Hearst Magazine Building, New York, 2000-2006
Hearst Magazine Building 2000 - 2006 Late Modernism period Description It is the world headquarters of the Hearst magazine Corporation Architect - Joseph Urban, Tower - Sir Norman Foster Location - 951-969 Eighth Ave at W47 , near Columbus Circle. Date - 1928, tower 2006. Construction – stone Type - Office Building
History – A blend of classicism and modernism Hearst Magazine Building 2000 - 2006 Late Modernism period History – A blend of classicism and modernism The former six-story headquarters building was commissioned by the founder, William Randolph Hearst and awarded to the architect Joseph Urban. The tower Architect- Norman Foster Construction - Turner construction 46 stories tall, standing 182 m (597 ft) with 80,000 m² (856,000 ft²) of office space. Hearst Tower was the first skyscraper to break ground in New York City after September 11, 2001 The building was completed in 1928 at a cost of $2 million and contained 40,000 sq. ft. 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 A new modernist skyscraper got proposed on the same site in year 2000
History – A blend of classicism and modernism Hearst Magazine Building 2000 - 2006 Late Modernism period History – A blend of classicism and modernism Reichstag, New German Parliament Berlin, Germany, 1992-1999 Great Court at the British Museum London, UK, 1994-2000
Features Late modernist concept of Space, geometry and light Hearst Magazine Building 2000 - 2006 Late Modernism period Features Late modernist concept of Space, geometry and light Neutral grid Structure is used as an ornament Foster’s design preserves the six-story façade of the landmark From its hollowed-out core rises a geodesic-like office tower featuring triangular steel bracing from the 10th floor up. It will have no vertical columns around the perimeter, creating corner views that are not possible in a typically framed building.
Hearst Magazine Building 2000 - 2006 Late Modernism period Features Diagrid form termed as the ‘birds’ mouths.’ They open up most of the floors and allow a much more panoramic view Win Win Situation As it is situated above the subway, the project also had to go through the Uniform Land Use Review Procedure. In the end, in exchange for improvements to the subway station—including a new entrance, installing three elevators and adding moving stairwells—Hearst was given a bonus of six floors to add onto the tower.
Hearst Magazine Building 2000 - 2006 Late Modernism period Diagrid Pattern Triangular bracing on the perimeter of a skyscraper is not new. It has been done before, most notably for the John Hancock Building in Chicago. Hancock Centre, Chicago , 1969 Skidmore, Owings and Merrill
Hearst Magazine Building 2000 - 2006 Late Modernism period Diagrid Pattern "The triangular frames carry the gravity load and has inherent strength and resistance to the lateral loads, seismic and wind The triangles are so efficient in terms of bearing both the gravity and lateral loads, the building use 21 percent less steel (9,500 metric tons) than a conventional building of its size. Lateral load Gravity load
Hearst Magazine Building 2000 - 2006 Late Modernism period Green Features Hearst Tower is the first green building completed in New York City 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. The building was constructed using 80% recycled steel. Overall, the building has been designed to use 25% less energy than the minimum requirements for the city of New York No use of materials, coatings and adhesives that emit volatile organic compounds — known as V.O.C.'s
Earned a gold designation from the USGBC LEED certification program. Hearst Magazine Building 2000 - 2006 Late Modernism period Glass in the building have a coating that tends to admit visible light while reflecting a large part of the invisible solar radiation that causes heat. Light and motion sensors are installed as well, to turn off lights when people are absent or when there is enough natural light coming the glass outer wall that artificial lighting is not needed. Earned a gold designation from the USGBC LEED certification program.
Entering from the existing arch it opens up and what one see is Hearst Magazine Building 2000 - 2006 Late Modernism period Entering from the existing arch it opens up and what one see is three escalators in front to the third floor level. Those escalators are set into a sloping water sculpture, which will cascade down past one as goes up.