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  1. Designated NYCL. July 9, 1985. The General Electric Building, also known as 570 Lexington Avenue, is a skyscraper at the southwestern corner of Lexington Avenue and 51st Street in Midtown Manhattan, New York City. The building, designed by Cross & Cross and completed in 1931, was known as the RCA Victor Building during its construction.

  2. 570 Lexington Avenue. More than a dozen Cornell programs occupy space in the historic General Electric building (formerly the RCA Victor building) at Lexington Ave. and 51st St., providing a new Midtown hub for faculty research, student learning and public engagement activities. The building serves as the new NYC headquarters for the ILR School ...

  3. 570 Lexington Avenue is also known as the General Electric Building (RCA Building) which stands at the southwest corner of Lexington Avenue and 51st Street and is best-known for its 30-foot enameled limestone Gothic spires. Known the world-over as one of the city’s most exquisite Art Deco jewels, this tower boasts a extraordinary crown top ...

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    The General Electric Building was originally designed and built for the RCA-Victor Corporation in order to project an image of great visibility for the company, which, at the end of 1920 was at the forefront of the radio industry and communications. Architects John Walter Cross and Eliot Cross of Cross & Cross, designed the building in a Gothic sty...

    The General Electric Building fifty floors dedicated to office space. It is located in the center of Manhattan, in the southwest corner of Lexington Avenue and 51st Street East. The main facades facing east to Lexington Avenue, where is the main entrance, 570 Lexington Avenue, and north to 51st Street East. The building is immediately adjacent to t...

    The most striking feature of this building is 196m tall extravagant coronation, a curious mixture of Gothic spiers of limestone with brick undulations and filigree ornaments in the shape of rays that represent the power of radio transmission waves sent by the Radio Corporation of America. At night, this “crown” is illuminated from the inside, so th...

    Topped with a crown of needles, this Art Deco skyscraper is decorated with diagonal and zigzag designs that evoke associations with electricity. Its brick veneer with glazed terra cotta ornaments mixed with the materials of the adjacent church of St. Bartholomew. With much of its base hidden behind the church is a rare example of a friendly context...

    The building is fairly conventional from a technical point of view. It is a skyscraper steel structure covered with brick and terra cotta. The slender octagonal tower General Electric Building rises from the twenty-sixth floor of the building, away from the silhouettes of the adjacent buildings. The unique needle characterizes the skyscraper as one...

    On a base of red granite it rises three levels, 50 floors covered with terracotta brick orange and variegated shades rise slightly. On the facade of the ground floor, brick combined with large slabs of red marble dotted with numerous ornamental pieces of steel and in some sectors form rounded walls that highlight the manual work done in the period....

  4. The General Electric Building is an Art-deco skyscraper designed by Cross & Cross, and built between 1929 and 1931 in New York, NY. General Electric Building is not the only name you might know this building by though. The building is, or has also been known as 570 Lexington Avenue Building. Its precise street address is 570 de Lexington Avenue ...

  5. The $3.5 million project restored the exterior marble, cleaned out the accumulation of half-a-century of small modern additions like fire call boxes in the lobby and disguised the 10-year old subway entrance as an original Art Deco element. The magnificent once-RCA Building, then General Electric Building, now 570 Lexington Avenue is one of the ...

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  7. The General Electric Building, also known as 570 Lexington Avenue, is a skyscraper at the southwestern corner of Lexington Avenue and 51st Street in Midtown Manhattan, New York City. The building, designed by Cross & Cross and completed in 1931, was known as the RCA Victor Building during its construction.

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