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10 most striking Manhattan skyscrapers

Manhattan, on an island, is NYC's cultural, financial, and media center, known for its rapid growth, urbanization, and iconic skyscrapers.

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Manhattan Skyscraper 1

Manhattan, located on an island, is New York City’s center of culture, finance, media, and entertainment. Its indispensable role in shaping NYC, also known as the Big Apple, has led to its rapid growth and development. The influence of capitalism and the desire for impressive titles have driven Manhattan’s urbanization process, resulting in a city defined by rising skyscrapers that form a unique, unforgettable skyline.

Let’s explore the structures that give Manhattan its distinctive silhouette.

Empire State Building

Empire State Building
Duncan WJ Palmer

Height: 443.2 m / 1,454 ft
Completion Year: 1931
Architects: Shreve, Lamb & Harmon Associates, and builders Starrett Bros. & Eken

The Empire State Building was built to be the world’s tallest building. Although it lost that title in the early 1970s, it remains one of the world’s top attractions, welcoming more than 4 million visitors every year. The building, with its 103 floors, was constructed and completed in only 13 months. The Empire State Building hosts the Empire State Building Annual Run-Up, where contestants climb the 1860 steps up! Its 86th and 102nd observatory floors provide some of the best views in Manhattan.

The building was impacted by the Great Depression, resulting in its subdued Art Deco style. It was crafted with few decorative touches; however, it has a prominent texture characterized by light and shadow play on its setbacks towards the upper floors. The façade’s unique yellow-gray color comes from the Indiana limestone panels cladding. The installed antenna pushes the spire height to 443 m, and the building’s steel-frame construction helps it meet its height expectations.

One World Trade Center

One World Trade Center
GLady

Height: 540 m / 1,776 ft
Completion Year: 2014
Architects: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill

The One World Trade Center, the tallest building in the US, was built in place of the World Trade Center’s Twin Towers, which were targeted and destroyed in the tragic 9/11 attacks. Daniel Libeskind’s master plan design was selected as the winner of the competition that arose to rebuild the affected area. Although most of his ideas were altered, his vision of building a tower of 1776 feet (540 meters), referring to the Declaration of Independence’s year of approval, was maintained.

The primary considerations in the One World Trade Center, also known as the Freedom Tower, were safety and structural integrity as a precaution for another attack. The external steel columns support the building’s perimeter, and working with a concrete core of extreme strength and durability, the structure can withstand the collapse of any two columns on a floor. The system acts like a rope in tension that pulls the load to the core, helping it deal with “progressive collapse.”

The Freedom Tower is remarkable for its highly transparent façade, which creates a kaleidoscope effect that is prominent in NYC’s skyline.

Central Park Tower

Central Park Tower
Percival Kestreltail

Height: 472.4 m / 1,550 ft
Completion Year: 2020
Architects: Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture

Central Park Tower is the tallest residential building in the world and the second tallest building in the US, following the One World Trade Center. Providing an impeccable view of the Manhattan skyline and Central Park, The Central Park Tower is home to some of the world’s most luxurious residences. In compliance with its luxury living vision, the tower provides an elevated private club on its 100th floor, the Central Park Club, known for its extravagant services and vistas.

The Tower harvests solar, wind, and geothermal power as part of its sustainability strategy, an attractive feature for most of its affluent inhabitants.

The Woolworth Building

The Woolworth Building

Height: 241.4 m / 792 ft
Completion Year: 1913
Architect: Cass Gilbert

The Woolworth building was the world’s tallest building until The Empire State Building earned the title in 1931. Frank W. Woolworth, millionaire and owner of the infamous Woolworth Five and Dimes stores, dreamed of a luxurious, grand, monumental headquarters building and hired architect Cass Gilbert to make his vision come to life. Cass Gilbert’s expertise in Beaux-Arts and Gothic Revival styles resulted in a Gothic masterpiece, elegantly piercing the Manhattan skyline.

The Woolworth Building, also referred to as the “cathedral of commerce” due to its scale and style, is clad with white-glazed terracotta tiles and different terracotta over-scaled motifs for the window spandrels. The spire obtains its unique look from the green patina-ed copper and Gothic-style gargoyles and tracery. The interiors and their lavish finishing resemble a gothic cathedral; however, this was done in response to capitalism rather than religion.

Chrysler Building

Chrysler Building

Height: 318.9 m / 1,046 ft
Completion Year: 1930
Architect: William Van Alen

Renowned for its sunburst-patterned stainless-steel spire, The Chrysler Building is considered one of the leading Art Deco skyscrapers in the world. Commissioned by Walter P. Chrysler, founder of the Chrysler car company, he envisioned a building that was a monument to himself. In compliance with Chrysler’s request, the architect, William Van Alen, crafted the skyscraper with elegant symmetry, smooth geometries, and curved ornaments. The multiple setbacks of the building are characterized by different material usage, ranging from smooth black granite to white marble, white bricks, marble combined with relief patterns, and dark bricks. The layered setbacks resemble a ziggurat carrying the iconic spike.

