william van alen [1883–1954] the chrysler building, 1926–1930

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WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

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Page 1: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954]

The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

Page 2: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The Chrysler Building could only have been constructed in the competitive climate of Manhattan in the 1920s.

• The American economy was flourishing, and there was not enough office space to go around; urban builders were encouraged to aim high.

Page 3: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 4: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 5: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• In 1926, Walter P. Chrysler, one of the wealthiest men in the automotive industry, entered his bid in the unofficial competition to build the tallest structure in New York City.

• He wanted an office building exalted enough to symbolize his own astounding ascent in the business world.

Page 6: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

Walter P. Chrysler

Page 7: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

Walter P. Chrysler Times' Man of the Year 1928

Page 8: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• Brooklyn-born architect William Van Alen, who had a reputation for progressive, flamboyant design, met Chrysler’s challenge with a seventy-seven-story building, the first in the world to exceed a height of one thousand feet.

Page 9: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The pyramidal form of the Chrysler Building was dictated by a 1916 zoning ordinance requiring buildings to be stepped back as they rose to allow sunlight and more air to reach the streets below.

• This restriction allowed architects to take a more sculptural approach to urban design.

Page 10: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• Instead of the tall, bland, rectangular boxes that had begun to colonize the city, inventive and dynamic forms began to lend interest and variety to the Manhattan skyline.

• The ordinance also focused attention on the summit of a building.

Page 11: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The Chrysler Building (1930) surpassed the Eiffel Tower to become the world's tallest structure.

• Almost as important, the Chrysler Building, with its jazzy, Art Deco lines and curves, announced to the world that Midtown Manhattan had arrived.

Page 12: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• Today it represents the finest of the Art Deco style and indeed is probably the most beautiful Art Deco building in the world. 

Page 13: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The skyscraper no longer imitated gothic

architecture (more common in Downtown Manhattan), but incorporated a current architecture style appropriate for its time of design and construction.

• As if mocking the ancient gothic style of other skyscrapers, the Chrysler Building incorporates gargoyles and decorative top that ends in a spire reaching towards the sky.

Page 14: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The building is 77 stories  and the height to the top of its spire is 1048 feet. 

• The tower culminates in a beautiful, tapered stainless steel crown that supports the famous spire at its peak. 

Page 15: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The  building has a lot of ornamentation that is based on features that were being used on Chrysler cars of the day.

Page 16: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 17: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 19: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• Atop the Chrysler, seven overlapping arches diminish toward the top to create the illusion of a building even taller than it is.

Page 20: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 21: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 22: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The distinctive decoration, a pattern of narrow triangles set in semicircles, has been likened to a sunburst, but it might equally recall the spokes of a wheel.

Page 23: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• Van Alen’s signal contribution to American architecture was to apply to modern skyscrapers the visual vocabulary of Art Deco, an international decorative style that emphasized streamlined motifs and often employed nontraditional materials.

Page 24: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• To make the Chrysler Building distinct from others of its kind, Van Alen chose motifs appropriate to the machine age, particularly the automobile.

Page 25: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• Notice, the gargoyles are actually Chrysler hood ornaments, and the decorative top is basically a series of hubcap-like curves.

Page 26: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The spire’s gleaming stainless steel cladding calls to mind the polished chrome of a brand new car.

• Stylized American eagle heads protrude from some corners of the building in playful reference to the gargoyles on Gothic cathedrals.

Page 27: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 28: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• Other corners are embellished with the winged forms of a Chrysler radiator cap. One ornamental frieze incorporates a band of hubcaps.

Page 29: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The corners of the sixty first  floor are graced with eagles, replicas of the 1929 Chrysler hood ornaments.

Page 30: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 31: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The building might as well be a car, definitely an object worthy of a cathedral like building in modern day America. 

Page 32: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 33: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• On the thirty first floor, the corner ornamentations are replicas of 1929 Chrysler radiator caps.

Page 34: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 35: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The building is steel frame,  masonry construction,  and metal cladding.

• There are  3,862 windows on its facade and 4 banks of 8 elevators designed by Otis Elevator Corporation.    

• As of this writing, it is still the 3rd tallest building in New York City. 

Page 36: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• If the exterior ornament enhances the modernity of the skyscraper, the interior was designed to recall the distant past, and positions the Chrysler Building among the wonders of the world.

Page 37: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

Chrysler Building, Entry Way Details 

Page 38: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The most spectacular features of the grand lobby are the elevator doors, adorned in brass and marquetry (decorative inlays on a wood base) with the lotus flower motif.

Page 40: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

Elevator Doors

Page 41: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

Inside a Chrysler Building elevator, looking up

Page 42: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The discovery in 1922 of King Tutankhamen’s tomb had unleashed an enthusiasm for archaic and exotic cultures, and the Chrysler Building was designed at the height of this mania for all things Egyptian.

Page 43: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• In addition to the lotus decoration, the public rooms display a range of ancient Egyptian motifs intended to suggest the building’s association with the great pyramids of the pharaohs.

Page 44: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 45: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 46: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

Art Deco Painted Ceilings

Page 47: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The paintings on the lobby ceiling record the heroic progress of the tower’s construction, as if the monument to Chrysler had already assumed a place in history equal to that of the Great Pyramids.

Page 48: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930
Page 49: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• Both Chrysler and Van Alen were intent upon making this building the tallest in the city, but toward the end of construction there was uncertainty over whether it could indeed hold that distinction.

Page 50: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• A rapidly rising office tower in Lower Manhattan had already reached 840 feet, and its architect, Van Alen’s former business partner, who acknowledged competition from the Chrysler, pushed his building even higher by adding a sixty-foot steel cap.

Page 51: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• Not to be outdone, Van Alen had his workers secretly assemble a twenty-seven-ton steel tip, or vertex, which was hoisted at the last minute to the top of the building as a magnificent surprise to the city.

• With that, the Chrysler not only exceeded the height of its Wall Street competition, but surpassed even the Eiffel Tower in Paris.

Page 52: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The Chrysler Building held the title of world's tallest building until 1931 when the Empire State Building (also in Midtown Manhattan) took the title.

Page 53: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• As it happened, that hard-won prize would be lost within the year to the Empire State Building, which is 202 feet higher.

Page 54: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• Downtown Manhattan was not able to regain the title until the completion of the World Trade Center towers in 1972 (which were dethroned by the Sears Tower in Chicago in 1976). 

Page 55: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• William Van Alen’s reputation suffered after the completion of his most famous building.

• Accused by Chrysler of taking bribes from contractors, the architect never received full payment for his work.

Page 56: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

• The effects of the Depression on the building industry further added to his woes.

• Today, Van Alen, with no major studies dedicated to his work, is little known in the history of architecture.

• On his death in 1954, the New York Times failed to even publish an obituary.

Page 57: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

Essay Question 1

• How is this building like an automobile?

Page 58: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

Essay Question 2

• Why did corporations and architects race to build tall skyscrapers in the 1920s?

• Why do you think the spire was added to the top?

Page 59: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

Essay Question 3

• What happened in 1929 to halt this building spree?

Page 60: WILLIAM VAN ALEN [1883–1954] The Chrysler Building, 1926–1930

Essay Question 4

• New York City building codes required that tall buildings such as this step back their upper stories.

• What were the benefits of making tall buildings smaller near the top?