General Information
Completion: | 1931 |
---|---|
Status: | in use |
Project Type
Material: |
Steel structure |
---|---|
Function / usage: |
Office building |
Architectural style: |
Neo-Gothic |
Location
Location: |
Manhattan, New York, New York, USA |
---|---|
Address: | 515 Madison Avenue |
Coordinates: | 40° 45' 35.64" N 73° 58' 26.04" W |
Technical Information
Dimensions
height | 162.16 m | |
number of floors (above ground) | 42 |
Excerpt from Wikipedia
The DuMont Building (also known as 515 Madison Avenue) is a 532-foot (162 m) high, 42-story building located at 53rd Street and Madison Avenue in Manhattan.
Overview
The building was built in art deco and neo-gothic style by John H. Carpenter and designed by his brother, architect J.E.R. Carpenter who also designed Lincoln Tower as well as nearly 125 buildings along Fifth Avenue and Park Avenue.
One of the building's most distinctive features is a broadcasting antenna that traces back to the building's role in the first television broadcasts of Allen B. DuMont experimental television station W2XWV in 1938. The station became commercially licensed as WABD—named for DuMont's initials—in 1944, WNEW-TV in 1958, and is now WNYW. The station was one of the few television channels that continued to broadcast through World War II.
After the war, the network and WABD moved to bigger studios - first at the John Wanamaker's store at Ninth Street and Broadway in Greenwich Village, then the Adelphi Theatre, the Ambassador Theatre, and in 1954 to the Central Turn-Verein Opera House at 205 East 67th, which was renamed The DuMont Tele-Centre and today is the Fox Television Center, home of WABD's descendant, WNYW.
In 1947, the building was the site of a protest by 700 picketers demanding that the United States end diplomatic relations with Spain as a protest against the government of Francisco Franco at the site of the Spanish consulate, located in the building.
In the early 1950s, the WABD antenna was moved to the top of the Empire State Building, in a move which consolidated all New York television stations to one location.
In 1958, WKCR-FM, the radio station of Columbia University, began transmitting from the former WABD antenna atop the building, remaining there until 1977, when it became the first radio (or television) station to transmit from the antenna atop the World Trade Center, the move necessitated by the construction of other surrounding skyscrapers which started interfering with the station's signal.
In 1962, the 250,000-square-foot (23,000 m²) building was sold to Newmark & Co. Which still owns and manages it.
Text imported from Wikipedia article "DuMont Building" and modified on July 23, 2019 according to the CC-BY-SA 4.0 International license.
Participants
- J.E.R. Carpenter (architect)
Relevant Web Sites
- About this
data sheet - Structure-ID
20037512 - Published on:
12/06/2008 - Last updated on:
22/10/2019