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Flatiron Building
 

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Southeast corner - 2007-12-15 (578407)
(c) Royce Douglas
 
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Looking up the southeast side - 2007-12-15 (578756)
(c) Royce Douglas
 
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View from the north - 2007-12-15 (110922)
(c) Tinny Winnie
 
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Identification
Official name Flatiron Building
Alternative names *
Emporis Building Number 114793
 
Location
Address *
Bordering street #1 5th Avenue
Bordering street #2 Broadway
Bordering street #3 East 22nd Street
Postcode *
Exact Latitude *
Exact Longitude *
Location Map (POI) *
Block Number *
Zone Ladies Mile
Neighborhood Flatiron
Borough Manhattan
City New York City
State New York
Country U.S.A.
 
Technical Data
Height (tip) *
Height (struct.) 87 m 285 ft
Height (roof) *
Floors (OG) 21
Construction end 1902
GFA *
 
Building in General
Type of construction high-rise building
Structural materials
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Facade systems
*
Facade materials
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*
Main usages
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Side usages
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Architectural style *
Status completed

Facts
- Flatiron's ornate but restrained facade is composed of stone and terra-cotta panels whose forms simulate the effects of rustication.
- Bearing the influence of architectural trends introduced at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Burnham's eye-catching design combined elements of French and Italian Renaissance architecture.
- The developer built the skyscraper as a speculative project with the intention of renting out offices to various commercial and financial enterprises which was unusual at this time.
- The building's triangular plan was a clever response to the awkward site produced by the intersection of Broadway and 5th Avenue.
- This steel-framed terra-cotta and stone-clad skyscraper represents the developers' first (and ultimately unsuccessful) attempt to create a new business center north of Wall Street.
- It replaced a trapezoid-shaped building of around 8-10 stories.
- The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
- One of the city's most famous landmarks, a postcard depicting this building is a must-have in the inventory of nearly all New York City's souvenir shops.
- Designated a National Historic Landmark in 1989 for possessing national significance in commemorating the history of the United States of America.
- So-called because of its triangular shape, this was one of the earliest buildings to utilise a steel frame from which the exterior walls were hung, a method commonly employed around the world today.

Companies involved in this Building*
Architect: D.H. Burnham & Company

Other companies: George A. Fuller Company, Atlantic Terra Cotta Company, TRACO.