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SOLD OUT Tour: Art Deco from Murray Hill to Madison Square

This walk through the east side of Midtown South includes an unusual collection of buildings, each different from the next: Ely Jacques Kahn’s most impressive office building, a modernist hotel by Corbett, Harrison & MacMurray; a work by Edgar Brandt, the great French iron master; the iconic Empire State Building; and an incomplete attempt by Metropolitan Life to capture the Empire State Building’s “world’s tallest” title.

$20

Tour: Art Deco Central Park West

A pleasant stroll along Central Park West, for a closer look at the buildings that form Manhattan’s major residential skyline. We visit the great twin-towered skyscraper-apartment buildings — the Century, the Majestic, and the Eldorado — and other multi-colored jazz-age fantasies of high living overlooking the Park.

$20

Lecture: Behind the Bright Lights – the Great Broadway Theaters

Port Washington Library One Library Drive, Port Washington, NY

With three-quarters of a century of history behind them, the 40 surviving Broadway theaters – many built as lavish headquarters for Broadway’s great impresarios, who spared no expense in their decor -.stand as stunning works of art in themselves, as well as monuments to the lively history of American theater.

Free

Tour: The Woolworth Building and its Lobby

Woolworth Building 233 Broadway, New York

Reservations required. Tour of the Woolworth Building lobby, closed to the public for more than a decade and now open again. The tour includes a detailed look at the building’s unmatched polychromatic terra-cotta exterior, and an in-depth exploration of the lobby and its wealth of ornament, including hidden corners and staircases — plus a special visit to the mezzanine level for an up-close view of its extraordinary mosaic ceiling.

$45

Tour: The Woolworth Building and its Lobby

Woolworth Building 233 Broadway, New York

Reservations required. Tour of the Woolworth Building lobby, closed to the public for more than a decade and now open again. The tour includes a detailed look at the building’s unmatched polychromatic terra-cotta exterior, and an in-depth exploration of the lobby and its wealth of ornament, including hidden corners and staircases — plus a special visit to the mezzanine level for an up-close view of its extraordinary mosaic ceiling.

$45

Tour: Landmarks battles in Midtown

Midtown Manhattan has seen more than its fair share of landmark battles. On this walk, we consider the landmark rationale and battle history of the Villard Houses/Palace Hotel (one of the earliest battles), St. Bartholomew’s Church (with issues of church/state conflict), Lever House (one of the new breed of modern landmarks), and Grand Central Terminal (whose landmark status was finally upheld by the Supreme Court).

$20

Tour: The Woolworth Building and its Lobby

Woolworth Building 233 Broadway, New York

Reservations required. Tour of the Woolworth Building lobby, closed to the public for more than a decade and now open again. The tour includes a detailed look at the building’s unmatched polychromatic terra-cotta exterior, and an in-depth exploration of the lobby and its wealth of ornament, including hidden corners and staircases — plus a special visit to the mezzanine level for an up-close view of its extraordinary mosaic ceiling.

$45

Tour: The Woolworth Building and its Lobby

Woolworth Building 233 Broadway, New York

Reservations required. Tour of the Woolworth Building lobby, closed to the public for more than a decade and now open again. The tour includes a detailed look at the building’s unmatched polychromatic terra-cotta exterior, and an in-depth exploration of the lobby and its wealth of ornament, including hidden corners and staircases — plus a special visit to the mezzanine level for an up-close view of its extraordinary mosaic ceiling.

$45

Tour: Art Deco on the Upper East Side

The Upper East Side – Manhattan’s gold coast – maintains an aura of conservative respectability, and perhaps as a result never attracted as much Art Deco flash as its counterpart on the west side of Central Park. Nevertheless, tucked among the Beaux-Arts town houses and sedate neo-Georgian apartment buildings, the neighborhood has some remarkable examples by some of the city’s best architects of the period.

$20

Tour: The Woolworth Building and its Lobby

Woolworth Building 233 Broadway, New York

Reservations required. Tour of the Woolworth Building lobby, closed to the public for more than a decade and now open again. The tour includes a detailed look at the building’s unmatched polychromatic terra-cotta exterior, and an in-depth exploration of the lobby and its wealth of ornament, including hidden corners and staircases — plus a special visit to the mezzanine level for an up-close view of its extraordinary mosaic ceiling.

$45

Tour: Downtown/Wall Street

This tour, which includes the former Custom House, Steamship Row, Castle Clinton, Federal Hall, and the House of Morgan, will discover well-known highlights as well as some unexpected delights. From the spectacular skyline up in the air to archaeological relics down underground, Downtown remains one of the world’s great urban treasures, even as it rebuilds.

