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Top 10 Watertank Enclosures, West Side

Pure, unadulterated, honest and organic wooden rooftop watertanks are a signature skyline theme, but they don’t make our list of the Top Ten Watertank Enclosures in NYC apartment buildings on the West Side that are stellar architectural achievements fit for the apex of our buildings.  It was, therefore, encouraging to note, therefore, that some alert citizens have organized the Water Tank Project at www.wordabovetheestreet.org to convert many of the city’s unadorned rooftop watertanks into works of art in the summer of 1913.  Of course, many of our finest watertanks have been already transformed into classical temples, turbines, ribbed barbecues, simple pyramids and rocketships.

 

#1 - Trump Parc, 106 Central Park South

Condo in Midtown West

This Central Park South skyscraper originally had an unusual, all-glass pinnacle with narrow ribs of reinforced concrete that transformed the top into a prism of light but when World War II made the city discourage nightime illumination of buildings its present top was created, a muscular and very dramatic griping of the sky. 



#2 - The San Remo, 145 Central Park West

Co-op in Central Park West

The twin towers of this Emery Roth residential building are modeled on the ancient Greek Choragic Monument of Lysicrates in Athens but their circular, colonnaded "temples" are much more attractive.



#3 - The Beresford, 211 Central Park West

Co-op in Central Park West

Here, Emery Roth designed three baroque, hexagonal towers with large, arched windows topped buy oval windows with broken pediments beneath pyramidal roofs with large copper lanterns containing very bright lights.



#4 - The Majestic, 115 Central Park West

Co-op in Central Park West

This building and the Century further down Central Park West were twin-towered apartment buildings not designed by Emery Roth but Jacques Delamarre for Irwin S,. Chanin with wrap-around corner windows and streamlined geometric sculptural treatment and smaller apartments.



#5 - The Eldorado, 300 Central Park West

Co-op in Central Park West

 This 28-story residential building has twin towers designed by Emery Roth with abstract geometic spires that have been likened to Flash Gordon finials.



#6 - The Oliver Cromwell, 12 West 72nd Street

Co-op in Central Park West

Credited with inaugurating the transformation of its neighborhood into one of the most distinctive areas architecturally of the city, this mid-block tower has numberous setbacks culminatinng in an octagonal drum  beneath a terracotta lantern  that emitted steam.



#7 - The Alexandria, 201 West 72nd Street

Condo in Broadway Corridor

This, very handsome, 25-story building was erected in 1991 with 202 residential condominium apartments and was designed by Frank Williams & Associates and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill with a wonderful Post-Modern watertank of Egyptian motifs.



#8 - Central Park Place, 301 West 57th Street

Condo in Midtown West

 With its pale-green aluminum cladding, this 55-story residential condominium tower designed by Davis, Brody & Associates has a high-tech, octagonal watertank enclosure.



#9 - The Alfred, 161 West 61st Street

Condo in Lincoln Center

 With its large mansard roof hiding its watertank, the 38-story Alfred opened in 1987 with 224 condominium apartments.



#10 - The Normandy, 140 Riverside Drive

Co-op in Riverside Dr./West End Ave.

Named after a great French oceanliner that eventually capsized at its New York City pier, this handsome building was the largest residential construction project in the city in 1939 and its two squat towers had penthouses with glass-brick circular stairways and fireplaces.