The New York Times building, Nueva York

Architect: Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Year: 2007

Location: New York, United States

Category: Commercial

Status: Unbuilt

The New York Times building, Nueva York

About

The new headquarters for The New York Times newspaper was commissioned via invited competition in 2000. RPBW’s winning design opens up a neglected corner of Manhattan opposite the Port Authority, with a 52-storey building whose themes of permeability and transparency express the intrinsic link between the newspaper and the city. The building’s basic shape is simple and primary, and relates to the Manhattan grid of streets. Occupying nearly half a block between West 40th and 41st streets, the slender, cruciform tower meets the ground at 8th Avenue. Floors zero to four step out behind the tower to fill the plot with a four-storey podium. Wrapped around a courtyard garden, this lower section of the building is the newspaper’s newsroom, nicknamed ‘the Bakery’ because the journalists work all night here preparing the next day’s paper. The building is designed to be as transparent and permeable as possible. For this reason, and unusually for a New York City tower, the ground-floor lobby is not a closed private space simply serving as access to the offices on the floors above. There is open access to anyone as a shortcut through the block from 40th to 41st streets. Crossing the lobby gives views through to the open-air courtyard garden, a serene space of birch trees and moss. The garden provides a backdrop to a 378-seat auditorium. It is possible to sit inside the ground-floor auditorium and see right through the building to the taxis passing on 8th Avenue outside. Also in the lobby is the art installation Moveable Type by Ben Rubin and Mark Hansen, whose 560 small digital displays process changing content from the newspaper.

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