Robert T. Lyons

St. Urban Apartments on Central Park West.
At 17 stories, 903 Park Avenue was the tallest apartment building in the world in 1916
Gramercy Park Hotel, 1925.
2 Horatio Street, 1931.

Robert Timothy Lyons (23 February 1873 - 15 May 1956) was an architect responsible for many residential and commercial buildings in New York City in the early 20th century. Typically he built in a Renaissance Revival or Neo-Federal style.

Early life

Lyons was born in New York on 23 February 1873[1] and died 15 May 1956 Truckville, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania[2]

Career

Emporis, the global real estate data and photo publishing firm, identifies 29 of Lyons' buildings in New York City in some detail—built largely between 1891 and 1931 (listed below). They are virtually all hotels or residential buildings. There are some commercial buildings.[3][4]

Lyons' notable work from the earlier part of his career would include the “St. Urban” on Central Park West at 89th Street which opened in 1906 in partnership with developer Peter Banner.[5]

There is at least one example of Lyons' work in Brooklyn Heights- 11 Schermerhorn Street.[6][7] Robert T. Lyons was an associate architect to William Van Alen in the preliminary design of the Reynolds Building, which was later revised to create the Chrysler Building.[8]

Lyons would partner with Bing & Bing on a number of prominent projects over a period of several decades. Among the earliest projects in that partnership was “the tallest apartment building in the world” at 903 Park Avenue at 79th Street—breaking the record of 12 stories with 17 stories when it opened in 1916.[9] Another prominent Bing & Bing project was the Gramercy Park Hotel,completed in 1925. It is located at the commencement of Lexington Avenue on Gramercy Park and was built on the site of architect Stanford White’s home.[3] He partnered with Bing & Bing on 2 Horatio Street apartment building which opened in 1931.

Government work

The New York Times refers to him as an architect of the New York State Mortgage Commission in 1935.[10] The New York times mentions that after working as an architect with the Federal Housing Authority from 1942 to 1944, Lyons would be returning to private practice in October 1944.[11]

Notable buildings

From Emporis:

References

  1. World War I draft registration card. Dated Sept. 12, 1918, Yonkers, NY and signed by Mr. Lyons.
  2. Death Certificate Luzerne County, Pennsylvania
  3. 1 2 Emporis listing of Robert T. Lyons buildings in NYC
  4. MetroHistory search for Robert T. Lyons building in NYC
  5. Luxury apartment houses of Manhattan: an illustrated history By Andrew Alpern, Courier Dover Publications, 1992, page 71.
  6. Original blueprints of 11 Schermerhorn Street, 1914
  7. http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/digital/collections/cul/texts/ldpd_7031148_053/pages/ldpd_7031148_053_00000421.html
  8. Office for Metropolitan History, "Manhattan NB Database 1900-1986," (date of access), http://www.MetroHistory.com
  9. "903 Park Avenue, at 79th Street; 1914 Apartment House Once Called World's Tallest," New York Times May 12, 2002
  10. New York Times
  11. New York Times October 10, 1944, Real Estate notice
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