Anonymous ID: d98840 April 15, 2018, 7:19 a.m. No.701   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>702 >>703

>>680

What is the history, who was involved?

 

The Vanderbilt Family (first built a mansion there which was sold and demolished to build the tower)

 

Wiki: https:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_K._Vanderbilt_House

 

The Lost Wm. K. Vanderbilt Mansion – 660 5th Avenue

http:// daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.ca/2014/06/the-lost-wm-k-vanderbilt-mansion-660.html

 

Two weeks later the Real Estate Record & Builders’ Guide reported that the Empire Trust Co. had purchased the house. “The structure will be remodeled into a banking house.” The New York Times was less optimistic saying “The ornate graystone structure…will probably be replaced by a modern skyscraper.”

 

As it turned out, the Empire Trust never converted the house to a bank branch as intended. Instead it put the house back on the market. It sat empty for five years before being purchased by Benjamin Winter in May 1925. The Times reported on May 20 that “the real estate operator…will erect a twenty-story business building on the site.”

 

Manhattan being Manhattan, that structure did not last, either. A sleek 40-story tower was later erected on the site.

Anonymous ID: d98840 April 15, 2018, 7:21 a.m. No.702   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>703

>>680

>>701

Full History of The Vanderbilt House: Now scrubbed from the webs. Pic related.

 

http:// daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.ca/2014/06/the-lost-wm-k-vanderbilt-mansion-660.htm

Anonymous ID: d98840 April 15, 2018, 7:27 a.m. No.703   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>680 , >>701 , >>702

William and Alva had three children; but by 1894 tensions between the pair were obvious. When William returned from Europe—alone—on December 12, 1894 The New York Times reported “Upon arriving in town, Mr. Vanderbilt did not go to his own house, 660 Fifth Avenue, but to the home of his mother, Mrs. William H. Vanderbilt, at 640 Fifth Avenue. He would see no reporters last night.”

 

Before long the drawing rooms of Fifth Avenue were shaken by Alva’s suit for divorce, citing William’s extramarital dalliances. She walked away with $10 million and much real estate, including the imperial Marble House in Newport. But William retained the Fifth Avenue mansion.

 

Eight years after Alva Vanderbilt walked out of No. 660 Fifth Avenue there was a new Mrs. Vanderbilt. William married Anne Harriman, the daughter of banker Oliver Harriman. Anne had been married and widowed twice–to Samuel Stevens Sands and to Lewis Morris Rutherfurd, Jr. The middle-aged couple (William was now 54 years old) would have no children. But Anne Vanderbilt successfully picked up the reins as hostess of the Petite Chateau.

 

In 1906 Vanderbilt’s son, William Jr., commissioned McKim, Mead & White to design a compatible mansion next door at No. 666 Fifth Avenue. Existing brownstone homes were demolished and the firm produced a mansion so harmonious with No. 660 that it was often confused as one building.

 

In July 1920 William Kissam Vanderbilt died while traveling in Paris. Within four months the mansion that had been his home for nearly four decades was on the market. The Times reported on November 10 “Negotiations are in progress for the sale of the mansion of the late William K. Vanderbilt at 660 Fifth Avenue…and reports among real estate men yesterday were that the deal would be concluded before the end of the week, with the purchase price between $2,500,000 and $3,000,000.”

 

Two weeks later the Real Estate Record & Builders’ Guide reported that the Empire Trust Co. had purchased the house. “The structure will be remodeled into a banking house.” The New York Times was less optimistic saying “The ornate graystone structure…will probably be replaced by a modern skyscraper.”

 

As it turned out, the Empire Trust never converted the house to a bank branch as intended. Instead it put the house back on the market. It sat empty for five years before being purchased by Benjamin Winter in May 1925. The Times reported on May 20 that “the real estate operator…will erect a twenty-story business building on the site.”

 

Manhattan being Manhattan, that structure did not last, either.

Anonymous ID: d98840 April 15, 2018, 10:23 a.m. No.706   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The first building to be built with the address of 666 Fifth Avenue was a smaller mansion designed by Stanford White which was completed in 1908 for the family of William K. Vanderbilt, Jr.. At the turn of the century, this stretch of Fifth Avenue had become an active retail corridor, with up-market retailers such as the famed Gunter Furs located on site. While the 'Petite Chateau' was sold and demolished in 1926 to make room for a twelve story tower, the mansion on 666th Fifth Avenue stood together with nine other buildings on the block until they were demolished in the late 1950’s.

 

In 1957, Tishman Realty & Construction Company Inc. built the modern 41 story skyscraper containing approximately 1,549,623 of rentable square feet. Designed by Robert I. Carson and Earl H. Lundin, the building was originally known as The Tishman Building. With an embossed aluminum exterior, the building’s modern formalism and projection of power attracted a variety of law, accounting and professional service firms.

 

Together with its unique retail layout and internal circulation at the ground level, the building hosted a critically acclaimed lobby and waterfall design feature designed by the Japanese American artist and landscape architect Isamu Noguchi. With 90 valet parking spaces, 20 passenger elevators, 4 freights elevators and 1 subway arcade with direct subway access, the building’s capacity for the unobstructed flow of tenants, goods and services was considerable.

 

http://www.cacq.com/images/site_images/666%20Fifth%20Ave_Case%20Study.pdf