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(11/8/04)
Webmaster note: The following article was published on The New York Times
website on 11/8/04.
Change,
as It Does, Returns to Times Square
By DAVID W. DUNLAP
Photo credit: Nancy Siesel/The New York Times
The
old Studebaker Building, which rose at the dawn of the last century over
Long Acre Square (better known as Times Square), is about to come down.
An apartment building will probably take its place.
Built in 1902 as a showroom for Studebaker Brothers vehicles - luxurious
horse-drawn carriages like the Grand Victorias, dashing Spider Phaetons,
smart single-seat traps and, for the truly adventurous, those self-propelled
devices called automobiles - the once elegant 10-story building at 1600
Broadway, also facing 48th Street and Seventh Avenue, served over the
years as the backdrop for countless postcards and snapshots of the Great
White Way.
Its rooftop has been a pedestal for enormous signs advertising Maxwell
House, Chevrolet, Braniff and Sony. Long after the Studebaker roadsters
and coupes moved out, its ground floor was home to the Ripley Believe
It or Not! Odditorium ("Curioddities From 200 Countries"), Howard
Clothes and Tony Roma's A Place for Ribs.
Columbia Pictures may be said to have been born there, since it was in
an office at 1600 Broadway that Harry Cohn, Joseph Brandt and Jack Cohn
formed the C.B.C. Film Sales Company in 1920. Four years later, tired
of the nickname "Corned Beef and Cabbage," they renamed the
company Columbia. The building also housed the National Screen Service
Corporation, suppliers of movie posters and other promotional materials.
In other words, 1600 Broadway was one of New York's most familiar unknown
buildings.
As recently as the 1980's, its architectural integrity was intact and
it still looked much the way it did when Long Acre Square - like the London
street, Long Acre - was the heart of the harness and carriage trade.
But in the 1990's, the building fell under the shadow of the 26-story
Renaissance New York Hotel Times Square, immediately to the south. Its
deep cornice was stripped off and V-shaped sign boards sprouted from its
upper corners. Finally, much of its facade was wrapped in a four-story
vinyl billboard for Absolut vanilla vodka.
Now there is another addition: demolition scaffolding.
Sherwood Equities, the owner of the property and the developer of the
Renaissance hotel, has applied to the city's Buildings Department to construct
a 25-story, 136-unit apartment tower at 1600 Broadway. It would be designed
by Einhorn Yaffee Prescott Achitecture & Engineering, working with
Schuman Lichtenstein Claman Efron. It would rise 290 feet, almost three
times as high as the Studebaker Building, which is not a landmark.
Jeffrey Katz, the chief executive of Sherwood, said that he had seriously
explored renovating the 102-year-old structure but that doing so would
not be feasible.
"It's drastically out of place at this time," Mr. Katz said.
"It wants now to become something else."
Indeed, the history of the building itself is one of constant change.
Designed by James Brown Lord, the architect of the Appellate Division
courthouse on Madison Square, the Studebaker Building was notable for
its broadly arched ninth-floor windows framed by ornamental stonework
medallions. Its corners were slightly cut away, or chamfered.
Studebaker Brothers had been at Broadway and Prince Street, and its emphasis
soon shifted from horse-drawn carriages to motor cars.
"No other concern in the world manufactures and markets as great
a range of self-propelled vehicles," Studebaker boasted in a 1909
advertisement, which invited readers to its "mammoth emporium"
on 48th Street. "You should seek the Studebaker headquarters as a
haven of refuge from the silvery tongued salesmen who, not knowing themselves,
blindly essay to lead the blind."
Only a year later, Studebaker was on the move again, as the center of
gravity of Automobile Row shifted northward along Broadway. By the 1930's,
the clothier Joseph Hilton & Sons had an outpost at 1600 Broadway,
where it sold $22.50 worsted suits.
The base of the building was remodeled in 1939 for the Odditorium, exhibiting
the curios collected by Robert Ripley in his travels around the world.
"In addition to the inanimate objects," The New York Times reported,
"there also will be presented daily performances in which individuals
of varied talents will take part."
The Odditorium filed for bankruptcy within a year, after which Howard
Clothes moved in, offering $73.95 Dacron-worsted men's suits in the late
1960's.
Atop the building was a commanding sign position, especially in the days
when the block between 47th and 48th Streets was occupied by low buildings.
Sony had the last spectacular sign on the rooftop, which Mr. Katz, the
landlord, said was designed personally by Sony's co-founder, Akio Morita.
By agreement with Sherwood, the horizontal crossbar of the Sony sign went
dark when the Renaissance hotel grew high enough to obscure it. In recent
years, Sherwood has installed smaller vinyl signs on the rooftop, now
for Amstel and Heineken.
Sherwood purchased the building in 1986 from the Robbins family, which
controlled National Screen Service. "We took it over it at a low
point, when Times Square was the old Times Square," Mr. Katz said.
"When we bought it, we knew we wouldn't develop it for a long time."
But that time has come. Because Times Square has changed again.
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