$20

Tour: The Woolworth Building and its Lobby

Woolworth Building 233 Broadway, New York

Reservations required. Tour of the Woolworth Building lobby, closed to the public for more than a decade and now open again. The tour includes a detailed look at the building’s unmatched polychromatic terra-cotta exterior, and an in-depth exploration of the lobby and its wealth of ornament, including hidden corners and staircases — plus a special visit to the mezzanine level for an up-close view of its extraordinary mosaic ceiling.

$45

Tour: Architecture of the Theater

See the great Broadway theaters built between the turn of the century and the onset of the Great Depression­ – stunning works of art that are monuments to the lively history of American theater.

$20

Tour: Art Deco in the Financial District

Towering above the narrow streets of 17th-century Nieuw Amsterdam are some of the city’s finest 20th century skyscrapers., including the best of Ralph Walker, once voted the “architect of the century” by his peers.

Lecture: Grand Central Terminal – 100 Years of a New York Landmark

Marbletown Community Center 3564 Main Street (Route 209), Stone Ridge, NY

On February 1, 2013, the beautifully restored Grand Central Terminal celebrated its centennial, accompanied by exhibitions, events and the new book, Grand Central Terminal: 100 Years of a New York Landmark. The terminal’s creation combined engineering bravado, technological wizardry and real estate savvy with innovative planning and Paris-inspired Beaux-Arts design. This illustrated lecture brings the terminal to life – its remarkable history, stunning architecture and central role in creating Midtown Manhattan. Free and open to the public.

SOLD OUT Tour: Art Deco Central Park West

A pleasant stroll along Central Park West for a closer look at the buildings that form Manhattan’s major residential skyline. We’ll see the great twin-towered skyscraper apartment buildings – the Century, the Majestic and the El Dorado – and other multi-colored jazz-age fantasies of high living overlooking the park.

$25

SOLD OUT Tour: The Woolworth Building and its Lobby

Woolworth Building 233 Broadway, New York

Reservations required. Tour of the Woolworth Building lobby, closed to the public for more than a decade and now open again. The tour includes a detailed look at the building’s unmatched polychromatic terra-cotta exterior, and an in-depth exploration of the lobby and its wealth of ornament, including hidden corners and staircases — plus a special visit to the mezzanine level for an up-close view of its extraordinary mosaic ceiling.

$45

Tour: Landmarks battles in Midtown

Midtown Manhattan has seen more than its fair share of landmark battles. On this walk, we consider the landmark rationale and battle history of some of the biggest.

Lecture: Art Deco New York – From the Chrysler Building to the Grand Concourse

Quogue Library 90 Quogue Street, Quogue (Long Island)

Lecture covering the great skyscrapers of architects Raymond Hood, William Van Alen, Ely Jacques Kahn, and Ralph Walker, then tracing the adaptation of this “skyscraper style” through apartment buildings on the Bronx’s Grand Concourse, airport terminals at LaGuardia, the Central Park West residential skyline, automated midtown parking garages, diners, hotels, department stores, banks and theaters.

Free

SOLD OUT Tour: The Woolworth Building and its Lobby

Woolworth Building 233 Broadway, New York

Reservations required. Tour of the Woolworth Building lobby, closed to the public for more than a decade and now open again. The tour includes a detailed look at the building’s unmatched polychromatic terra-cotta exterior, and an in-depth exploration of the lobby and its wealth of ornament, including hidden corners and staircases — plus a special visit to the mezzanine level for an up-close view of its extraordinary mosaic ceiling.

$45

SOLD OUT Tour: Art Deco in Queens

Art Deco in the borough of Queens – a bus tour sponsored by the Art Deco Society of New York. Watch this space for further details!

SOLD OUT Tour: Art Deco Central Park West

A pleasant stroll along Central Park West for a closer look at the buildings that form Manhattan’s major residential skyline. We’ll see the great twin-towered skyscraper apartment buildings – the Century, the Majestic and the El Dorado – and other multi-colored jazz-age fantasies of high living overlooking the park.

$20

Tour: Margot Gayle's Tribeca – A Victorian Society New York New-Member-Orientation Walking Tour (so join up!)

This tour of Tribeca, focusing on its many cast-iron wonders, is offered to newly minted members of the Victorian Society New York (the local chapter of the Victorian Society in America), founded in the kitchen of the late preservation advocate Margot Gayle. Without Margot’s efforts, Tribeca might not be the protected historic neighborhood it is today. Though the tour is by invitation only, there’s a simple way to cadge an invitation: join Victorian Society New York!