The interiors further reflect the skyscraper’s lavish Art Deco style. Until 1945, an observation deck was open so visitors could enjoy the NY skyline. Currently, only the lobby is open to the public, and the rest of the building is reserved for office space.

Rockefeller Center’s Comcast Building

Rockefeller Center Comcast Building

Height: 259.1 m / 850 ft
Completion Year: 1933
Architect: Raymond Hood

If you have watched any movie or show set in New York at Christmas time, then you have definitely seen the Rockefeller Center. The Rockefeller Center is a complex with a main central plaza surrounded by multiple building complexes. The most striking mass in the complex is the Comcast Tower, the complex’s tallest tower, which forms the Rockefeller Center’s striking centerpiece.

The Comcast Tower is prominent in the Manhattan skyline and gives Rockefeller Center an aura of greatness. Within the complex, the Comcast Tower surrounds high-end shopping and dining facilities and an ice-skating ring.

30 Hudson Yards

30 Hudson Yards

Height: 387.1 m / 1,270 ft
Completion Year: 2019
Architects: Bill Pedersen and Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF)

It is almost impossible to miss the 30 Hudson Yards with its unique triangular observation deck, extending more than 1,100 ft (335 m) in the air. Its shaded glass façade blends in with its surroundings, reflecting the sky and appearing part of it. It is also the tallest tower in the Hudson Yards complex. It is home to numerous facilities ranging from residences and restaurants to medical facilities and hosts companies like Facebook and WarnerMedia. The complex is also Manhattan’s first LEED-GOLD Neighborhood Development.

15 Hudson Yards

15 Hudson Yards

Height: 278.6 m / 914 ft
Completion Year: 2018
Architects: Diller Scofidio + Renfro

The 15 Hudson Yards project was offered to Elizabeth Diller’s DS+R, which designed “The Shed,” one of Manhattan’s significant cultural projects and architectural innovations. DS+R wanted the neighbor of The Shed to respect its role and presence, ensuring that it would enrich its functionality. In light of this vision, the skyscraper’s lower floors were utilized for The Shed’s service spaces, and the developers were given the right to build upper floors instead.

The structure transitions smoothly from the rectangular Manhattan grid at the base to a sculpted cloverleaf shape at the top, with each quadrant aligned to provide panoramic diverse views of the Manhattan skyline.

One Vanderbilt

One Vanderbilt

Height: 435m / 1427 ft
Completion year: 2020
Architects: KPF

The One Vanderbilt, Midtown Manhattan’s tallest skyscraper, is located near Grand Central Terminal, one of NYC’s historic buildings. The terminal is a vital transportation hub and provides commercial spaces and a stunning architectural experience. Considering Grand Central’s influence on the area’s overall context, One Vanderbilt was designed to interact with the historic building and enhance its functionality.

One Vanderbilt connects to the terminal through direct access from its lobby to the station and through a pedestrian plaza on the ground level, creating a visual and spatial connection between the two masses. In addition, One Vanderbilt’s design respects the presence of the historic terminal through its materiality. The architecture team selected terracotta in the overhang, defining the lobby’s entrance, and curved pearl-colored terracotta panels as a prominent element in the skyscraper’s façade.

The building also boasts the prestigious LEED platinum and WELL platinum sustainability certifications in addition to its critical role in enriching the area’s context.

111 West 57th Street

111 West 57th Street

Height: 435.3 m / 1,428 ft
Completion Year: 2021
Architects: SHoP Architects

111 West 57th Street, commonly referred to as the Steinway Tower, is the world’s thinnest skyscraper. While it flaunts this impressive word record, the building’s unusual height-to-width proportions of 24:1 have earned it an unanticipated title, The Coffee Stirrer. Another striking title the Steinway Tower holds is NYC’s third tallest building.

High-strength concrete and a tuned mass damper supported and reduced the slender building’s swaying. The building’s setbacks resulted in a feather-like appearance in its uppermost part, unlike most skyscrapers, which have more proportional setbacks on each face of their structure. 111 West 57th Street responds to Manhattan’s historical context by the installation of elegant terracotta pilasters with a wave-like profile and smooth bronze-colored connecting decorative elements over the glass façade.

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1 thought on “10 most striking Manhattan skyscrapers”

  1. One World Trade Center is not known as The Freedom Tower. That name was dropped when the building was redesigned. Also Central Park Tower does not belong on this list. The building is nothing special.

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