1 million more than the original proposal and included an additional story 17 64 Part of the third story was demolished to make way for the double story ballroom 43 64 The 42nd Street facade was also modified to include a portico 61 Operation edit nbsp Seen from Seventh Avenue circa 1909The Knickerbocker opened to private guests on October 23 1906 and to the general public the following day 31 82 At the time of the hotel s opening a room for one person averaged about 3 25 per day iii while suites cost about 15 20 per day iv 31 The hotel quickly became part of the city s social scene 83 One week after the hotel s opening it was receiving an influx of guests from the subway 84 By early 1907 Architectural Record said the hotel has proved to be a huge popular success 36 Architectural historian Robert A M Stern wrote the Hotel Knickerbocker along with the nearby Astor and Rector hotels created something of an architectural ensemble clustered around Times Square 34 The Armenonville restaurant a 600 seat cafe on the ground floor opened in June 1908 85 The 42nd Street frontage was slightly rebuilt two years later when 42nd Street was widened 86 and the Armenonville restaurant was renovated 87 Also in 1911 the Knickerbocker expanded into the neighboring Ryan Hotel adding about one hundred more suites 38 After John Jacob Astor IV died on the Titanic in 1912 his son Vincent Astor inherited the hotel which continued to run successfully under James B Regan 13 The Hotel Knickerbocker s residents included Metropolitan Opera singer Enrico Caruso who took up a suite on half a story 35 because of the hotel s proximity to the Metropolitan Opera House 40 When the end of World War I was falsely announced on November 8 1918 Caruso led the crowd outside his suite in singing The Star Spangled Banner 88 he repeated the performance on Armistice Day three days later when the war actually ended 89 The actor and composer George M Cohan also lived there 38 90 Other guests and residents included opera singer Geraldine Farrar baritone Antonio Scotti film director and producer D W Griffith novelist F Scott Fitzgerald as well as numerous politicians and diplomats 55 91 The Tammany Hall political organization often held its meetings at the Hotel Knickerbocker and media magnate William Randolph Hearst launched his failed campaign for the 1909 New York City mayoral election at the Knickerbocker 55 The popular hotel bar gained the nickname The 42nd Street Country Club 38 According to a legend the martini was invented at the Knickerbocker in 1912 by Martini di Arma di Taggia a hotel bartender who mixed dry vermouth and gin for John D Rockefeller The legend was subsequently debunked as having originated from a 1972 book by John Doxat 48 The Hotel Knickerbocker was also rumored to be where the velvet rope line was invented 55 During dinnertime staff used a red velvet rope to create a queue then handed out plates to guests waiting outside 48 55 During Easter celebrations the hotel s chef put live chicks in sugar eggs and guests would dine while the chicks hatched onto the table 48 The Hotel Knickerbocker was also the site of some high profile incidents during its history 50 For instance a chimpanzee dressed in human clothing walked into the lobby in 1918 prompting a panic 92 93 The next year two men stole gems from a guest and attempted to escape through the basement squirting tabasco sauce into the eyes of the responding patrolmen who arrested the burglars anyway 94 95 There were also several murders at the Knickerbocker including in 1912 when the hotel s in house violinist Albert de Brahms killed his wife and tried to seal her body in plaster 48 55 Office use edit nbsp Broadway facade detailThe enactment of Prohibition in 1919 resulted in a marked decline in business at the Knickerbocker s restaurants and bars 34 40 By late 1919 Regan had given over operation of the hotel to his son James E Regan Jr though the senior Regan retained the lease 91 In May 1920 the junior Regan announced the hotel would be closed at the end of the month and converted to an office building Although the senior Regan s lease had more than fifteen years left to run he surrendered it to Vincent Astor 91 96 At the time the residents included James Regan Jr and his wife Alice Joyce as well as Caruso and his family 91 Immediately upon the announcement of the hotel s closure several commercial tenants made bids for space in the Hotel Knickerbocker and some applicants sought the entire building At the time the surrounding section of Broadway was quickly being developed for commercial purposes 97 The Hotel Knickerbocker closed on May 28 1920 98 99 1920s to 1960s edit Vincent Astor Nicholas Biddle and S B Thorn formed the Knickerbocker Holding Company on June 14 1920 two weeks after the hotel s closure 38 100 The Bank for Savings loaned the company 3 million in October 