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927 Fifth Avenue: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 40°46′25″N 73°57′58″W / 40.7735°N 73.9660°W / 40.7735; -73.9660
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[[Category:Fifth Avenue (Manhattan)]]
[[Category:Fifth Avenue (Manhattan)]]
[[Category:Warren and Wetmore buildings]]
[[Category:Warren and Wetmore buildings]]
[[Category:Upper East Side]]

Revision as of 20:26, 12 June 2013

927 Fifth Avenue
Map
General information
TypeCondominium
Architectural styleArt Deco
Address927 Fifth Avenue
Town or cityNew York, NY
CountryUS
Current tenantsapprox. 12-24 tenants
Construction started1917
Completed1917
Technical details
Structural systemSkyscraper
Floor count12 (12 apartments)

927 Fifth Avenue is an upscale residential apartment building in Manhattan, New York City. It is located on Fifth Avenue at the corner of East 74th Street opposite the Model Sailboat Pond in Central Park. The limestone-clad building was designed by Warren & Wetmore, also known for the Grand Central Terminal, and completed in 1917 in the Renaissance Revival style.

The building is incorporated as a housing cooperative. It has 12 apartments on 12 floors. Residents include Paula Zahn (former resident Mary Tyler Moore moved out in 2005).

The co-op became well-known when Pale Male, a Red-tailed Hawk that nests on ornamental stonework above a 12th-floor window, was featured an episode of the PBS series Nature. It later gained international notoriety when the board of the cooperative decided to evict the hawks in December 2004. Protests and widespread negative news coverage led to the restoration of the nest three weeks later.[1]

References

  1. ^ McCarthy, Meghan. City Hawk: the Story of Pale Male. New York: Simon & Schuster for Young Readers, 2007

40°46′25″N 73°57′58″W / 40.7735°N 73.9660°W / 40.7735; -73.9660