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When it was completed in 1930, the 1,046-foot building was briefly the tallest in the world. In recent years, it's fallen ...
Completed in 1930, the Chrysler Building briefly held the title of world’s tallest building for 11 months. It stands 1,046 ...
Though it only had the distinction of being the world’s tallest building for 11 months, the Chrysler Building in midtown Manhattan has remained one of the most recognizable skyscrapers in the ...
Signa Holding, the embattled co-owner of the Chrysler Building, was ordered by an Austrian court to sell its stake in the iconic New York City skyscraper. A month after the company declared ...
The iconic Chrysler Building is up for sale for the first time in nearly a decade. According to David Heller of Savills, the goal is to maximize income to Cooper Union, which owns the land underneath, ...
The collapse last week of Aby Rosen’s Chrysler Building partner, Austrian property mogul Rene Benko, couldn’t come at a worse time for the landmark skyscraper. According to sources ...
Is the building’s reputation enough for it to endure as an icon, even as its ownership and interior crumble? The Chrysler Building opened in 1930.Credit...Frederic Lewis/Getty Images Supported ...
New York City’s iconic Chrysler Building is up for sale. The owners of the 1930 art deco office tower—an Abu Dhabi government fund and New York developer Tishman Speyer—have hired CBRE Group ...
Chief among the assets listed for sale are Signa’s private jet and 50% of the Chrysler Building, which Signa acquired in 2019 for $150 million, a steep 81% discount from its 2008 sale price.
The building, designed by the architect William Van Alen, was erected between 1928 and 1930. The Chrysler Building and its extensive office space was originally constructed for the Chrysler car ...
If you have been swinging around New York City in Marvel's Spider-Man: Miles Morales, you may have noticed that the iconic Chrysler Building has been replaced by a generic skyscraper. Even though ...
At the Empire State Building, on a roof of Madison Square Garden and on a terrace adjacent to the Chrysler Building, thousands of veritable worker bees have been turning nectar into honey.