| Location |
| 390 Park Avenue between 52nd and 53rd streets |
| Metro |
| 5th Av/53rd St (E,F) |
| Info |
| Influential glass-walled office building |
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At only 302 ft, the Lever House is a small building by Manhattan standards,
but the glass-walled skyscraper marked a turning point in American office
architecture. The
Lever House was constructed in 1952 as the new headquarters for the Lever
Brothers Company, the biggest manufacturers of soap and detergents. They
commissioned Skidmore, Owings and Merrill to build a modern, clean and
American building. Gordon Brunshaft, the leading architect, based its
design on earlier ideas from European modernist architects such as Mies
van der Rohe and Le Corbusier, but it was the first time their radical
ideas were implemented in a corporate office tower.
Gordon Brunshaft made the tower a slab with its narrow
side towards the street. The slab is counter-posed to a horizontal slab
which floats on a series of columns. The horizontal mezzanine is cut out
in the center, creating a central courtyard. Due to its inefficient use
of the available space (only 25 percent of the surface is used for the
tower), the suburban-style layout has not been copied much, but its curtain
glass office tower became the de facto standard for modern office buildings
in the United States.
The fact that the tower now seems like just one of so
many office towers shows how much it has been copied. When it was built
in 1952 it was the first glass-walled building amid the masonry structures
of residential Park Avenue. It was soon
followed by many other modern office buildings, among them Mies van der
Rohe's In recognition of its historical importance, the Lever House was
designated an official landmark in 1992. The building was renovated in
1998 by SOM and - appropriately for the headquarters of a soap company
- is again as squeaky clean as ever.
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