Quote:
Originally Posted by CoolCzech
The lobby of this Art Deco skyscraper, designed by William Lamb and completed in 1931, is being restored.
[b]A plastic-panel dropped ceiling in the lobby, added in the 1960s, is being removed. In its place will go a re-creation of the original ceiling, a gold-leaf-on-canvas abstraction of planets and stars. A re-creation, rather than a restoration, is necessary because removing the white paint slapped over the original art was deemed too costly and difficult, explains Richard Metsky, an architect with Beyer Blinder Belle Architects and Planners, which is handling the renovation. Crews will stretch a new canvas over the old one, preserving it in case future generations ever develop a more cost-effective restoration method.
Overall, Metsky hopes to improve the character of a lobby whose triple-height main entry and buffed gray-and-lilac terrazzo floors has in recent years been muddled by bulky security gates and garish storefront signs. Renovations, which begin in July and will last until March 2008, will add rows of cold cathode bulbs to brighten the dim space, which encompasses half a city block and has five entrances. Back-lighted illustrations of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, added in the 1960s, will be removed.
Beyer Blinder Belle is particularly suited to the project, having restored Grand Central Terminal and the Chrysler Building, both nearby New York City landmarks with highly decorative ceilings.
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.....god......fucking 1960s.
Aside from that, it's so great about this restoration, and I think it's awesome that they are recruiting the restorer of Chrysler and GCT, two very well-turned out restoration jobs, IMO. I'll have to visit the Empire State when I'm home in the summer.
lol that'd be so awesome if they actually did come up with a better restoration method, and then they're all "What idiots paint over artwork, and then cover it with canvas?"