Tag Archives: Robert Moses

Vanished New York City Art Deco: The Trylon and Perisphere – Part One Construction

The Trylon and Perisphere, 1939.

The Trylon and Perisphere, May 18, 1939. Photograph by Samuel H. Gottscho, from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York.

April 30th marks the 80th anniversary of the opening of the New York World’s Fair. Driving for Deco could not let that milestone pass without a post about it. Of course the entire fair fits the category of “vanished New York City Art Deco”. But this two-part post will look at the fair’s “theme center”, the Trylon and Perisphere.

 

The news of a proposed New York World’s Fair hit the newspapers on September 23, 1935. The recent success of The Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago made planners in New York feel that a fair in the city would reap huge economic benefits. After a short search, the site chosen for the fair was a large ash dump in Queens near Flushing Bay. Reclaiming the over 1,000 acres and the construction of the fair took less than four years.

 

Mark Washington Inaugural

According to the committee’s plans, the fair would be opened on April 30, 1939, to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the inauguration of George Washington as the first President of the United States in New York City on April 30, 1789. The entire exposition, which has yet to be named, would celebrate not only that single event but the establishment in that same year of the government of the United States. 

New York Herald-Tribune, September 23, 1935, Pg. 1

 

Fraser's George Washington statue

James Earle Fraser’s enormous statue of George Washington on Constitution Mall at the 1939-1940 New York World’s Fair. Photograph by William A. Dobak from the collection of The Museum of the City of New York.

 

The large statue of the Washington near the center of the fair grounds would try to remind visitors of the initial reason for the exposition. But the committee’s vision of the fair changed considerably before the opening day. Instead of looking back, the theme of the fair looked forward.

 

October 9, 1936 New York Times headline.

October 9, 1936 New York Times Headline. Image from Proquest Historical Newspapers.

 

At an October 8, 1936 press conference, the board of directors of the New York World’s Fair of 1939 formally announced their plans. The New York Times reported the next day:

The exhibits and amusements covering an area of 1,216 1/2 acres, keyed to the theme of “Building the World of Tomorrow,” are being planned with a view to a total investment of $125,000,000, and are expected to attract 50,000,000 visitors in a year’s time, with a daily maximum capacity of 800,000. 

New York Times, October 9, 1936, Pg. 1

 

At the same conference, President of the Fair, Grover Whalen told the press “The theme, is the creation of a better world and fuller life – the advancement of human welfare. This would be on display in the ‘theme building’.   At 250 feet the theme building would tower over the rest of the fair, whose buildings would not be much higher than two stories. Inside the “Theme Building” a panorama visualizing the “theme” shows how tools of today’s civilization have been developed in the 150 years since the inauguration of George Washington.”

 

Proposed Theme Building Sketch.

Sketch of the proposed “Theme Building” of the New York World’s Fair. Showing one of the 250 foot tall towers. Image from MCNY.org

 

Five months after announcing theme “the world of tomorrow”, the “theme building” underwent a radical redesign. Instead of a traditional building in a modern style, the design became futuristic and abstract.

 

NYHT headling

March 16, 1937 headline from the New York Herald-Tribune, Pg. 23A. Image from Proquest Historical Newspapers

   A sphere and an obelisk of fantastic proportions will compose the dominant architectural theme of the New York World’s Fair of 1939. The sphere will house the “theme exhibit” – a portrayal of “the basic structure of the world of tomorrow” – and will appear to be suspended above a circular pool. Actually the huge white globe will be supported by eight steel columns encased in glass and hidden from sight by clusters of fountains. 

  The sphere will be 200 feet in diameter, or about equal to an eighteen-story building. Its interior will be a single vast auditorium, more than twice the size of Radio City Music Hall. A single entrance fifty feet above the pool will be reached by glass enclosed escalators.

   A bridge will link the sphere to the obelisk. The obelisk will rise 700 feet. From the connecting bridge, a wide ramp 900 feet long, will slope to the ground in a three-quarter circle around the pool. The highest vantage point on the exposition grounds will be the bridge and the top of the ramp. 

   Upon entering the sphere, visitors will descend a short ramp and emerge on a moving platform which will rim the circular exhibition space. An amplified voice, accompanied by soft music, will describe the floor exhibits and the planets and constellations which probably will decorate the dome. 

    The moving platform will be suspended far above the exhibition floor and hung twelve feet from the wall, so that a view may be had from the railing on either side. Moving at the rate of thirty feet a minute, it will take fifteen minutes to carry a visitor from the entrance to the adjacent exit. 

