digplanet beta 1: Athena
Share digplanet:

Agriculture

Applied sciences

Arts

Belief

Business

Chronology

Culture

Education

Environment

Geography

Health

History

Humanities

Language

Law

Life

Mathematics

Nature

People

Politics

Science

Society

Technology

The Hearst Tower
Hearstowernyc.JPG
Hearst Tower in 2006
General information
Type Office
Location 300 West 57 Street
New York City, U.S.
Coordinates 40°46′00″N 73°59′00″W / 40.766538°N 73.983452°W / 40.766538; -73.983452Coordinates: 40°46′00″N 73°59′00″W / 40.766538°N 73.983452°W / 40.766538; -73.983452
Construction started 30 April 2003
Completed 2006
Opening 2006
Cost $500 million ($6250/office sq.m.)[1]
Height
Roof 182 m (597 ft)
Technical details
Floor count 46
Floor area 80,000 square metres (861,100 sq ft)
Design and construction
Architect Foster + Partners
Gensler
Adamson Associates Architects
Structural engineer WSP Cantor Seinuk

The Hearst Tower is a building located at 300 West 57th Street, 959 8th Avenue, near Columbus Circle in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, New York. It is the world headquarters of the Hearst Corporation, bringing together for the first time their numerous publications and communications companies under one roof, including, among others, Cosmopolitan, Esquire, Marie Claire, Harper's Bazaar, Good Housekeeping and Seventeen.

Contents

History[edit]

The six-story base of the headquarters building was commissioned by the founder, William Randolph Hearst and awarded to the architect Joseph Urban. The building was completed in 1928[2] at a cost of $2 million and contained 40,000 square feet (3,700 m2). The original cast stone facade has been preserved in the new design as a designated Landmark site. Originally built as the base for a proposed skyscraper, the construction of the tower was postponed due to the Great Depression. The new tower addition was completed nearly eighty years later, and 2,000 Hearst employees moved in on 26 June 2006.[3]

The tower – designed by the architect Norman Foster, structurally engineered by WSP Cantor Seinuk, and constructed by Turner construction – is 46 stories tall, standing 182 meters (597 ft) with 80,000 square metres (860,000 sq ft) of office space. The uncommon triangular framing pattern (also known as a diagrid) required 9,500 metric tons (10,480 tons) of structural steel – reportedly about 20% less than a conventional steel frame. Hearst Tower was the first skyscraper to break ground in New York City after September 11, 2001. The building received the 2006 Emporis Skyscraper Award,[4] citing it as the best skyscraper in the world completed that year.

Hearst Tower is the first "green" high rise office building completed in New York City, with a number of environmental considerations built into the plan. The floor of the atrium is paved with heat conductive limestone. Polyethylene tubing is embedded under the floor and filled with circulating water for cooling in the summer and heating in the winter. Rain collected on the roof is stored in a tank in the basement for use in the cooling system, to irrigate plants and for the water sculpture in the main lobby. 85% of the building's structural steel contains recycled material. Overall, the building has been designed to use 26% less energy than the minimum requirements for the city of New York, and earned a gold designation from the United States Green Building Council’s LEED certification program, becoming New York City's first LEED Gold skyscraper.

The atrium features escalators which run through a 3-story water sculpture titled Icefall, a wide waterfall built with thousands of glass panels, which cools and humidifies the lobby air. The water element is complemented by a 70-foot-tall (21 m) fresco painting titled Riverlines by artist Richard Long

On June 12, 2013, two window cleaners were trapped on the window cleaning crane partway down from the top of the tower.[5] The unique zigzag grid on the building's exterior and "bird's mouth" divots on its corners necessitated development of a special scaffold for window washers.[6]

According to Curbed, "Designing a cleaning rig that could clean the Hearst Tower took the engineers at Tractel-Swingstage three years (and around $3 million); the company's vice-president of engineering had never seen anything like what Foster and Partners called the building's 'bird's mouths'."[7]

The resulting design incorporates "a rectangular steel box the size of a Smart car, supporting a 40-foot mast and hydraulic boom arm attached by six strands of wire rope to a telescopic cleaning basket, [and housing] a computer that monitors 67 electromechanical safety sensors and switches."[6] The device was installed in April 2005 on 420 feet of elevated steel track looping the roof of the tower.[6]

Gallery[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Notes
Further reading
  • Stichweh, Dirk. New York Skyscrapers. Prestel Publishing, Munich 2009, ISBN 3-7913-4054-9
Films
  • Up to the Sky: Hearst Tower, New York. Documentary by Sabine Pollmeier and Joachim Haupt. 2009

External links[edit]


Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hearst_Tower_(New_York_City) — Please support Wikipedia.
A portion of the proceeds from advertising on Digplanet goes to supporting Wikipedia.
9906 videos foundNext > 

Treasures of New York: Hearst Tower

Treasures of New York goes on a private tour inside Hearst's world headquarters to explore New York City's first completed "green" office building, a recent ...

Hearst Tower Window Washers Dangling From 44th Floor Fire Rescue On Scene In NYC

Hearst Tower Window Washer Dangling From 44th Floor Fire Rescue On Scene In NYC. A dramatic high-rise rescue is unfolding in Midtown as cops and firefighters...

NYC Hearst Tower Window Washers Dangling From 44th Floor Fire Rescue On Scene

NYC Hearst Tower Window Washers Dangling From 44th Floor Fire Rescue On Scene. Hearst Tower Window Washer Dangling From 44th Floor Fire Rescue On Scene In NY...

Hearst Tower Window Washers Dangling From 44th Floor Fire Rescue On Scene In NYC

Subscribe For The Best Videos https://www.youtube.com/TradeMastertm ( TradeMaster TM )

Hearst Tower rescue: Window washers left dangling 45 storeys up for 90 minutes after platform breaks

Window washers left hanging 45 stories up on the side of the Hearst Tower in Manhattan, New York, have been rescued by firefighters. The crew were working on...

Hearst Tower - green building in new York

This is the Hearst Tower and the view from the 46 stories building near Columbus Circle. Hearst Tower is a "green building" the first building to receive a G...

Hearst Tower

NYC's first LEED Gold certified skyscraper.

Norman Foster on Hearst Tower

Pritzker-Prize-winning architect Lord Norman Foster talks about the process of designing and building the LEED-certified Hearst Tower in New York in this sho...

Hearst Tower: Building Green

When built in 2006, Norman Foster's Hearst Tower in New York was at the time the most environmentally friendly building in the city. Video produced by McConn...

Hearst Tower in New York City

Hearst Tower in New York City. Soon to be featured in The Amazing Spider-Man.

9906 videos foundNext > 

2 news items

 
ArchDaily
Tue, 04 Jun 2013 18:03:55 -0700

The first “green” high rise office building to be completed in New York City, Hearst Tower accurately represents the talent and intellect that drives Foster and Partners toward innovative and ground breaking design. The building's symmetrically jagged ...

Popular Mechanics (blog)

Popular Mechanics (blog)
Wed, 12 Jun 2013 16:12:39 -0700

"It is certainly a dramatic job, hanging high above the street, and working away separated both from the people on the other side of the glass inside the Tower, and from the tiny figures on the street below." Comments Permalink. tags: hearst tower, new ...
Loading

Oops, we seem to be having trouble contacting Twitter

Talk About Hearst Tower (New York City)

You can talk about Hearst Tower (New York City) with people all over the world in our discussions.

Support Wikipedia

A portion of the proceeds from advertising on Digplanet goes to supporting Wikipedia. Please add your support for Wikipedia!