New York's Modernism Architecture City Guide: Beaux-Arts, Art-Deco, International Style, Brutalism and Organic Architecture (2024)

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New York's Modernism Architecture City Guide: Beaux-Arts, Art-Deco, International Style, Brutalism and Organic Architecture

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  • Written by Gili Merin

“A hundred times have I thought New York is a catastrophe, and fifty times: It is a beautiful catastrophe.” Le Corbusier. This architecture city guide celebrates Modernism in one of the world's greatest cities: New York. We embark on an architectural journey through nearly a century of innovative, revolutionary architecture: from early 20th century, revivalist Beaux-Arts; to machine-age Art Deco of the Inter-War period; to the elegant functionalism of the International Style; to the raw, exposed Brutalism characteristic of the Post-War years; and, finally, to the splendid forms of organic architecture. From world-renowned landmarks to undiscovered jewels, we invite you to explore the 2,028 blocks that make Manhattan an architectural mecca for citizens around the world.

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Read more to discover Modern New York's city guide.

Beaux-Arts

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Grand Central Station / Reed and Stem, Warren and Wetmore (1903). Image © Flickr CC license / Bobby Bradley

Beaux-Arts (literally meaning “fine arts”), a dominant style in large-scale public institutions in New York City between the years 1890-1920, is characterized by sculptured ornaments, such as entablatures, columns, flying buttresses, gargoyles, and architraves, reminiscent of the Italian Baroque and Rococo styles. Although the buildings’ heavily ornamented facades appear emblematic of seemingly old-fashioned architecture, they actually embraced modern construction techniques, such as the use of steel-framed construction

Two great examples of the style were built by École des Beaux-Arts graduates, who applied a French aesthetic to the local New York landscape: The New York Public Library (1911) and Grand Central Station (1913). Perhaps the most accessible concentration of information in the world, The New York Public Library is appropriately housed in a grand marble structure, its Fifth Avenue facade decorated with Greek Corinthian columns, iconic lions, and sculptured niches. However, the facade is still rather “modernly” functional, as its form serves to distinguish the different uses of the library’s internal program (for example, pediments mark the reading rooms, while long, narrow windows, the book stacks). Only two blocks away, Grand Central Station’s monumental, south-facing facade is a symmetrical composition of triumphal arches and a colossal central clock. The vast, 85-meter-long main concourse is lit by six high-arched windows, and its concave, starry ceiling was painted in 1912 by the artist Paul César Helleu. Its innovative, passenger-oriented design, based on a series of ramps rather than staircases (thus facilitating travelers carrying wheeled suitcases), produced a highly efficient circulation system that has proven quite influential in modern-day transport hub design.

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The US Custom House / Cass Gillbert (1907) . Image Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
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The Flatiron Building / Daniel Burnham (1902). Image Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Check out more examples of Beaux-Arts:

  • Bayard-Condict Building / Louis Sullivan (1899) / 65 Bleecker Street
  • The Flatiron Building / Daniel Burnham (1902) / 175 Fifth Avenue
  • The U.S. Custom House / Cass Gillbert (1907) / 1 Bowling Green
  • Battery-Maritime Building / Walker and Morris (1909) / 10 South St

Art-Deco

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The Chrysler Building / William Van Alen (1930). Image © New York Architecture

Art-Deco replaced the revival language of Beaux-Arts and is perhaps the last extravagant decorative style, dominant in the Inter-War years of the 1920s and 1930s. Inspired by the machine age, Art-Deco is characterized by symmetrical, repetitive, geometrical ornamentation. Interestingly, the Art-Deco skyscraper, with its typically tapered top, was directly influenced by zoning regulations passed in 1916, which forced the setbacks of high-rise buildings in order to allow natural light to reach the streets below (the regulation would inspire many of New York’s future innovative architectural forms as well).

Art-Deco widely embraced mass production, which can be witnessed in the atypically rapid construction of two of New York’s most iconic skyscrapers: The Chrysler Building (1930) and The Empire State Building (1931, completed in only fifteen months). The stainless steel Chrysler Building is topped with a crown of chevrons whose“stylized sunburst motif” distinguishes it within the city skyline. The building was the first in the world to reach a height of 1,000 feet, making it the tallest building in the world at the time. It was surpassed a mere eleven months later by the 102-story Empire State Building, which held the record for 42 years, until the 1973 construction of the World Trade Center.