    Mr. Whalen said that the architectural motif of the “theme center” was so new that technicians had to coin several new words to describe the structures. The obelisk, he said, will be known as a “trylon” – a combination of “tri”, referring to its three sides, and “pylon.” Indicating its use as a monumental gateway to the theme building, which he called a “perisphere.”

     Plans for the two structures were prepared by the architectural firm of Harrison & Fouilhoux. The structures will be built at an estimated cost of $1,200.000. 

  The sphere will be floodlighted at night. Batteries of projectors mounted on distant buildings will spot the globe in color, while other projectors will superimpose moving patterns of light which may take the form of clouds, geometric patterns or moving panoramas. This will create the optical illusion that the sphere itself is slowly rotating.

    The obelisk will not be illuminated. “Its sloping sides will fade into the night,” according to the plans, “giving the effect of a tower reaching to infinity.”

New York Herald-Tribune, March 16, 1937, Pg. 23A

 

Patent drawing of the Trylon and Perisphere.

Harrison and Fouilhoux 1937 patent drawing for the Trylon and Perisphere. Image from thepatentroom.com.

 

Model of the Trylon and Perisphere.

Model of the proposed “Theme Center”, 1937. Image from NYPL Digital Collections.

 

Construction

1936 – 1937

The formal dedication of the fair occurred on June 3, 1936. At the Flushing site, Grover Whalen led the directors over a 90 foot ash mound and discarded tires to a tower erected for the ceremony. With a vantage of 150 feet above the dump, Whalen broke a bottle of 1923 champagne, christening the fair. Shortly thereafter the herculean task of grading the site began. Accompanied by the 65 piece Department of Sanitation Band, Grover Whalen, Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia and Park Commissioner Robert Moses broke ground on June 29th.

 

Grover Whalen breaks ground for the World's Fair.

New York City Mayor, Fiorello LaGuardia watches with amusement while Grover Whalen breaks ground for the 1939 New York World’ Fair, June 29, 1936. Image from

 

With the groundbreaking at the Corona Ash Dump, grading the site began. Full grading of the future park took about a year. The driving of wooden piles into the marshy land, to support the future fair building, began in 1937. With less than two years to go construction crews worked in three shifts around the clock.

 

Surveying the fair site in 1938.

Surveying the fair site in 1938, showing the piles driven into the marshland. Image from mcny.org.

 

With the pilings in place, construction of the fair buildings began in earnest during 1938. Soon the Trylon and Perisphere would rise and dominate the skyline of the borough of Queens.

 

Theme Center site.

Site of the future and futuristic “Theme Center”, May 28, 1937. Image from NYPL Digital Collections.

 

1938 – 1939

During the winter of 1938 construction begins on the “Theme Center”.  There is less than 14 months until the opening day of the fair.

 

The first steel for the Perisphere.

March 21, 1938. The first steel is laid for the Perisphere. Image from NYPL Digital Collections.

 

March 22, 1938, the Trylon starts rising.

March 22, 1938. The Trylon is already rising from its base as work begins on the Perisphere. Image from NYPL Digital Collections.

 

 

 

By late spring 1938, the Perisphere’s outer steel work neared two-thirds completion. And already finsihed was the frame-work for the bridge connecting it to the Trylon. Inside that bridge the world’s longest (at the time) escalator would carry visitors up inside the Perisphere.

 

June 13, 1938.

June 13, 1938. Image from NYPL Digital Collections.

 

By July the construction of the Trylon topped off. World’s Fair publicity listed the Trylon’s height at 700 feet. The actual height came to 610 feet, even so it became the tallest structure on Long Island. The Perisphere also had the same size embellishing, claiming a diameter of 200 feet. Its size at 180 feet or eighteen stories was still impressive. As the Perisphere’s framework neared completion, the construction workers playfully dubbed it “the big apple”, due to the red rust proofing paint use on the steel.

 

 

 

By August and the “Theme Center’s” steel work complete, it was time to dedicate the Trylon and Perisphere. Grover Whalen and Mayor LaGuardia hosted the ceremony with Ferde Grofé and his orchestra providing the music. After the first musical number, Mayor LaGuardia drove the last rivet into the Perisphere.

 

Dedication day of the Trylon and Perisphere.

Friday August 12, 1938, grounds set up for the dedication of the Trylon and Perisphere. Image from NYPL Digital Collections.

 

Now the time had come to encase the Trylon and Perisphere in scaffolding and to cover them in plywood and gypsum . The entire structure then received coatings of pure white paint. The only pure white buildings at the World’s Fair were the Trylon and Perisphere.

