A view from “The View” – 1540 Broadway

According to Wikipedia:

The former Bertelsmann Building, now known as 1540 Broadway, is a 44-story, 733 foot (223 m) office tower in Times Square in Manhattan, New York City, standing at West 45th Street. The building was the North American headquarters of media conglomerate Bertelsmann from 1992 until the company vacated and sold the property, of which they occupied all office-use floors, in 2004. The building housed US satellites of central functions such as Corporate Development, Corporate Communications and the Office of the Chairman and CEO, as well as serving as worldwide headquarters for the Bertelsmann Music Group and Bertelsmann Book Group (what has later taken on the umbrella brand name Random House). Today’s office tenants include Viacom, China Central Television, Yahoo, KEMP Technologies, Adobe and Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman. The building retained the Bertelsmann name and signage facing Broadway until its eventual removal in late 2013.

Started in 1989 and finished in 1990, the tower is one of the few in Times Square to contain class A office space. Also found in the tower is Planet Hollywood, and commercial tenants MAC Cosmetics, Disney Store, and Forever 21.

In the 1990s the Bertelsmann subsidiary Random House looked to build a skyscraper across 45th Street from its parent and be connected to it via a neon-lighted bridge across 45th Street. When the deal fell through it built the Random House Tower 10 blocks uptown.

Loew’s State Theatre (1921) formerly occupied the site of the Bertelsmann Building. Before Loew’s, the Bartholdi Inn (1899), then New York’s best-known theatrical boarding house, was located there.

According to Anthony Slide’s History of Vaudeville:

The last major theatrical boarding house in New York was the Bartholdi Inn, which was opened in 1899 by Mme. Bartholdi on two upper floors of the building at 1546 Broadway, the ground floor of which was occupied by Child’s Restaurant. When Bartholdi became ill, the establishment was taken over by her daughter Polly and by 1906, it had expanded to one hundred rooms on the upper floors of three buildings at West 45th Street and Broadway. Among the Bartholdi Inn’s tenants were Pearl White, D.W. Griffith, Mack Sennett, Charlie Chaplin, Eva Tanguay, Nat Wills, and the chorus girls from the Ziegfeld Follies. It as here also the the first motion picture fraternal organization, the Screen Club, was founded on Labor Day 1912.

The establishment closed on February 1, 1920, shortly before the buildings which it occupied were demolished to make way for the new State Theatre. The inn’s furnishings were auctioned off on February 4, 1920. At its passing, Variety commented, “When the Bartholdi Inn passes into oblivion there will never be another like it. The day of the intimate theatrical boarding house in New York is gone forever, the numerous hotels in the theatrical district supplying everything the Inn could supply perhaps better – but without the spirit of comradeship”.

Taken with a Sony RX-100 M3.

A view from “The View” – One Worldwide Plaza

Up next is One Worldwide Plaza. According to Wikipedia:

One Worldwide Plaza is the largest tower of a three-building, mixed-use commercial and residential complex completed in 1989, in the New York City borough of Manhattan, known collectively as Worldwide Plaza. One Worldwide Plaza is a commercial office tower on Eighth Avenue. Two Worldwide Plaza is a residential condominium tower west of the center of the block, and Three Worldwide Plaza is a low-rise condominium residential building with street level stores on Ninth Avenue, to the west of the towers. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill was the designer for the office complex, and the residential complex was designed by Frank Williams. The complex, whose component skyscrapers are among the list of tallest buildings in New York City, occupies an entire city block, bounded by Eighth Avenue, Ninth Avenue, 49th Street, and 50th Street. Located on the west side of Eighth Avenue, One Worldwide Plaza is built on the site of New York City’s third Madison Square Garden.

Skidmore, Owings and Merrill have designed many well known buildings including the Burj Khalifa, currently the tallest building in the world. Frank Williams also designed the ‘W Hotel – Times Square‘, which was the subject of the previous post.

Taken with a Sony RX-100 M3.

