Rockefeller Center
Harrison, Wallace Kirkman; Hood, Raymond M.; Abramovitz, Max
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Date
1931-1940Description
Frontal view of the entrance off the Time-Life Building (now One Rockefeller Plaza), with two figures by Carl Jennewein symbolizing Industry (left) and Agriculture (right), installed in 1937; Principal architect was Raymond Hood, working with and leading three architectural firms, [ Reinhard & Hormeister; Corbett, Harrison, & MacMurray (1929-1935); Godley & Fouilhoux ], on a team that included a young Wallace Harrison. The firms were known as The Associated Architects. Rockefeller Center was acclaimed as a pioneering concept of commercial, multilevel, superblock planning; its Art Deco skyscrapers, including the RCA Building, are grouped around a sunken plaza. Many are embellished with landscaped terraces. Harrison and Abramovitz were later responsible for the more mundane towers (1959-1974) on the Sixth Avenue side of the complex. Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.groveart.com/ (accessed 1/9/2008)
Type of Work
skyscraper; office building; mixed-use developmentSubject
architectural exteriors, business, commerce and trade, cityscapes, City planning, Art Deco
Rights
Rights Statement
Licensed for educational and research use by the MIT community only