1920 for the conversion of the old Hotel Knickerbocker into an office building Astor hired architect Charles A Platt to design the office conversion 101 102 The hotel interiors were completely gutted and the ground level was converted to fourteen storefronts 103 The rest of the building was rebuilt as an office building with rents from 4 to 5 per square foot 43 to 54 m2 v 40 The walls of the old suites were moved or removed 103 The grill room in the basement was leased in December 1920 and continued to operate after the hotel s closure 104 The Old King Cole painting was loaned to the Racquet and Tennis Club on Park Avenue by 1925 105 before being installed permanently at the St Regis Hotel in 1935 40 By early 1921 the old Hotel Knickerbocker had become known as the Knickerbocker Building 103 While the storefront at the corner of Broadway and 42nd Street was quickly leased to a location of the National Drug Stores Corporation 106 the rest of the first floor was not leased until 1924 when it became a clothing store 107 108 The New York Society of Model Engineers main room in the Knickerbocker Building housed a model train exhibition each year during the early 1930s 109 Other tenants included advertising firms attorneys and insurance companies 110 Over the years the Knickerbocker Building s former function as a hotel was forgotten by the public the name Knickerbocker Hotel even became associated with another subsequently shuttered hotel on 45th Street 111 nbsp The hotel at night in 2015When the Knickerbocker Building became the headquarters of Newsweek magazine in October 1940 it was renamed the Newsweek Building 112 113 Also in the 1940s an employment agency and art office 114 The Ryan Hotel structure at 140 West 42nd Street which had been part of the original Knickerbocker Hotel but not the subsequent office building was sold in 1944 to an investor who intended to modify that structure heavily 115 116 Vincent Astor continued to own the Newsweek Building until 1957 until it was sold to a client of Bernard H Kayden The underlying land was simultaneously sold to Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance a subsidiary of Harry Helmsley s Helmsley Spear company and Irving S Wolper for 2 75 million 117 118 In early 1959 Newsweek signed a lease for space on 444 Madison Avenue with plans to move out of the Knickerbocker during the beginning of that May 119 120 1970s to 2000s edit By the mid 1970s the building was known as 150 152 West 42nd Street and 1462 1470 Broadway Helmsley still operated the building which contained offices commercial shops and a pornographic bookstore The land was held by the Inch Corporation a shell company representing the true owner the British royal family 121 Helmsley announced that he would drop his ownership of the Knickerbocker Building in 1975 raising concerns that the building would be demolished The other option was to renovate the space for 2 million which could then be rented for 4 50 per square foot 48 4 m2 122 Instead the building deed was sold for a nominal sum of 1 despite the building being valued at 4 5 million 123 In 1979 with the office market in a slump Helmsley David Baldwin and Jack Vickers were planning to convert the office building to residential lofts As part of the project Helmsley Baldwin and Vickers were to relocate the building s main entrance from 152 West 42nd Street to 1466 Broadway constructing a new lobby on Broadway 111 Libby Ross amp Whitehouse designed the new lobby and converted the interior to 113 units 19 124 Stores and commercial space would have been on the lowest four stories while the other stories would have been residential lofts 124 125 The commercial market quickly recovered and the space was instead rented as showrooms and studios for companies in the Garment District 19 40 The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on April 11 1980 2 and the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the Knickerbocker Building as a landmark on October 18 1988 1 126 127 SL Green bought 1466 Broadway along with several other Manhattan buildings owned by the Helmsley estate in 1998 for 165 million 128 129 SL Green began renovating the building shortly afterward in March 1999 At the time the building contained a three story location of The Gap at ground level 130 The Gap s billboards were prominently displayed on the facade 131 The Gap expanded its ground floor space from 15 000 to 35 000 square feet 1 400 to 3 300 m2 during this time reopening in mid 2001 68 SL Green sought to attract small office tenants to the top seven floors 68 so the company decided in late 2001 to rebrand the building as 6 Times Square which it believed was a more prominent address 132 The facade was restored and the mansard roof was coated with greenish copper Due to the complexities of the renovation its costs increased to three times the