The New Yorker Hotel / Sugarman and Berger (1930. Image Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
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Check out more examples of Art Deco:

  • Paramount Building / Rapp and Rapp (1927) / 1501 Broadway
  • The New Yorker Hotel / Sugarman and Berger (1930) / 481 8th Ave
  • 500 Fifth Avenue / Shreve Lamb & Harmon Associates (1931) / 500 Fifth Avenue
  • The GE Building / Raymond Hood (1933) / 30 Rockefeller Plaza

The International Style

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Seagram Building / Mies van der Rohe (1958). Image

In the 1950s New York’s decorative styles were abandoned in favor of the rational style emerging from Germany’s Bauhaus school: the International Style, characterized by simplified geometry, a lack of ornamentation, the glorification of functionality, and an emphasis on standardisation. In fact, the “International Style” was first officially recognized and institutionalized in New York, during the 1932 MoMA exhibition curated by Philip Johnson and Henry-Russell Hitchco*ck, which laid the principles for the canon of Modern architecture.

The Seagram Building (1958) and Lever House (1951), located on either side of Park Avenue, are two icons of the International Style in New York. Mies Van Der Rohe’s Seagram Building, a 38-story glass and steel office building, sought to outwardly express its interior structure through the use of non-load bearing, bronze I-beams on its facade. Furthermore, the building is set 100 feet from the street edge, which not only created a highly-frequented public plaza but also pioneered a new public-oriented typology within the city grid. Across the street, Lever House, by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, is 24-story stainless steel and heat-resistant glass structure which sits atop an elevated two-story rectangular base; raised on pilotis, the horizontal base provides a shaded public plaza, as well as a mediator to the interior lobby. The Seagram Building and Lever House, with their use of modern materials and techniques as well as their integration of public space, became the prototype for the new, corporate, functional aesthetic of the modern skyscraper.

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Check out more examples of The International Style:

  • UN headquarters / Wallace K. Harrison (1952) /1 United Nations Plaza
  • MetLife building / Walter Gropius, Pietro Belluschi (1963) / 200 Park Avenue
  • The Ford Foundation Building / Kevin Roche (1968) / 320 E 43rd St

Brutalism

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The Brutalist Style in New York referred to as “New-Brutalism” echoed the avant-garde Corbusian use of exposed concrete, or "béton brut,” which rejected the International Style’s aesthetics. Brutalism suggested a new “honest” philosophy towards materials, emphasizing rough texture and grand-gestured geometry. Many Brutalist buildings, constructed between 1950 and 1970, have proven less than popular with New Yorkers, and demolition is often chosen over restoration; The Holy Trinity Chapel in New York University (1964), for example, a trapezoid-shaped structure of exposed concrete and stained glass, was described in 2010, a year prior to its demolition, as an "awkward Modernism from a time when the search for form preoccupied American architects.”

Brutalism has proven more successful in industrial structures, such as The Westyard Distribution Center, which, originally built as a factory, was later converted into an efficient office space. The 15-story concrete building’s sharp, angular facade, recognizable from a distance, can be viewed in its full glory from the High Line. Another Brutalist landmark, constructed of granite rather than concrete, is the Whitney Museum (1966). Designed by Marcel Breuer, the museum’s cantilevered spaces maximized the narrow site’s capacity for gallery space; its internal volumes can constantly be transformed thanks to portable partitions. The inverted ziggurat-shaped museum, with its seven polygonal windows, creates a strong innovative statement.

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Whitney Museum / Marcel Bruer (1966). Image © Flickr CC license / Francis Wu
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The Police Headquarters / Gruzen and Partners (1973) . Image

Check out more examples of Brutalism:

  • The University Village / James Ingo Freed & I. M. Pei (1967) / 505 LaGuardia Place
  • The Police Headquarters / Gruzen and Partners (1973) / one police plaza
  • Manhattan Church of Christ / Eggers & Higgins (1967) / 48 East 80th Street
  • AT&T Long Lines Building / John Carl Warnecke (1973) / 33 Thomas Street

Organic Architecture

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Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum / Frank Lloyd Wright (1959). Image © Flickr CC license / Paul Arps

We end our tour with the expressive, amorphic style that attempted, throughout the decades of Modernist hegemony, to propose a new language, characterized by organically-inspired forms (made possible due to the use of easily-molded reinforced concrete) that result in unusual internal volumes. The flamboyant, flame-shaped form of the Civic Center Synagogue is such an example, presenting an ingenious solution to the narrow urban site; as a result, the Synagogue’s religious program can be fulfilled in an inviting, sky-lit space.

