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Waldorf Astoria New York

From Wikiquote
The Waldorf Astoria in New York

The Waldorf Astoria New York, located in Manhattan at 301 Park Avenue, is a luxury hotel and condominium apartment building. The building was the world’s tallest hotel from its completion in 1931 until 1957. The original Waldorf-Astoria, located on Fifth Avenue, opened in 1893 and was demolished in 1929.

Quotes

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  • How could one tell the story of the Empire State Building without evoking the Waldorf-Astoria? This seems almost impossible, as both edifices shared a site, at the corner of Fifth Avenue and Thirty-Fourth Street. This site, originally occupied by a small farm when it was bought by William Blackhouse Astor in 1827, has played a major role in the evolution of New York ... in the 1850s, Caroline Astor had her mansion built on half the site, and she would organize lavish balls for the city's wealthy families, known as the Four Hundred. In 1893, her nephew, John Jacob Astor, erected on the other half of the site the Waldorf Hotel, to which Caroline Astor replied in 1895 with the demolition of her own house, and the erection of her hotel, the Astoria. In 1897, the two hotels merged to become the prestigious Waldorf-Astoria. Thirty years later, the hotel aging and the price of land soaring, the Astors agreed to sell the whole site to real estate developers and decided to build a new Waldorf-Astoria uptown.
  • The Peacock Alley Restaurant is an extension of the Waldorf's plush lobby, and it is lovely: filled with art deco treasures, ceilings etched with glass panels, patterned parquet floors, and murals of white peacocks. The walls are covered with French walnut burl veneer panels inlaid with ebony. The pillars are Moroccan marble, and the ceiling and cornices are covered in gold and silver leaf. ...
    Peacock Alley was the name given to a 300-foot-long corridor with amber marble and mirrored walls that connected two hotel buildings owned by John Jacob Astor's great-grandsons, the feuding Astor cousins, William Waldorf Astor and John Jacob Astor IV. It was a place to see and be seen. On weekends, up to 36,000 men and women walked the alley, admiring themselves and one another in the mirrors, prompting the name "Peacock Alley" as a description of the strutting to and fro. The Peacock Alley Restaurant was named for that famous corridor.
  • The hyphenated Waldorf-Astoria was actually two interconnected Astor family hotels. Both were the work of New York architect, Henry J. Hardenbergh, who designed them in the German Renaissance style. The twelve-story Waldorf was built in 1893 by William Waldorf Astor. It was soon dwarfed and enfolded by the adjacent L-shaped sixteen-story Astoria, built by William's cousin, the former Caroline Schermerhorn. The hotels were joined in 1897. A nasty, long-running fight between Caroline and William led her to instruct Hardenbergh to design the Astoria so that it could be sealed off from the Waldorf at each floor.
  • ... In the record three-week-long on-site auction that followed the closing, souvenir collectors, sentimentalist, antiquarians, and dealers bid on more than twenty thousand lots of hotel property. ... The world-famous name "Waldorf-Astoria," which encapsulated the history of both an era and a dynasty, went for a token $1 to the builders of a new and otherwise unrelated hotel going up on Park Avenue. By February 1930 Henry Hardenbergh's great building, one of the architectural wonders of Manhattan, had been leveled.
  • Architect Henry Hardenbergh returned to design the bigger, grander Astoria, a task he fulfilled with considerable aplomb. Rising to a height of 18 stories and stretching 350 feet along West Thirty-fourth Street, it reduced the neighboring Waldorf to the status of poor relation. A mammoth cliff of dark red brick topped by a three-story mansard roof, the new Astoria dominated the view for blocks up and down Fifth Avenue, its sheer magnitude setting a new standard for grand hotels of the coming century.
  • The Waldorf Astoria hotel in Manhattan is known for its grand public spaces, like its two-tiered ballroom and vast lobby. But upstairs, in a windowless corner of the hotel's administrative offices, Deidre Dinnigan toils in a cramped room not much larger than a closet. Ms. Dinnigan, the hotel's archivist, is responsible for cataloging and researching more than 4,000 objects, from filigreed brass room numbers to yellowing advertisements from the 1950s. ,,,
    The 123-year-old Waldorf Astoria is one of the few hotels with an extensive archive, and possibly the only one to have its own archivist. But the future of Ms. Dinnigan's position, and the collection that she oversees, is uncertain. The hotel, which was bought by a Chinese insurance company two years ago for a record $1.95 billion, is to close in the spring to undergo a conversion. Most of the 1,413-room premises will be turned into luxury condominiums, with a much smaller hotel component.
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