original budget and the renovation was completed in March 2003 three and a half years later than originally scheduled 11 Reuse as hotel edit nbsp The pop up Toys R Us store at the building s base seen in 2018In 2004 SL Green sold 6 Times Square to Sitt Asset Management for 160 million 133 134 Sitt sold the building in 2006 to Istithmar Hotels an investment group from the royal family of Dubai for 300 million 135 136 137 Istithmar announced plans to convert the building back into a five star hotel with between 250 and 300 rooms 135 136 138 However by late 2009 Istithmar was unable to fulfill its debt obligation 139 Istithmar surrendered the property to its lender Danske Bank in March 2010 140 141 142 Danske subsequently resold the building to a joint venture of Highgate Holdings Ashkenazy Acquisitions and Stanley Chera 143 144 FelCor Lodging Trust a Texas real estate investment trust acquired a 95 percent stake in the third through sixteenth floors for 109 million 145 146 The purchase took place in late 2011 145 although the acquisition was not announced until February 2012 147 148 The retail condominium on the first two floors was still owned by Ashkenazy 5 FelCor renovated the property for an additional 115 million completely gutting it with the exception of the facade 149 The hotel s new interior was designed by architecture and interior design firm Gabellini Sheppard Associates with Peter Poon Architects as the architect of record 150 The new design was intended to both evoke the original hotel and represent Times Square s 21st century revival 151 In a gesture to the hotel s history the four signature suites were named the Caruso Cohan Martini and Parrish suites after prominent personalities of the old hotel 55 152 The hotel reopened on February 12 2015 as the Knickerbocker Hotel 153 154 The rooftop bar the St Cloud opened in June 2015 155 The old subway entrance in the basement remained shuttered 50 and several of the original hotel s works of art such as Old King Cole were not restored in the renovated Knickerbocker Hotel 55 The ground level of the Knickerbocker Hotel building continued to house commercial uses such as one of the last ever locations of Toys R Us which operated as a pop up location in 2017 and 2018 156 157 Critical reception editAfter the Knickerbocker Hotel reopened in 2015 it received mixed reviews A critic for British newspaper The Daily Telegraph gave the Knickerbocker a 7 10 rating saying that the hotel adds a pinch of sophistication to Times Square Yet with its sleek low slung furnishings and neutral palette the interiors are the antithesis of Beaux Arts and Bellhops in baggy knickerbockers and chunky Doc Martens set the tone the moment you arrive 158 A reviewer for Oyster com also contrasted the hotel s Renaissance style exterior and modern interior saying Some guests find this minimalist style cold and uninviting especially paired with the lack of seating in the lobby 159 Conversely a reviewer for Fodor s said the hotel provided a serene counterpoint to the mass of people lights and excitement that converge at the crossroads of Broadway and 42nd Street 160 A critic for Business Insider wrote in 2020 It s comparable in price to other big brand hotels but offers a sleeker more boutique vibe with upscale rooms and five star service 161 Visitors also praised the hotel s central location large rooms and rooftop bar but criticized the fact that it lacked a pool and a spa 159 162 See also editList 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 StreetsPortals nbsp Architecture nbsp Hotels nbsp New York City nbsp NRHPReferences editNotes edit Explanatory notes 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 The artist is variously cited as Charles Finn 43 61 or James Wall Finn 9 62 a b c d These were characterized in Architects and Builders Magazine 1906 pp 92 93 as being the first through thirteenth suite floors The floor numbering excluded the two stories at the base which contained no suites 67 a b c 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved May 28 2023 Inflation figures Equivalent to 25 million in 2022 a Equivalent to 43 million in 2022 a Equivalent to 106 in 2022 d Equivalent to between 130 and 163 in 2022 d Equivalent to between 58 and 73 per square foot 620 and 790 m2 in 2022 d Citations edit a b c d e f g h Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 1 a b Federal Register 46 Fed Reg 10451 Feb 3 1981 PDF Library of Congress February 3 1981 p 10649 PDF p 179 Archived PDF from the original on February 1 2021 Retrieved March 8 2020 a b c 1462 Broadway 10036 New York City Department of City Planning Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 7 2021 a b c d e f White Norval Willensky Elliot Leadon Fran 2010 AIA Guide to New York City 5th ed New York Oxford University Press p 296 ISBN 978 0 19538 386 7 a b c d e f g Knickerbocker Hotel