300 Park Avenue South Explained

300 Park Avenue South
Building Type:Commercial
Architectural Style:Beaux-Arts
Former Names:Mills & Gibb building
Location:300 Park Avenue South, Manhattan, New York, 10010
Roof:192feet
Completion Date:1911
Floors:16
Developer:Mills & Gibb
Architect:Starrett & van Vleck

300 Park Avenue South (previously the Mills & Gibb Building[1] and currently also known as The Creative Arts Center) is a building on the northwest corner of East 22nd Street in the Flatiron District/Gramercy Park neighborhoods of Manhattan, New York City.

History

The 16-story Beaux-Arts style building was to a design by Starrett & van Vleck. Built in 1911 for Mills & Gibb on the site of the old Fourth Avenue Presbyterian Church,[2] it boasted a frontage of on Fourth Avenue and on Twenty-second Street.[3] The Beaux-Arts style building was completed in 1911. Its automatic sprinklers were supplied with water by two steel pressure tanks of capacity each, located in a fireproof house on the roof. They were connected together, with gate and check valves at each, and discharge through a dead riser running down through the building to the basement. The ornamental iron partitions glazed with wire mesh glass that separated each floor from the main stairway were furnished by the Winslow Brothers' Company. "Richardson" seamless kalamein fire doors protected the openings on the passenger elevator shaft. furnished by the J. F. Blanchard Company, these doors were finished with Verdi antique enamel. The entire steel frame was fireproofed with terra cotta hollow tile furnished by Henry Maurer & Son, New York City.[4]

It is currently occupied by the Smithsonian Institution's New York Research Center,[5] the New York State Council on the Arts, Wilhelmina Models, FanDuel, and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Rockrose Development Corporation is the landlord.[6]

References

Notes

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 300 Park Avenue South. https://web.archive.org/web/20131106091427/http://www.emporis.com/building/300-park-avenue-south-new-york-city-ny-usa. dead. November 6, 2013. Emporis. 2 January 2015.
  2. Book: Watson. Edward B.. Gillon. Edmund V.. New York Then and Now. 2 August 2012. Courier Corporation. 978-0-486-13106-1. 83–.
  3. Book: American Carpet and Upholstery Journal. Public domain. 28. 1910. 35, 88–.
  4. Book: Environmental Control & Safety Management. Public domain. 19-20. 1910. The Insurance Press. New York. 378, 398, 400–.
  5. Web site: Archives of American Art. Smithsonian. 2 January 2015.
  6. News: Cuozzo. Steve. Wilhelmina in lease renewal. 2 January 2015. New York Post. June 22, 2010.