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Mapping NYC
| Museum of the City of New York
Location
338 5 Avenue
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

Empire State Building, view \[of] installation.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Looking up at the Empire State Building.]
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

Empire State Building, heating and ventilating equipment, main steam control room.
Doomed Dirigible Dock image

Doomed Dirigible Dock
Story

The images in our collection don’t show dirigibles actually docking at the Empire State Building, because no dirigible successfully docked there. In fact, Christopher Grey in The New York Times gently hints that the idea for a mooring mast may have been a ruse to add a few extra feet to the building. The tower is 200 feet tall, greatly widening the height difference between the Empire State Building and the second tallest building in the world at that time, the Chrysler Building.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

350 Fifth Avenue. Empire State Building. Detail entrance doors
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

Waldorf Astoria.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

34th Street and 5th Avenue. Empire State Building, view looking up.
350 Fifth Avenue image

350 Fifth Avenue

\[Fifth Avenue, Thirty-fourth Street, Southwest Corner, Mrs. Astor's House.] The southwest corner of 5th Ave. and 34th St., Mrs. William Astor's residence.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Midtown Manhattan from the East River.]
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

Empire State Building, view \[of] installation.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Looking west on East 35th Street past Lexington Avenue.]
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Empire State Building.]
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Empire State Building.]
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

West 34th Street and Fifth Avenue. Empire State Building with church spire in foreground
350 Fifth Avenue image

350 Fifth Avenue

Residence, Mrs. William Astor, Fifth Ave. & 34th St., S.W. Corner.
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

Waldorf Astoria Hotel. The decorations for the Dewy Parade in front of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel at 33rd Street and 5th Avenue.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[View of the Empire State Building from Pier 58.] Once a Grace Line pier.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Looking south from the steps of New York Public Library's main branch toward the Empire State Building.]
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Empire State Building seen from Hudson River.]
Vanderbilt Ball: How a Costume Ball Changed New York Elite Society image

Vanderbilt Ball: How a Costume Ball Changed New York Elite Society
Story

In the spring of 1883, the solemnity of Lent didn’t stand a chance against the social event on the mind of all of New York’s elite society: Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt’s fancy dress ball. The invitations had been hand-delivered by servants in livery, young socialites had been practicing quadrilles (dances performed with four couples in a rectangular formation) for weeks, and “amid the rush and excitement of business, men have found their minds haunted by uncontrollable thoughts as to whether they should appear as Robert Le Diable, Cardinal Richelieu, Otho the Barbarian, or the Count of Monte Cristo, while the ladies have been driven to the verge of distraction in the effort to settle the comparative advantages of ancient, medieval, and modern costumes” (New York Times). The best dressmakers and cobblers had spent months poring over old books making costumes — which were already being breathlessly described by the New York Times — as historically accurate as possible.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

Empire State Building, detail tower looking up from 86th floor, set back.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Skyline view showing Empire State Building.]
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

\[Waldorf Astoria.] The Waldorf-Astoria Hotel at 34th Street and 5th Avenue; view from a rooftop on the opposite corner.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Looking up at the Empire State Building.]
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

350 Fifth Avenue. Empire State Building, view \[of] installation electrical.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

New York City views. Macy's sign and Empire State II. View of the Empire State Building and Macy's building.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Sculpture garden.]
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

Japanese War Commission, Banquet Hall interior, general view. \[Japanese War Commission, September,1917.]
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Elevated city view from Tudor City toward Empire State Building.]
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Looking south on Fifth Avenue from 39th Street.]
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

The opulent Waldorf-Astoria hotel stood here, where the Empire State Building is now, from 1897 until 1929. the hotel was actually two separate buildings, joined by a 300-foot long hallway called Peacock Alley, where tourists and local New Yorkers used to gather to gaze at the tycoons, theatrical stars and dignitaries walking by. New York City and its share of hotels prior to the Waldorf-Astoria's opening, but this was the first to bring Gilded Age social life out into the wide open. It not only provided large and lavish spaces for the wealthy to entertain but also the opportunity for the rest of New York to observe and covet their lifestyle. The hotel grew out of a rivalry among the Astors- one of New York's oldest and wealthiest families thanks to John Jacob Astor's early and large investments in Manhattan real estate. The site had been occupied by two brownstones. One belonged to William Waldorf Astor, and the other to his aunt, Caroline Schermerhorn Astor- the gatekeeper of New York Society. William tore down his family's house to make way for the 11-story Waldorf. Not only did the new property quickly tower over his aunt's, but the construction din and debris forced her and her son John Jacob "Jack" Astor IV to move. As retribution, Jack first considered building a stable next to the Waldorf. But after it opened in 1893, the hotel was so profitable that Jack decided to hitch himself to his cousin's venture. At a cost of $3 million, he put up the Astoria, which of course had to be several stories taller than its neighbor. Connected by Peacock Alley, and a hyphen in its new name, the Waldorf-Astoria became the largest hotel in the world. The architect was Henry Janeway Hardenbargh, who had designed the Dakota Apartments in 1882 and would design the Plaza a decade later. The style was German Renaissance-dominated by red-tiled gables and turrets.
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

350 Fifth Avenue image

350 Fifth Avenue

Mrs. William Astor., 34th St. and 5th Ave.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Looking south from the steps of New York Public Library's main branch toward the Empire State Building.]
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

Kitchen at the Waldorf Astoria.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Midtown Manhattan skyline from Queens.]
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

Street Scene, South from Elevated Station 6th Ave. & 42nd Street.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Midtown Manhattan from the East River.]
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

Hotel Waldorf-Astoria, Fifth Avenue & 34th Street. Photographs, Prints & Drawings Photographs, Prints & Drawings
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

New York City Skyline at Dusk, East River, View From Pepsi-Cola Plant in Long Island City \[Showing United Nations.]
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

Li Hung Chang Leaving Waldorf-Astoria, 1896. Li Hung-Chang in a horse-drawn carriage outside of the Waldorf during his tour of the United States in 1896.
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

Waldorf Astoria.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Looking north on Fifth Avenue from 27th Street to the Empire State Building.]
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Looking north on Fifth Avenue from the Empire State Building.]
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

Street Scenes, 34th Street & 5th Avenue. The corner of 34th Street & 5th Avenue with buildings along 5th Avenue. A traffic light in the middle of the avenue is visible, as are cars and pedestrians.
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

5th Ave.--34th St.
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

Japanese War Commission, Banquet Hall interior, detail. \[Japanese War Commission, September,1917.]
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893) image

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (1893)

Waldorf Astoria Hotel. The decorations for the Dewey Parade in front of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel at 33rd Street and 5th Avenue.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

34th Street and 5th Avenue. Empire State Building \[during construction], view looking up.
Empire State Building image

Empire State Building

\[Empire State Building.]