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Citigroup Center

153 East 53rd Street
New York City NY United States

Status: built
Construction Dates
  Began 1974
  Finished 1977
Floor Count 59
Basement Floors 3
Floor Area 146,658 m²
Building Uses
 - office
 - religious
 - restaurant
 - retail
Structural Types
 - highrise
 - atrium
 - tuned mass damper
 - narrow base
 - stilts
Architectural Style
 - late-modernist
Materials
 - aluminium
 - concrete
 - glass
 - steel

  Heights   Value Source / Comments  
Roof 278.9 m
Top of Slanted Crown
Main roof 230.1 m
Bottom of Slanted Crown

Description
Companies:
- Architect: Edward Larrabee Barnes Associates
- Design architect: Stubbins Associates
- Associate architect: Emery Roth & Sons
- Developer: Citibank
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Facts & Description:

- Counting spires and antennas the Citigroup Center is the 6th tallest building in New York City and 5th tallest in Midtown. Not counting spires and antennas the Citigroup Center is the 4th tallest in the city and 3rd tallest in Midtown.

- Being one of the first buildings in NYC to break out of the International \'box\' style, the structure is supported by four exterior megacolumns at the center of each side and an octagonal core. This arrangement permited the developers to construct a large tower overtop of St. Peter\'s Lutheran Church where columns would otherwise reside. Additional air-rights were purchased from the church and allowed the tower to become one of the tallest in the city. The four corners are cantilevered 72\' beyond the edge of the columns which rise 114\' above the plaza to the first office floor.

- Cost: $195 million (USD)

- This column arrangement is not without its problems though and the behaviour of the lateral load resisting system was unwittingly changed as a result of the contrator\'s suggestion to substitute bolted for welded connections.

- It was only after completion of the tower that the original designer suspected a potential danger in the bolted connection and convinced the owners to undertake strengthening the joints. The tower\'s bolted joints were too weak to withstand 70mph wind. During the summer of 1978, work crews welded plate reinforcing to key diagonals to make the structure safe. Six weeks into the repair Hurricane Ella heading right for New York City and the tower was only half done with the repairs. The City was just hours away from disaster but luckily Hurricane Ella turned eastward away from the city giving the constructon workers enough time to fix the tower. Even though nothing happened the crisis was kept hidden from the public for almost 20 years.

- The 160\' (48.8m) \"crown\" above the 59th floor was originally intended to provide high-rent condominium units but zoning bylaws prevented this development. The designers also contemplated using the sloped surface as a solar energy collector, but this proved unfeasible and the southerly orientation remained as part of the final design. The crown also houses one of the first Tuned Mass Dampers used in a tall building design (see also John Hancock Tower in Boston). The TMD comprises a solid 400-ton block of concrete resting on oil-film bearings and electronically contolled actuators over 800\' (240m) above the ground.

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Companies
Stubbins Associates  -  architect
  
   

© Hamburger

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