How You Finish a Skyscraper is the Most Important Part

epiminondas writes:

A good story has a beginning, a middle, and an end.  So does a good skyscraper.  It should feel well grounded, like it is where it belongs.  As you look up at the building, your eye should be enchanted and encouraged to dwell on details as it follows the building skyward.  And when you see the top, it should look like the end. It should make a statement, put a period on the sentence.  Or an exclamation point.  It should end with dignity and grace, not just STOP.  In my estimation, the General Electric building in New York City possesses all the characteristics of a truly great architectural masterpiece.  It definitely has a beginning, a middle and an end.

Image

Above is a view of the GE building as seen from my hotel room in the recent past. It stands at the corner of Lexington and 51st avenue to the left of the Waldorf Astoria. What is really enchanting about it is the top…

Image

Now this is the kind of elegance and panache you just don’t see any more in architecture.  Vibrant, muscular, restrained, and yet flamboyant at the same time.  You don’t really notice the spectacular detail from the ground looking up.  But from a height (and we were in the 30-range of floors) you can see how dazzling the top of the GE building really is.

Image

At any point you gaze at this structure, you linger to see the details.  This is the kind of architecture we once took for granted. It is a masterpiece. Long may it stand as a testament to an artistic vision of the early American skyscraper.

This entry was posted in Architecture. Bookmark the permalink.

4 Responses to How You Finish a Skyscraper is the Most Important Part

  1. Sir Barken Hyena's avatar Sir Barken Hyena says:

    That is stunning! Almost like the Sagrada Familia, fantasy in stone. Thanks for posting.

    Like

    • Gary Reams's avatar Gary Reams says:

      And with good reason in earthquake prone LA and SF. I’ve lived in both and been through quakes in both and there’s a good reason that you don’t want a ton of bricks falling on you,…YOU COULD DIE. In the 89 San Francisco earthquake 6 or more people died in their cars when the front of the building they worked in fell on them and squashed them and their cars flat. within blocks of where I lived. Worse were the unfortunate people trapped in the cars on the collapsed freeway that were burned alive in their cars when the cars caught on fire etc. Horrible.

      Like

  2. I love that building. Used to work nearby — it was always a favorite. Never got such a good view of the top of it, though. Great shots (and eloquent, sensible thoughts), tks.

    Like

Leave a comment