TRD Research The Real Deal March 13 2019 Archived from the original on February 1 2021 Retrieved March 10 2021 National Park Service 1980 p 1 a b c The New Hotel on Site of the St Cloud The New York Times October 16 1901 p 11 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 10 2021 via newspapers com National Park Service 1980 p 5 a b c d e f g h Hotel Knickerbocker The New York Times February 18 1906 pp 44 45 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 11 2021 via newspapers com MTA Neighborhood Maps Times Sq 42 St S mta info Metropolitan Transportation Authority 2018 Archived from the original on August 29 2021 Retrieved September 13 2018 a b c d e f g Dunlap David W August 22 2003 After More Than Four Years of Reconstruction a Landmark Is Unwrapped in Times Square The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on December 27 2017 Retrieved March 9 2021 a b Hutchins 1902 p 630 a b c d e Tauranac J Gerhardt K 2018 Manhattan s Little Secrets Uncovering Mysteries in Brick and Mortar Glass and Stone Globe Pequot p 120 ISBN 978 1 4930 3048 4 Archived from the original on December 6 2021 Retrieved March 10 2021 a b c d Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 2 a b c d e National Park Service 1980 p 4 Sale of the St Cloud Hotel Purchased by John Jacob Astor for 850 000 Property Involved PDF The New York Times October 19 1892 p 8 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 10 2021 a b c d e f National Park Service 1980 p 6 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 8 a b c Six Times Square Emporis Archived from the original on June 17 2021 Retrieved March 9 2021 a b c d Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 5 National Park Service 1980 p 2 a b c d e National Park Service 1980 p 2 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 5 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 5 National Park Service 1980 p 3 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 6 National Park Service 1980 p 2 a b c d Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 6 Kramer Levin Naftalis amp Frankel LLP for 1466 Broadway LP c o Highgate Holdings Incorporated owner February 1 2011 Appeal pursuant to Section 310 2 of the Multiple Dwelling Law seeking to vary the court requirements under Section 26 of the Multiple Dwelling Law to permit the hotel conversion of an existing commercial building PDF New York City Board of Standards and Appeals Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 9 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b Schulz Dana March 21 2015 The Knickerbocker Times Square s First Luxury Hotel Is Reborn as a Modern Landmark 6sqft Archived from the original on November 24 2020 Retrieved March 10 2021 a b Karmin Craig December 23 2014 For FelCor Less Is More Strategy Pays Off Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 10 2021 Luxury Hotel Rooms amp Suites in NYC The Knickerbocker Hotel July 13 2020 Archived from the original on February 25 2021 Retrieved March 10 2021 The Knickerbocker Hotel Announces February 2015 Opening Hotel News Resource December 2 2014 Archived from the original on March 23 2017 Retrieved March 21 2017 a b c d e Knickerbocker Hotel Open to Guests To day The New York Times October 24 1906 p 9 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 10 2021 via newspapers com a b c d e f New Hostlery to Open Hotel Knickerbocker Will Be Ready on Wednesday New York Tribune October 22 1906 p 5 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 11 2021 via newspapers com a b Architects and Builders Magazine 1906 p 102 a b c d e Stern Robert A M Gilmartin Gregory Massengale John Montague 1983 New York 1900 Metropolitan Architecture and Urbanism 1890 1915 New York Rizzoli p 269 ISBN 0 8478 0511 5 OCLC 9829395 a b National Park Service 1980 p 7 a b Architectural Record 1907 p 2 a b Architectural Record 1907 p 17 a b c d e f Bloom Ken 2013 Broadway An Encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis pp 289 290 ISBN 978 1 135 95020 0 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 11 2021 Architects and Builders Magazine 1906 p 98 a b c d e f Gray Christopher February 16 1997 Beaux Arts Facade and Old King Cole in the Bar The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on December 19 2013 Retrieved February 7 2014 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 6 National Park Service 1980 p 3 a b c d e New Times Square Hotel Nearly Ready the Knickerbocker to Be Opened to the Public Wednesday PDF The New York Times October 21 1906 p 12 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 9 2021 a b c d Architects and Builders Magazine 1906 p 89 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 3 National Park Service 1980 p 7 Architects and Builders Magazine 1906 p 93 Times Square 42nd Street Subway Station PDF National Register of Historic Places