A view from “The View” – W Hotel – Times Square

In an earlier post (See: Book of Mormon) I mentioned that we went into New York City to celebrate my wife’s birthday, and that we had eaten at “The View” restaurant perched on top of the Marriott Marquis Hotel. The restaurant revolves slowly (it takes it about one hour to complete a full revolution) and as it does you get views of the surrounding skyscapers – from a perspective quite different from that you get a street level.

This is the “W Hotel – Times Square“, recognizable from the huge letter “W” on top of it.

According to Wikipedia:

W Hotels was launched in 1998 with the W New York, a conversion of the old Doral Inn hotel at 541 Lexington Avenue in Manhattan. The first few W hotels were mainly conversions of existing hotels already within the Starwood group. The W expanded its number of flagship properties quickly in the United States over the next decade and is now focusing its expansion efforts abroad for the most part.

W opened its first hotel in Europe in Istanbul in May 2008. The hotel, located in the renovated Akaretler Row Houses, a group of historic structures built in the 1870s to house the employees of the Dolmabahçe Palace, blends the traditional Ottoman design of the row houses with the contemporary feel of the luxury hotel chain. The W Barcelona hotel was W’s first in Western Europe and opened in October 2009. It features a futuristic design by architect Ricardo Bofill in the shape of a sail and, standing 26 stories tall, it can be seen from all over the city. At the moment, the W Doha Hotel and Residences is the only W property in the Middle East and North Africa, though there are several properties currently in development for the United Arab Emirates and India. W’s most notable properties under-development includes the 62 storey W MUMBAI also known as Namaste Tower.

For example, the lobbies of all the hotels are known as the “Living Room.” W Hotels attempt to include the letter W wherever possible – the swimming pool is known as “Wet”, the concierge is known as “Whatever Whenever”, the laundry bag is known as “Wash” and so on. Many of the W properties are accompanied by their well regarded “Bliss” spas.

Taken with a Sony RX-100 M3

Clouds over the Croton Reservoir

Taken with a Sony RX-100 M3 from the top of the New Croton Dam looking North-East. In the distance Hemlock Brook Preserve, which the Westchester Land Trust describes as follows:

This 14-acre preserve was donated by Walter P. Lewisohn in 1971 to The Nature Conservancy. In 2003 The Nature Conservancy transferred the preserve to Westchester Land Trust. The preserve contains a deep, hemlock-lined ravine. A small stream flows through the ravine and is surrounded by a mixed hardwood forest. Great-horned owls have been observed on the preserve. An old stone fireplace and wooden bench can be found in the middle of the preserve, near the brook. A pool of water forms at the back of the preserve, near a stone dam. Although small, Hemlock Brook Preserve is unusually beautiful. With the brook itself slicing through the hemlock ravine, it feels more like the Adirondacks than the lower Hudson Valley. The preserve is only half a mile from the Croton Reservoir and helps protect water quality in the reservoir. In June 2010, two dozen volunteers from Swiss Re in Armonk joined our staff on a beautiful day to create a new trail that loops through the preserve.

Martin Parr curates an exhibition of David Hurn’s Swaps

David Hurn Wild pony colt. Cold tourists in the rain in the background. Brecon Beacons, Wales, Great Britain. 1974. © David Hurn | Magnum Photos

Looks interesting! Pity I’m not in the UK at the moment.

On the occasion of the 70th anniversary of Magnum Photos, Magnum’s current President Martin Parr has curated David Hurn’s print swaps collection.

On the occasion of the 70th anniversary of Magnum Photos, and to celebrate the community of photographers of which he is a part, Magnum’s current President Martin Parr has curated a selection of the print swaps from which David Hurn has built an extraordinary collection.

With a career spanning over six decades, Hurn, like Parr, is also a connoisseur and patron of documentary photography. Over the years he has amassed more than 600 prints, from the 19th century to the present – and most of his collection was built via swapping with fellow photographers. “I have never chosen a print that has not enriched my life,” says Hurn.

Source: David Hurn’s Swaps • Magnum Photos

The exhibition will take place May 18-21 at Photo London, The Embankment Gallery West, Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 1LA, United Kingdom.