10-24-2014, 03:13 AM
I was just at a fundraiser in the city and -- on the way home -- passed through the lobby of 200 Park Ave, built in the early 1960s as the Pan Am building.
Designed in the brutalist/international style and offset from the grid to span Park Avenue and 44th St (As does the Helmsley (formerly New York Central) Building just north and Grand Central Terminal just south) it can thus be be seen from a distance almost in its entirety. It is frequently noted as the building New Yorkers would most like to see demolished.
I wanted to work for Pan Am as a kid. When they went under in 1991, the 25-foot-high "meatball" logo was removed from the 44th St sides, and the 15-foot-high PAN AM logo from the Park Avenue sides, to be replaced by those of MetLife. Old-school New Yorkers often still call it by its original name.
I then passed through Grand Central, which made me feel better.
Designed in the brutalist/international style and offset from the grid to span Park Avenue and 44th St (As does the Helmsley (formerly New York Central) Building just north and Grand Central Terminal just south) it can thus be be seen from a distance almost in its entirety. It is frequently noted as the building New Yorkers would most like to see demolished.
I wanted to work for Pan Am as a kid. When they went under in 1991, the 25-foot-high "meatball" logo was removed from the 44th St sides, and the 15-foot-high PAN AM logo from the Park Avenue sides, to be replaced by those of MetLife. Old-school New Yorkers often still call it by its original name.
I then passed through Grand Central, which made me feel better.