The Normandy

The Normandy, at 140 Riverside Drive and 86th Street, is a luxury residential cooperative apartment building in Manhattan, New York City. It is one of the city's best Art Deco buildings, and the last of the great twin-towered apartment houses built by architect Emery Roth; it was in The Normandy that Roth chose to live in his retirement years. The AIA Guide to New York City comments on the building's "senuous curves".[1]

A 1978 review of Roth's work by architecture critic Paul Goldberger in the New York Times commented that

the Roth firm took on modernism slowly the Normandy apartments of 1938 at 140 Riverside Drive have an Art Deco-like base, but the ornamental housing for the water tower lurches back suddenly to the Italian Renaissance. There were a few other such schizophrenic [Roth] designs from the 30's and buildings such as 930 Fifth Avenue and 875 Fifth Avenue of 1940 show a gradual disappearance of the old ornament.[2]

The Normandy is a New York City landmark.[3]

Notes

  1. White, Norval & Willensky, Elliot (2000), AIA Guide to New York City (4th ed.), New York: Three Rivers Press, ISBN 978-0-8129-3107-5
  2. Goldberger, Paul (February 16, 1978). "Emery Roth dominated the age of apartment buildings". New York Times. Retrieved March 1, 2010.
  3. Guide to New York City Landmarks. New York: John Wiley and Sons, 2008. p. 148-9.

Coordinates: 40°47′24.6″N 73°58′47.4″W / 40.790167°N 73.979833°W / 40.790167; -73.979833

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