National Park Service September 17 2004 p 5 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 9 2021 Dunlap David W March 28 2004 1904 2004 Crossroads of the Whirl The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on August 10 2017 Retrieved December 17 2016 a b c d e f g Giannotta Meghan December 19 2016 Secrets of the Knickerbocker The birth of the martini more amNewYork ProQuest 1852946531 Report of the Public Service Commission for the First District of the State of New York For The Year Ending December 31 1910 Public Service Commission 1911 pp 109 110 Archived from the original on January 20 2021 Retrieved March 9 2021 a b c Dunlap David W July 16 2014 Behind Subway s Phantom Hotel Entrance Neither Arias Nor Opulence Linger The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 12 2020 Retrieved March 9 2021 MTA Capital Program 2015 2019 PDF mta info Metropolitan Transportation Authority October 28 2015 Archived PDF from the original on November 6 2015 Retrieved December 17 2016 Amendment to the Memorandum of Agreement Between Federal Transit Administration New York State Historic Preservation Office New York City Transit Authority Regarding The Times Square Shuttle Station During Contract A 35302 The Reconfiguration of the Times Square Shuttle Station SHPO Project 17PR00545 PDF mta info Metropolitan Transportation Authority April 25 2018 Archived PDF from the original on April 25 2018 Retrieved April 27 2018 Nash Eric P December 9 2001 F Y I The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 25 2021 Retrieved March 12 2021 Architects and Builders Magazine 1906 pp 90 92 a b c d e f g h Silverman Justin Rocket April 24 2015 Mural at historic Knickerbocker Hotel tells era s tale New York Daily News ISSN 2692 1251 Archived from the original on February 9 2018 Retrieved March 12 2021 a b Architects and Builders Magazine 1906 p 90 a b c Architects and Builders Magazine 1906 pp 89 90 Architectural Record 1907 pp 4 5 Collins Glenn January 17 2007 King Cole a Grimy Old Soul Heads for a Cleaning The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on February 26 2021 Retrieved March 9 2021 Architects and Builders Magazine 1906 p 89 Architectural Record 1907 pp 12 14 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 3 a b c d e Landmarks Preservation Commission 1988 p 3 Architectural Record 1907 pp 12 14 a b Architects and Builders Magazine 1906 p 92 a b c d e Newest Astor Hotel to be Pushed Ahead The New York Times May 28 1905 p 12 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 10 2021 via newspapers com National Park Service 1980 p 3 a b Preston Marguerite March 12 2015 Opening Alert Charlie Palmer s Times Square Behemoth Debuts in the Knickerbocker Eater NY Archived from the original on October 31 2015 Retrieved March 10 2021 a b c Architects and Builders Magazine 1906 pp 92 93 a b c Siwolop Sana July 18 2001 Commercial Real Estate A Former Hotel Is Being Reborn as Small Offices The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 27 2015 Retrieved March 11 2021 Parker Jennifer May 19 2015 Exclusive First Look at the Only Rooftop Bar in Times Square Bloomberg Archived from the original on September 7 2016 Retrieved March 10 2021 Fabricant Florence June 2 2015 Knickerbocker s St Cloud Comes With a Serving of History The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 22 2016 Retrieved March 10 2021 Lansat Myelle December 30 2018 A luxury hotel in Times Square hosts a rooftop New Year s Eve party where guests are only 150 feet from the ball drop and box seats cost up to 125 000 Business Insider Archived from the original on December 31 2019 Retrieved March 10 2021 This Over the top New Year s Eve Party Is on a Rooftop Just 150 Feet From the Ball Drop in Times Square and Tickets Are 125 000 Travel Leisure December 27 2018 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved March 10 2021 Hutchins 1902 pp 630 632 Broadway s Future South of Times Square Real Estate Movement That Promises to Have Unusual Elements of Strength Large Plots Awaiting Development PDF The New York Times June 26 1904 p 17 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 11 2021 Changes in Long Acre Square The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Vol 80 no 2070 November 16 1907 p 799 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 11 2021 via columbia edu New Hotel for New York The Hartford Courant December 26 1901 p 14 ISSN 1047 4153 ProQuest 555016921 Real Estate New York Tribune March 13 1902 p 5 ProQuest 571194640 a b c d e Astors May Take Over Hotel Knickerbocker Due to Get Possession Feb 1 Under Forfeited Contract The New York Times January 14 1905 p 1 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 9 2021 via newspapers com Real Estate Lease of the Hotel Knickerbocker Officially Recorded New York Tribune July 26 1902 p 10 