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Whats your favorite "vintage" Skyline or building?

Magus

Practically Family
Messages
655
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Southern California
I am working on a project and wondering what people prefer. I rather like the Chrysler over the Emire Stat myself. And City hall in Los Angeles is nice as well.

So...whats your vote?
 

Tomasso

Incurably Addicted
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13,719
Location
USA
I love the Wrigley Building at night.

city_500x752_353.jpg
 

Tomasso

Incurably Addicted
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13,719
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USA
LizzieMaine said:
The Palmolive Building in Chicago is pretty nice too --

palmolive1a.jpg

Looks like the Playboy Building(1967-90).;) Chicago is loaded with architectural gems from the Golden Era.

The Chicago Board of Trade Building is an icon of this ilk. She really looked fine in the "Untouchables".

ChicagoBoardofTrade-001.jpg
 

The Reno Kid

A-List Customer
Messages
362
Location
Over there...
Chrysler Building!

I've developed an appreciation for some of the more mundane local buildings (at least the ones that haven't been torn down in the name of "progress"). But as for the real American icons, it's gotta be the Chrysler Building.
 

The Wolf

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,153
Location
Santa Rosa, Calif
another vote

Even though the Empire State Building was reputed to be Doc Savage's HQ I'm a big fan of the Chrysler Building. I appreciate the modern gargoyles ( the eagle heads).
The Flat Iron building is also wonderful. Times Square in the golden age looked great, when neon signs looked like the future instead of a palmistry sign.
Let me also give a vote for the ferry building in San Francisco. Pulling up to it with the city growing from behind it. You can feel the excitement.

Sincerely,
The Wolf
 

Daisy Buchanan

My Mail is Forwarded Here
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3,332
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BOSTON! LETS GO PATRIOTS!!!
I have to agree with HJ about the Chrysler Building. And no, I'm not just being an agreeable "fake wife", I really love the aesthetic of this building.
On another note, one can't get much more art deco than South Beach in Miami. I know this isn't a skyline, but wow, what a great group of buildings, big and small. Architects have done a fantastic job preserving them, and when going there it's like being transplanted to another time.
 

Tomasso

Incurably Addicted
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13,719
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USA
Magus said:
I rather like the Chrysler over the Emire Stat myself.

So...whats your vote?

I would pick the Chrysler Building over the Empire State Building. I love that spire and I greatly prefer its lobby.
 

Benny Holiday

My Mail is Forwarded Here
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3,758
Location
Sydney Australia
The Museum of Contemporary Art, Circular Quay

Great idea for a thread, Magus. I love the MCA (it used to be the home of the Maritime Services Board) because it's so classically Art Deco, and it was thus one of the first Deco buildings I recognised as such when I first fell in love with the style.

I've always nicknamed it "the Dailey Planet" because it looks like it's appeared straight out of an old Superman serial.

MCA2.jpg
 

Twitch

My Mail is Forwarded Here
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3,133
Location
City of the Angels
The Chrysler build in without a doubt is the most recognizable edifice in the US. I always scan any movies of the NYC skyline shots for it.
 

Tomasso

Incurably Addicted
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USA
Twitch said:
The Chrysler build in without a doubt is the most recognizable edifice in the US.

Washington D.C. may have a few buildings that are a bit more recognizable.
 

Hondo

One Too Many
Messages
1,655
Location
Northern California
SF ferry building

I'm not into buildings, none the less they are awesome once you know a bit about their history, enjoyed all submitted photos, very cool.
Being on the West coast, I've fond memories of the SF ferry building, (and that fog horn) my how the times have changed, thanks
;)

(stroll down after photo)

SFferrybuilding.jpg


Survived the 1906 earthquake with barely a scratch.
- Inspired by La Giralda, bell tower of Seville Cathedral.
- After the 1906 earthquake the clock remained stuck at 5:16 for a year.
- Designed in late 1892 by A. Page Brown (1859-1896), graduate of Cornell University, not long after moving to San Francisco in 1889.
- Edward Swain supervised the completion of the Ferry Building after the architect was killed in an accident in January, 1896.
- Designated as a landmark in 1977 by the American Society of Civil Engineers.
- Re-opened March 21, 2003 after US$75,000,000 restoration.
- Once the transportation hub of San Francisco where 170 ferry boats a day brought commuters and transcontinental railroad passengers to the foot of Market Street where the city streetcar lines ended.
- Built as the Union Depot and Ferry House.
- The clock tower has a steel frame with self-supporting sandstone walls that was strengthened after the 1906 earthquake and reclad in reinforced concrete painted to match the sandstone base.
- This structure was one of the first steel frame buildings in San Francisco.
- The clock, with its four 22-foot diameter clock faces, was officially re-started on June 17, 2003 at 12 noon by Mayor Willie Brown.
- Designated City Landmark #90 on July 9, 1977.
- The Grand Nave of the Ferry Building is 660 feet long, 45 feet wide and fully skylit.
- At one time the Ferry Building was one of the most used transportation halls in the world.
- The second and third floors offer over 170,000 square feet of premium office space with dramatic views.
- The completion of the Bay Bridge (1936) doomed the ferries and as a result the Ferry Building's role.
 

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