However, the greatest monument to Organic Architecture in New York, and perhaps the world, is The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, the building was conceived as a “temple for the spirit.” Made of reinforced concrete, the cylinder-shaped structure’s swirling curves stand in outspoken contrast to the New York grid. The interior’s spiral ramps, which create a continuum throughout the museum’s six floors, encircle the 92-foot wide atrium, which is covered by a domed, glass skylight. Most recently, the atrium was dramatically transformed by the light artist, James Turrell, who created what he described as “an architecture of space created with light.”

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Civic Center Synagogue / William H. Breger (1967). Image © Flickr CC license / Matt Green

Check out the following trailer to the 1998 documentary The Cruise, sharing the story of a Double-Decker New York bus and its tour guide, whose relationship with the city is at once full of love and borderline insane.

Complete list of buildings:

  • Bayard-Condict Building / Louis Sullivan (1899) / 65 Bleecker Street
  • The Flatiron Building / Daniel Burnham (1902) / 175 Fifth Avenue
  • Grand Central Station / Reed and Stem, Warren and Wetmore (1903) / 89 East 42nd Street
  • The U.S. Custom House / Cass Gillbert (1907) / 1 Bowling Green
  • Battery-Maritime Building / Walker and Morris (1909) / 10 South St
  • The New York Public Library / John Merven Carrère and Thomas Hastings (1911) / 476 5th Ave
  • Paramount Building / Rapp and Rapp (1927) / 1501 Broadway
  • The New Yorker Hotel / Sugarman and Berger (1930) / 481 8th Ave
  • The Chrysler Building / William Van Alen (1930) / 405 Lexington Ave
  • The Empire State Building / Shreve, Lamb and Harmon (1931) /350 5th Ave
  • 500 Fifth Avenue / Shreve Lamb & Harmon Associates (1931) / 500 Fifth Avenue
  • The GE Building / Raymond Hood (1933) / 30 Rockefeller Plaza
  • UN headquarters / Wallace K. Harrison (1952) /1 United Nations Plaza
  • Seagram Building / Mies van der Rohe (1958) / 375 Park Avenue
  • MetLife building / Walter Gropius, Pietro Belluschi (1963) / 200 Park Avenue
  • The Ford Foundation Building / Kevin Roche (1968) / 320 E 43rd St
  • Whitney Museum / Marcel Bruer (1966) / 945 Madison Avenue
  • The University Village / James Ingo Freed & I. M. Pei (1967) / 505 LaGuardia Place
  • AT&T Long Lines Building / John Carl Warnecke (1973) / 33 Thomas Street
  • The Police Headquarters / Gruzen and Partners (1973) / one police plaza
  • Manhattan Church of Christ / Eggers & Higgins (1967) / 48 East 80th Street
  • Westyard Distribution Center / Davis, Brody & Associates (1970) / 450 West 33rd Street
  • Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum / Frank Lloyd Wright (1959) /1071 5th Ave
  • Civic Center Synagogue / William H. Breger (1967) / 49 white street

Cite: Gili Merin. "New York's Modernism Architecture City Guide: Beaux-Arts, Art-Deco, International Style, Brutalism and Organic Architecture" 30 Jul 2022. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/429668/architecture-city-guide-modern-new-york&gt ISSN 0719-8884

New York's Modernism Architecture City Guide: Beaux-Arts, Art-Deco, International Style, Brutalism and Organic Architecture (2024)

FAQs

What architectural style is New York City? ›

Today, the most famous skyscrapers of NYC, including the Chrysler Building (1930), the Empire State Building (1931), and the Rockefeller Center (1939) are examples of Art Deco. These buildings along with countless apartment houses and public buildings have made NYC the Art Deco capital of the world.