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 9 2021 via newspapers com Begin Work on Hotel New York Tribune May 19 1905 p 3 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 10 2021 via newspapers com Building Notes The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Vol 75 no 1942 June 3 1905 p 1221 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 11 2021 via columbia edu Knickerbocker Hotel Opens New York Tribune October 24 1906 p 4 Retrieved March 11 2021 via newspapers com Risen Clay December 2 2006 The Knickerbocker The Morning News Archived from the original on June 12 2011 Retrieved November 6 2014 A Rush of Patrons to the Newest Hotel Where Do the People All Come From Ask the Clerks PDF The New York Times October 28 1906 p 6 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 11 2021 Society Opens New Summer Cafe Fort Worth Star Telegram June 14 1908 p 24 Retrieved March 11 2021 via newspapers com Widening of Forty Second Street Will Begin Early This Summer The New York Times June 12 1910 p 67 Retrieved March 11 2021 via newspapers com New Armenonville Opens Hotel Knickerbocker s Open air Restaurant Visited by Many The New York Times June 2 1911 p 11 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 11 2021 via newspapers com Glad Crowds Unrestrained Rule City Fill Streets With Triumphal Parades and Police New York Tribune November 8 1918 p 3 Retrieved March 12 2021 via newspapers com Berger Meyer October 17 1956 About New York The Met s Rendering of Our National Anthem Recalls Caruso s Own Version of It PDF The New York Times p 42 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 12 2021 Lowe David PaineWebber Art Gallery 1998 Beaux Arts New York Whitney Library of Design p 38 ISBN 978 0 8230 0481 2 a b c d Knickerbocker Hotel to Close Doors May 30 New York Tribune May 11 1920 pp 1 3 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 11 2021 via newspapers com Ape in Big Broadway Hotel Scares Women as He Wanders Into the Knickerbocker Lobby PDF The New York Times February 18 1918 p 18 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 11 2021 Huge Chimpanzee Enters Lobby of New York Hotel Buffalo Courier February 18 1918 p 1 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 11 2021 via newspapers com Robbers Battle for 100 000 Gems Beat Knickerbocker Hotel Guest Scale Walls of Building and Are Captured PDF The New York Times December 24 1919 p 1 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 11 2021 Hotel Thieves Caught in Chase Times Union December 23 1919 p 2 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 11 2021 via newspapers com The Knickerbocker to Close as Hotel Company Headed by Vincent Astor to Convert It Into an Office Building PDF The New York Times May 11 1920 p 1 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 12 2021 Many Bids Offered for Knicker Bocker Applications Already Made for Entire Space of Hotel Building When Converted PDF The New York Times May 12 1920 p 6 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 12 2021 The Knickerbocker Empty Only Workmen in Hotel Broadway Concerned About Liquors PDF The New York Times May 29 1920 p 9 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 12 2021 Hotel Knickerbocker Passes Into History New York Daily News May 28 1920 p 3 ISSN 2692 1251 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 12 2021 via newspapers com Knickerbocker Holding Company PDF The New York Times June 15 1920 p 30 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 12 2021 3 000 000 Loan on Knickerbocker Bank for Savings Will Finance Project Converting Hotel Into Office Building PDF The New York Times October 1 1920 p 32 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 11 2021 Astor Gets 3 000 000 Loan on Knickerbocker New York Tribune October 1 1920 p 17 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 11 2021 via newspapers com a b c Business Growth in Times Square Is Shown by Big Leases in New Knickerbocker Building The New York Times February 13 1921 p 101 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 12 2021 via newspapers com Many Big Loans in Uptown Centre The New York Times December 5 1920 p 137 Retrieved March 12 2021 via newspapers com Old King Cole The Washington Post April 25 1925 p 6 ISSN 0190 8286 ProQuest 149555903 Fifth Avenue Lease in 5 000 000 Deal National Drug Stores Corp Sells Depew Building Leasehold to Frederick Brown PDF The New York Times May 6 1921 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived PDF from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved March 12 2021 Times Square Lease Knickerbocker Building Floor Ready to wear Store PDF The New York Times June 21 1924 p 24 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 12 2021 Real Estate News Tenant Found for Floor In Knickerbocker Bldg Space Unoccupied Since Structure Was Changed to Offices