Daily News Building ca. 1935
Founded in 1919, the New York Daily News was America’s first tabloid and soon became its best-selling newspaper. The Daily News Building, designed by Raymond Hood in 1930, combined the paper’s nine-story plant with a 36-story rental office tower. Hood gave the News a signature building, whose white-and-black striped brick facade was audaciously stark. From the vantage point of the Chanin Building, a new office tower at East 42nd Street and Lexington Avenue, Abbott captured the bold presence of the building, set against the lowly tenements of Kips Bay, with Tudor City and a Consolidated Edison power plant in the background. In 1931, Abbott took a similar photograph of the building; she may have returned to the site in 1935 to replace a lost or damaged negative. On her second visit, she was unable to gain access to the Chanin Building roof and was forced to photograph from a lower floor. As a result, the perspective is skewed, and the building appears to lean to the left. Today Abbott’s view is obstructed by the Mobil Building (1955). In 1994, the Daily News moved its editorial offices to the West Side and its plant to New Jersey.