 

Scaffolding covering the "Theme Center", September, 1938.

Scaffolding starts to cover the “Theme Center”, September 23, 1938. Image from NYPL Digital Collections.

 

Autumn of 1938.

Autumn, 1938 and scaffolding almost completely encases the Trylon and Perisphere. Wurts Bros. photograph from mcny.org.

 

Workmen applying the outer covering to the Trylon.

Workmen nailing the plywood covering of the Trylon. Winter, 1939. Image from NYPL Digital Collections.

 

 

Industrial designer, Henry Dreyfuss, won the commission for creating the “Theme Center” exhibit. Entitled Democracity it provided visitors a look at a utopian city in the year 2039. While on the inside of the dome visions of workers and the constellations would be projected. CBS newscaster H. V. Kaltenborn provided narration explaining to the visitors what they were seeing. Two platforms, moving in opposite directions, transported people around the inside of the Perisphere in six minutes. One revolution equaled a twenty-four hour period.

 

 

 

The scaffolding is being removed. Winter of 1939.

Winter 1939 and the scaffolding is coming down to reveal the gigantic pure white sphere and obelisk. Photo by Gottscho & Schleisner from the collection of mcny.org

 

 

April, 1939 and ready for the public. Construction of the massive “Theme Center” took just over a year. It dominated the fair grounds and instantly captured the world’s attention.

 

Ready for the public.

April, 1939. Ready to open. (Photo by George Rinhart/Corbis via Getty Images)

 

Part Two will look at the Trylon and Perisphere during the run of the World’s Fair and its fate after the closing in 1940.

 

Anthony & Chris

 

If you enjoyed this post check out these earlier World’s Fair related posts:

New York World’s Fair Souvenirs 1939 – 1940

Reference Library Update – Heinz Exhibit Brochure, 1939 New York World’s Fair

Reference Library Update: The Great Lakes Exposition, 1936

The Central Park Casino, Joseph Urban’s long, lost New York City Night Club

The Central Park Casino, September 10, 1935

The Central Park Casino, September 10, 1935. Image from Official Website of the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation

 

Chris and I love to collect vintage magazines. The cover art can add a wonderful, period, decorative, Deco touch to a room. The advertisements are fun and informative, but it is the articles that are the real golden nuggets. I know it seems like everything is available on the World Wide Web, but that is not the case. Sometimes the articles in these vintage magazine are the only source for specific information and photographs. This is especially true of the article about the Central Park Casino in the August, 1929 issue of The Architectural Record. Chris purchased the magazine on Ebay several years ago and I’m glad he did – there were more pictures of the interior of the Casino in that article than I had ever seen before or since.

 

Architectural Record, August 1929 - Cover

Architectural Record, August 1929 – Cover

It is a shame that a restaurant as special as the Central Park Casino could be destroyed by political vindictiveness. The casino started life in 1864 as the Ladies Refreshment Salon in a building designed by Calvert Vaux. The Casino was located inside the park near 5th Avenue and just south of 72nd Street.  By the 1920’s it was a restaurant that had seen better days.  Mayor James J. (Gentleman Jimmy) Walker (1881-1946), who was elected to office in 1925, wanted to have a place to be entertained and to entertain visitors to the city, decided the Casino was the perfect place. Walker obtained the lease (by not exactly fair methods) and gave it to his friend, the hotelier Sidney Solomon.

 

Mayor James J. (Gentleman Jimmy) Walker

Mayor James J. (Gentleman Jimmy) Walker. Image from the New York Times

 

Joseph Urban - image from Columbia University Rare Book Library

Joseph Urban – image from Columbia University Rare Book Library

Solomon hired famed Austrian-American architect, theatrical and film set and interior designer Joseph Urban (1872-1933) to do the $500,000 dollar renovation. Urban had just designed the Ziegfeld Theatre (1927-1966) on Sixth Avenue, as well as designing the sets for the first two shows in that theatre, Rio Rita and Show Boat. In 1928 Urban was at the peak of his fame.  With a design style for visual impact  and the dramatic  he the transformed the Victorian restaurant into an ultra-moderne night club. The ball room, with its black mirrored ceiling, reflecting the crystal chandeliers and dancers enjoying the best orchestras of the late 1920’s and early 1930’s, received the highest praise for design at the time. Joseph Urban’s design sketch for the mural seen in the below photograph, is the only surviving color record of the any of the Casino. “It presents a flora fantasy set against a soft, gold background.” – Carter Cole, Joseph Urban Architecture, Theatre, Opera, Film (Abbeville Press, Inc., 1992, Pg. 190-193). Consisting of pink and white flowers over dark green foliage, The side walls were decorated with stylized green leaves with pink and silver highlights on a black background.