Leased for 1 000 000 The New York Herald New York Tribune June 21 1924 p 21 ProQuest 1112976451 Model Makers Nearing Ideal Show Reveals Build Train So Tiny Locomotive Can Run Only 1 0 Min Before Overheating New Little Ships on View 20th Century Reproduction Has Half Mile of Track Miniature Rail and Steam Engineers Have Their Day New York Herald Tribune February 10 1934 p 13 ProQuest 1242956183 Agents Report Business Space Rentals Active Many Office Units Leased in 42d St Corner Building Other Moves Arranged New York Herald Tribune June 10 1933 p 26 ProQuest 1222154933 a b Oser Alan S January 10 1979 Real Estate Times Sq Landmark New Career The New York Times p D19 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 120992134 Newsweek Moves to Times Square Former Knickerbocker 42d St Building to Bear Name of Tenant Publication PDF The New York Times October 30 1940 p 43 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 9 2021 Newsweek Moves Offices To Broadway 42d Street New York Herald Tribune October 30 1940 p 37 ProQuest 1264432425 Newsweek Building Gets Two Tenants Space Leased for Art Office and Employment Agency PDF The New York Times August 5 1942 p 31 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 12 2021 Old Astor Holding in Times Sq Sold Ryan Heirs Sell Structure Erected With the Adjoining Knickerbocker Building PDF The New York Times April 6 1944 p 33 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 12 2021 Large Midtown Building Sold By Ryan Estate 13 Story Business Parcel in West 42d St Conveyed Downtown Lofts in Deal New York Herald Tribune April 6 1944 p 29A ProQuest 1283093013 Newsweek Building in Sale Lease 42d St Site Goes To Mass Mutual New York Herald Tribune June 22 1957 p A6 ProQuest 1337587932 42d St Property and Land Bought Newsweek Building and Its Site Are Sold in Separate Deals by Vincent Astor PDF The New York Times June 22 1957 p 26 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 12 2021 Big Area Taken By Newsweek New York Herald Tribune January 11 1959 p 1C ProQuest 1323216928 Newsweek Going to Madison Ave Building at No 444 Will Be Named for Magazine When It Takes 5 Floors May 1 PDF The New York Times January 13 1959 p 44 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 12 2021 Moritz Owen April 1 1974 Does Queen Liz Own N Y Site of Porno Shop New York Daily News p 18 ISSN 2692 1251 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 12 2021 via newspapers com Horsley Carter B May 4 1975 Office Building Faces Demolition The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved April 8 2020 Oser Alan S June 30 1976 About Real Estate The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 9 2021 Retrieved March 12 2021 a b Times change at Times Sq New York Daily News November 15 1980 p 119 ISSN 2692 1251 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 12 2021 via newspapers com Oser Alan S June 30 1981 About Real Estate Office Tower on 42d Street Revitalized by New Owner The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 24 2015 Retrieved March 12 2021 Dunlap David W October 19 1988 Panel Chooses A Former Hotel As a Landmark The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved January 17 2021 Shepard Joan October 19 1988 Old Knickerbocker Hotel is Landmarked No action on St Regis New York Daily News p 817 ISSN 2692 1251 Archived from the original on February 2 2022 Retrieved March 12 2021 via newspapers com Grant Peter February 4 1998 Green ing of Graybar New York Daily News p 43 ISSN 2692 1251 Archived from the original on January 28 2021 Retrieved March 11 2021 via newspapers com Bagli Charles V February 4 1998 Realtor to Pay 165 Million For 3 Helmsley Office Towers The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 27 2015 Retrieved March 11 2021 Dunlap David W July 28 1999 Commercial Real Estate Restoring a Landmark Hotel to Its Gilded Glory The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 18 2017 Retrieved March 11 2021 Stamler Bernard July 11 1999 Neighborhood Report New York Up Close Ads on Sidewalk Sheds Are Anything but Pedestrian The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 14 2017 Retrieved March 11 2021 Muto Sheila September 5 2001 What s in an Address Sometimes a Better Image Office Buildings Take On Street Names Numbers With Greater Appeal Wall Street Journal p B14 ISSN 0099 9660 ProQuest 2074372587 Dunlap David W September 14 2004 Metro Briefing New York Manhattan Times Square Landmark To Be Sold The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 11 2021 SL Green Realty Corp Announces Agreement to Sell 1466 Broadway for 160 Million Business Wire September 10 2004 p 1 ProQuest 445575092 a b Bagli Charles V June 6 2006 Dubai Royalty Plans to Restore a Times Square Landmark The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 11 2021 a b Dubai Royalty buys Times Square