What art deco architecture is in New York City? ›

Of all the world's great cities, none is so defined by its Art Deco buildings as is New York with its noble Art Deco skyscrapers, such as Rockefeller Center, Radio City Music Hall, the Empire State Building and the Chrysler Building, along with countless other apartment houses, public buildings, and theaters found ...

What architectural style is also known as Beaux-Arts style? ›

Also known as Beaux-Arts Classicism, Academic Classicism, or Classical Revival, Beaux Arts is a late and eclectic form of Neoclassicism. It combines classical architecture from ancient Greece and Rome with Renaissance ideas.

What is the Beaux-Arts style 1885 1930? ›

Architecture and opulence of the American Renaissance, 1885-1930. The Beaux-Arts style uses formal symmetry, Italian Renaissance form, and classical Greek and Roman decorative elements such as columns, pediments, and balustrades to create a grandiose and imposing architectural statement.

Is New York an Art Deco city? ›

The Big Apple's iconic skyline has evolved plenty in the past 100 years, but it was the art deco movement in the 1920s and 1930s that really saw it get lit up. From the Chrysler Building to the Empire State Building, New York's art deco architecture is as iconic today as it was back in the day.

Is New York known for its architecture? ›

The Highrise Group

New York City, often called the "Concrete Jungle," is renowned for its iconic skyline, a testament to the city's rich architectural history. The city's buildings, from towering skyscrapers to historic brownstones, tell a story of innovation, resilience, and cultural diversity.

What is art deco architecture known for? ›

Art Deco is a popular design style of the 1920s and '30s characterized especially by sleek geometric or stylized forms and by the use of man-made materials.

Where is art deco architecture most commonly used? ›

Many of the iconic buildings in New York City were built at the height of the Art Deco movement. In countries such as India, Cuba, and the Philippines, Art Deco architecture continued to be popular and commonplace well into the 1960s. Dozens of cities in the world are heralded for their Art Deco architecture.

What is the oldest architecture in New York City? ›

The Wyckoff House, NYC's Oldest Building, Dates Back To 1652.

What is Beaux-Arts architecture made of? ›

There is a heavy focus on materials such as stone, marble, and limestone. Formal gardens, well-landscaped grounds, and many other details signify Beaux-Arts. What is Beaux-Arts style also known as? Beaux-Arts style is also sometimes referred to as Academic Classicism, Classical Revival, and Beaux-Arts Classicism.

What is Beaux-Arts tradition architecture? ›

Beaux-Arts architecture was a classically-inspired style associated with Second Empire France and Gilded Age America. It was based on the teachings of the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Beaux-Arts architecture was a classically-inspired style popular in the second half of the 19th century and early 20th century.

What is the difference between Beaux-Arts and Art Deco? ›

Art Deco favours geometrical angles with empasis placed on verticality whereas Beaux Arts encompasses classical elements which favour pillars and pilasters. Art Deco finishes are smooth with minimal decoration in comparison to the highly decorative finishes favoured by Beaux Arts.

What is the history of Beaux-Arts architecture? ›

Influenced by classical Roman and Greek forms, Beaux-Arts emerged as the dominant style of architecture in the United States between the late 19th century and early 20th century. Its emergence in Chicago is chiefly due to it being the style of choice for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition.

What are the characteristics of Beaux-Arts? ›

Beaux Arts architecture is characteristically symmetrical, grandiose, elaborate, and reminiscent of its formal roots. Its elements are nearly always opulent. Some of the architectural characteristics often seen in the style include balconies, columns, pediments (triangular gables), and balustrades (vertical posts).

What architectural style is Manhattan? ›

The Midtown Manhattan skyline at night from the Empire State Building. Shown are clear examples of Art Deco and Modern architecture. New York has architecturally significant buildings in a wide range of styles spanning distinct historical and cultural periods.

What are New York style homes called? ›

Townhouses and Brownstones were built all over New York City in the mid to late 1800s. These 19th-century homes are still around today and are commonly used for residences.

Does New York have Gothic architecture? ›

Examples of Gothic architecture in NYC can be found throughout the city, including the Federal Hall National Memorial, Dakota Apartments, and historic Trinity Church.

What is the current architectural style called? ›

Contemporary architecture refers to the current style of architecture. Buildings from the late 20th century to the present moment that include elements such as unconventional or non-linear forms, innovative materials, and sustainable building practices may be referred to as works of contemporary architecture.

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