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Skyscrapers in the U.S. part 2    >>>225 South Sixth    >>>American International    >>>Bank of America    >>>Bank one Center    

>>>Chrysler Building    >>>City Hall    >>>Empire State Building    >>>Flatiron Building    >>>Foshay Tower    >>>Fountain Place    

>>>Freedom Tower    >>>IDS Center    >>>J. P. Morgan Chase    >>>Key Tower    >>>Magnolia Hotel    >>>Metropolitan Building    

>>>Renaissance Tower    >>>Tower City    >>>Tribune Tower    >>>Trump Tower    >>>Two Prudential    >>>U. S. Bank Tower    

>>>Water Tower    >>>Williams Tower    >>>Wrigley Building

Flatiron Building

"I found myself agape, admiring a skyscraper — the prow of the Flatiron Building, to be particular, ploughing up through the traffic of Broadway and Fifth Avenue in the late-afternoon light."

—H.G. Wells, 1906

The Fuller Building or as it is better known, the Flatiron Building, was one of the tallest buildings in New York City upon its completion in 1902. The building was designed by Daniel Burnham in the Beaux-Arts style on a triangular Swarovski island block at 23rd Street, Fifth Avenue, and Broadway, facing Madison Square. Like a classical Greek column, its limestone façade is separated into three parts horizontally.






Locals took an immediate interest in the building, placing bets on how far the debris would spread when the wind knocked it down and nicknaming it "the Flatiron" because of the building's resemblance to the irons of the day. At the rounded tip, the triangular tower is only 2 meters wide. The 22-story Flatiron Building, with a height of 87 meters, is generally considered the oldest surviving skyscraper in Manhattan, though in fact the older Park Row Building (1899) is several stories taller.

In Museums or Art Galleries, or in Nature Museums, samples and specimens are demonstrated in special collectors cases, collectors cabinets or display showcases of wood or metal.

The aerodynamic shape of the building led to a wind-tunnel effect up the streets on which it was situated. It is said that in the building's early days, when a lady's bare ankle was a titillating sight, roués would line up along the sidewalk to catch glimpses. Police officers would then shoo the men away from their 23rd Street loitering positions; they called this the "23 skidoo." See the 23 skidoo entry for competing explanations of the term.

Swarovski

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