Harman Patil (Editor)

Random House Tower

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Status
  
Complete

Roof
  
684 ft (208 m)

Floors
  
52

Opened
  
2003

Completed
  
2003

Height
  
208 m

Construction started
  
2000

Cost
  
300 million USD

Random House Tower httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Type
  
Apartments and headquarters of Random House

Location
  
1745 Broadway/230 West 56th Street, New York City

Owner
  
SL Green/IvanhoƩ Cambridge/Witkoff/Lehman Brothers (Office portion)

Architecture firm
  
Skid, Owings & Merrill

Similar
  
Paramount Plaza, Baudouine Building, Marbridge Building, Grand Hotel, 287 Broadway

The Random House Tower, also known as the Park Imperial Apartments, is a 52-story mixed-use tower in New York City, United States, that is used as the headquarters of book publisher Random House and a luxury apartment complex. The book publisher entrance is on Broadway and goes up to 27 floors, while the apartment complex entrance is on 56th Street.

Map of Random House Tower, New York, NY 10019, USA

Separate architects designed each of the sections. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill designed the office portion, which has a steel frame. Ismael Leyva Architects and Adam D. Tihany designed the residential portion, which has a concrete frame. The two sections do not entirely line up, and trusses were built on the 26th and 27th floor to transfer the load.

The apartments have three-meter ceilings, and there are five penthouses of up to 2,970 sq ft (276 m2) in size. Although the apartments start above the 27th floor of the office portion, the residential floors are numbered 48-70 for marketing purposes. Among the first tenants were P. Diddy and New York Yankees pitcher Randy Johnson.

At the top of the building are two fluid tuned mass dampers - the first of their kind in the city - which are designed to damp building sway. Similar dampers are employed in the Citigroup Center building, although Citigroup's dampers are made of concrete. Random House's dampers have capacities of 265,000 and 379,000 liters of water.

The complex is on a trapezoidal block between 55th Street and 56th Street and follows the angle of Broadway. It has jagged setbacks, similar in shape to the towers of Rockefeller Center, to improve the views of Central Park.

Critics have noted that its three main towers give it the impression of being three books (although the architects referred to them as "three sliding crystals").

Random House occupies 645,000 sq ft (59,900 m2), with the rest housing 130 apartments, as well as 32,000 sq ft (3,000 m2) of retail space.

In looking to expand its headquarters, Random House had originally planned to build a tower at 45th and Broadway across from its parent company Bertelsmann's headquarters at 1540 Broadway with a neon-lighted skyway across 45th Street connecting them.

References

Random House Tower Wikipedia