 

 

The ball room.

The ball room.

 

Another popular room in the Casino was the Pavilion, a light, airy space with no obstructing columns. This was made possible by the use of Lamella construction for the roof, first developed for airplane hangers. Urban made good use of the lattice-work, painting it and the ceiling cream with stylized flora in red and green. Illuminating the room, were Urban’s enameled metal, indirect lighting chandeliers (Urban used similar chandeliers in several other buildings including the Atlantic Beach Club on Long Island).

 

Lamella Construction Detail of the Pavilion.

Lamella Construction Detail of the Pavilion.

A preview for the press was held on the evening of June 3rd. Joseph Urban was the chief figure at the reception. He explained to the New York Times the design he created:

“The moods of each room are established through rhythmic line and sensuous color and the whole composition each room plays up to the next room. (In) the main dining room, broad surfaces of silver, give a living neutral background to a pulsating rhythm of maroon and green. In the ballroom, the line of the mural composition is like the wave of a conductor’s baton beginning dance music, while dim reflections in the black glass ballroom ceiling give space and movement in sympathy to the life of the room. An entrance lobby where reliance on pure proportion serves as a foil to these formal rooms. The pavilion, where the freshness of Spring flowers and joyousness of a wind among young leaves inspired the decoration. An informal small dining room of fumed knotty pine, a ruddy ceiling and materials of vigorous texture and pattern.”

The New York Times, June 4, 1929, Pg. 30

 

Central Park Casino Lobby

Central Park Casino Lobby

On June 4, 1929 the renovated Central Park Casino opened its doors with a brilliant, invitation-only party for 600 guests at $10 ($139.00 in 2015) each. The intention of the new management was to make the Casino “a place for the fashionable and fastidious”. There was a fear that the Casino would be turned into a private club for Walker and his cronies, but that was never the plan. On June 5th the doors were open to the general public, but its menu prices and cover charges made it the most expensive restaurant in New York. The high prices would also be the main reason given for closing it down.

 

Small dinning room detail

Small dinning room detail

 

The Central Park Casino was a favorite after theatre destination for politicians, show business folk and the wealthy. It also drew the ire of Park Commissioner, Robert Moses (1888-1981). Moses hated Jimmy Walker, who he felt had insulted his mentor, New York Governor Al Smith and he hated Walker’s corrupt administration. A progressive administration came in when Fiorello Laguardia was elected mayor in 1934, two years after Walker resigned from office. In that same year Moses and three friends went to the Casino and Moses was unpleasantly surprised when their bill came to $27.00 ($480.00 in 2015), which was higher than the prices at the Plaza Hotel. The whole story of the political battle over the Central Park Casino can be found in Susannah Broyles excellent blog post for the Museum of the City of New York. Click on Robert Moses’ photograph below for the link to that article.

 

Robert Moses - Image from the New York Public Library

Robert Moses Image from the New York Public Library

 

Moses’ public argument for closing the Casino was that there was no place for a restaurant in a public city park that was so out of reach for the majority of the citizens. But the proof of Moses’ vindictiveness toward Jimmy Walker was clear when the lease holder of the Casino, Sidney Solomon offered to revise the menu and cut prices to make it a more middle class restaurant, Moses still revoked the lease. In February of 1936 the Casino closed its doors, then came the final court battle to decide the fate of the structure. On May 1st the Appellate court decided that Moses had the power to tear down the building and  five days later demolition began. In April, 1937, at the cost of $1,000,000 a playground replaced the Central Park Casino, and New York lost not only a historic building, but a one of the best late 1920’s modernistic design interiors.

 

Wurts Bros. Image from the Museum of the City of New York.

Wurts Bros. Image from the Museum of the City of New York. Destruction of the Central Park Casino.

 

 

Wurts Bros. Image from the Museum of the City of New York. Demolition of the Central Park Casino, May, 1936.

Wurts Bros. Image from the Museum of the City of New York. Demolition of the Central Park Casino, May, 1936.

 

For the entire article about the Central Park Casino from the Architectural Record, click on the photograph below.

 

Central Park Casino Exterior

Central Park Casino Exterior

 

It is sad that the Central Park Casino’s life as an ultra-smart night spot lasted less than seven years. And since New York changes so much, so fast, the Central Park Casino has not only vanished physically, but also in the minds of almost everybody.

 

Chris & Anthony (The Freakin’, Tiquen Guys)