landmark USA Today Associated Press June 6 2006 Archived from the original on June 15 2012 Retrieved November 6 2014 Middle Eastern Investors Heart New York Observer May 23 2007 Archived from the original on November 25 2020 Retrieved March 11 2021 Stoler Michael April 20 2006 Condos New Retail To Be Added to Times Square Mix The New York Sun Archived from the original on April 25 2019 Retrieved March 10 2021 Troianovski Anton Boston William December 2 2009 Dubai World Holds Key to Property Revival The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on October 24 2019 Retrieved March 11 2021 Pruitt A D Karmin Craig March 3 2010 Dubai World Coughs Up the Knickerbocker Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on June 3 2019 Retrieved March 11 2021 Dubai s Istithmar World Capital hands in the keys to former Knickerbocker Hotel The Real Deal New York March 3 2010 Archived from the original on May 16 2021 Retrieved March 11 2021 Reuters Staff March 4 2010 Dubai s Istithmar loses prime U S property paper Reuters Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 11 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a author has generic name help Hutson Brittany May 14 2010 Bank of America Tower Boosts Area Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on September 14 2021 Retrieved March 12 2021 Ex Knickerbocker Hotel Site Sold To NY Real Estate Developer Dow Jones Institutional News March 23 2010 ProQuest 2172583619 a b Hotel REITs RLJ Lodging Felcor agree to 7B merger Real Estate Weekly April 26 2017 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 10 2021 Cutting Out the Middleman Wall Street Journal February 6 2012 ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on April 28 2012 Retrieved March 12 2021 Hudson Kris February 1 2012 Knickerbocker Hotel Knocks Again Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on July 26 2013 Retrieved March 9 2021 FelCor Announces Acquisition of Iconic New York City Knickerbocker Hotel Business Wire February 1 2012 Archived from the original on April 3 2022 Retrieved March 12 2021 Dailey Jessica June 7 2013 The Knickerbocker Hotel s Rooftop Bar Takes Shape In Midtown Curbed New York Retrieved November 6 2014 Mapping New York City s Hotels Under Construction Curbed NY Archived from the original on March 23 2017 Retrieved March 22 2017 Bortolot Lana May 1 2014 Landmark Buildings Make Hotel Comebacks Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved March 12 2021 The Knickerbocker Hotel Modeliste Magazine September 22 2018 Archived from the original on July 9 2021 Retrieved July 2 2021 Plautz Jessica February 11 2015 New York s Knickerbocker Hotel reopens CNN Archived from the original on March 22 2017 Retrieved March 21 2017 Knickerbocker Hotel Announces February 2015 Opening Lodging Magazine December 2 2014 Retrieved November 22 2022 Dobkin Kelly June 8 2015 Rooftop Bar Alert Charlie Palmer s St Cloud at the Knickerbocker Opens Tonight Zagat Retrieved March 10 2021 Toys R Us Times Square Pop Up Spared as Toy Giant Closes 182 Stores Commercial Observer January 24 2018 Archived from the original on March 12 2022 Retrieved March 13 2021 Green Dennis We visited one of the last Toys R Us stores to open here s what it looked like Business Insider Archived from the original on February 5 2021 Retrieved March 13 2021 Charlton Gill October 11 2021 The best hotels near Times Square for a stay in the neon heart of New York City The Telegraph Retrieved November 21 2022 a b The Knickerbocker Hotel Review What To Really Expect If You Stay Oyster com February 19 2020 Retrieved November 21 2022 Clarke Jessica Colley The Knickerbocker New York Hotel Review Fodor s Travel Retrieved November 21 2022 Hochberg Emily January 10 2020 The Knickerbocker in Times Square is the perfect luxury base for first time visitors to New York here s why Insider Retrieved November 21 2022 The Knickerbocker Hotel U S News amp World Report Retrieved November 21 2022 Sources edit Hutchins William November 1902 The New York Hotels Part II The Modern Hotel PDF Architectural Record Vol 16 pp 630 633 Knickerbocker Hotel PDF Report New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission October 18 1988 Knickerbocker Hotel PDF Report National Register of Historic Places National Park Service April 11 1980 The Knickerbocker Hotel A Novelty in Decoration PDF Architectural Record Vol 21 no 1 January 1907 pp 1 17 Wyndham Gittens Herbert December 1906 The Hotel Knickerbocker Trowbridge amp Livingston Architects Architects and Builders Magazine Vol 39 pp 89 102 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Knickerbocker Hotel Official website Original floor plans 1902 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Knickerbocker Hotel amp oldid 1157139990, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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