Seagram Building
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The Seagram Building is a skyscraper in New York City. It was designed by architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, and was completed in 1958, as a 38-story icon of corporate International Modernism. It was designed as the headquarters for the distillers Joseph Seagram's & Sons, thanks to the foresight of Phyllis Lambert, the daughter of Samuel Bronfman, Seagram's CEO. Its perfectly-proportioned, utterly simple slab of dark bronze and amber-tinted glass curtain walls set a style as did the opulently naked granite plaza behind which it is set, which encouraged New York City's zoning board to rewrite its zoning regulations in 1961 to encourage similar open public spaces.
The Seagram Building is located at 375 Park Avenue, in Midtown Manhattan.
External links
- The story of Seagram Building (http://www.cbsforum.com/cgi-bin/articles/partners/cbs/search.cgi?template=display&dbname=cbsarticles&key2=seagram&action=searchdbdisplay) - by CBS Forum (http://www.cbsforum.com/)
- Architectural history and description. (http://www.thecityreview.com/park375.html)
- Capsule descriptive quotes. (http://www.greatbuildings.com/buildings/Seagram_Building.html)
- Herbert Muschamp's encomium. (http://www.nytimes.com/library/magazine/millennium/m1/muschamp.html)