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Building New York: The Rise and Rise of the Greatest City on Earth

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The evolution of New York's built environment is chronicled in this breathtaking history organized chronologically by site-from architectural masterpieces to engineering marvels. Witness New York as it was being built in the years following the Civil War. It was during this era when the city spread uptown, landscaped Central Park, engineered the bridges and subways, and scaled ever higher in the form of innovative skyscrapers.The New York story unfolds in these pages with an immediacy only photography can capture. It allows us to relive the moment when the theaters moved uptown followed by the city's "newspaper of record," and muddy, horse-trodden Longacre Square sprouted its iconic neon signs and was reborn as Times Square. Trace the growth by accretion of the Metropolitan Museum of Art as it nibbled away at the park or the transformation of Fifth Avenue into "millionaires row." Along the way, the majestic history of the city unfolds along with the story of the visionaries whose stamp it bears today. New York's coming of age coincided with the rise of photography, and this incredible trove of photographs culled from the archives of Time Life and the New-York Historical Society are the very images that created the larger-than-life reputation of New York that continues to dazzle the world today.

304 pages, Hardcover

First published September 1, 2005

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About the author

Bruce Marshall

110 books28 followers
Lieutenant-Colonel Claude Cunningham Bruce Marshall, known as Bruce Marshall was a prolific Scottish writer who wrote fiction and non-fiction books on a wide range of topics and genres. His first book, A Thief in the Night came out in 1918, possibly self-published. His last, An Account of Capers was published posthumously in 1988, a span of 70 years.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Mike Violano.
352 reviews18 followers
April 19, 2021
Building New York is an profusely illustrated time travel guide through the city’s landmarks. A treasure trove of black and white photos takes the reader through New York’s buildings, parks, tunnels, bridges, highways and two world’s fairs. The march through the centuries starts in the 1800s with the Statue of Liberty, the Brooklyn Bridge, the South Street harbor and elevated trains up and down Manhattan’s avenues. The lesser known Brooklyn Navy Yard where warships were built from 1812 until World War II gets into the picture as well.
Most of the book features the development of New York City urban architecture in the 20th century as captured in Getty Images. The mansions and clubs of the city’s wealthy class in the early 1900s mimicked French chateau and Italian palazzo styles; a number still remain lovingly preserved in the 21st century. By 1929 there were 180 buildings more than 20 stories high. Skyscrapers of the early 1900s evolved higher and higher. Construction pictures of the Woolworth Building, Chrysler Building, the Empire State Building and Rockefeller Center complete with the Radio City Music Hall are particularly fun to see.
Chapters cover the grand museums, soaring Cathedrals and Broadway theaters in Times Square. The TWA and Pam Am terminals built on landfill usher early International flights at Idelwild Airport (today’s JFK airport) on Jamaica Bay and the creation of LaGuardia Airport serving US domestic flights get photo and text treatment.
The last chapters are devoted to buildings from the 1950s and later such as the Seagram and Lever Buildings on Park Avenue, the World Trade Center and the Trump International Hotel on Columbus Square that replaced the Gulf and Western Building where I worked in the 1990s.
Profile Image for Jose.
1,233 reviews
October 25, 2021
Nice coffeetable book, some color pictures of recent buildings but I really Like the older stuff which is covered although not as I would want as a spread,very few are covered this way. Most buildings are covered briefly sometimes 2 or 3 pages with mostly black and white period photos. I did not care some for some of the text such as the bourgeois comment and subtle text regarding classes or Criticizing Robert Moses because of displaced families by the same token did point out FDR New Deal(Steal) gave him most of funds,also underhanded praise for The New Deal yet also touches briefly on Democrat-controlled Tammany Hall Corruption. Trump Building, Tower also featured which is great. Could have been a bigger book and featured alot more cartography and buildings,maps,cutaways. It is a nice but brief look at When NY was NY before it got ruined.
Profile Image for Jacqueline Hankinson.
78 reviews
February 23, 2017
Wonderful companion to peruse either before or after a visit to New York City. It brings the landmarks in up close and personal connection to the places you visit. As a real estate agent, I was interested in the real estate deal by Peter Minuit for the island Manna-Hattan. East River, Grand central Statio, Central Park, Elle Island, all of theses landmarks became more real to me. The photographs and text were enlightening and intriguing. A must read for visitors to the "greatest city on Earth".
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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