Rabu, 13 Juni 2018

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New York Architecture Photos: Brooklyn Trust Company Building
src: www.newyorkitecture.com

Brooklyn Trust Company adalah bank New York City.


Video Brooklyn Trust Company



History

The company was leased in 1866. In 1873 it experienced difficulties resulting in a brief operating suspension. Between 1913 and 1930 the company acquired five other banks through a merger. The company merged into the Manufacturer's Trust Company on October 13, 1950. At the time of the merger, Brooklyn Trust Company has 26 branches.

  • George Vincent McLaughlin was president of the Brooklyn Trust Company beginning in 1940.
  • Charles Jeremiah Mason, Jr. (1899-1990) joined the Brooklyn Trust Company in 1939. He was assistant to the vice president at the Brooklyn Trust Company when he joined Hanover Producers in 1950. He became assistant vice president at Hanover Producers in 1953 and vice president in 1955, retired in 1964.
  • William Boone Nauts (1902-1990) joined the Trust Company in Brooklyn in 1925. During the Depression he joined the Manufacturer's Trust Company. He retired in 1967 as vice president of Hanover Trust Producers.

Maps Brooklyn Trust Company



Headquarters building

The former Brooklyn Trust Company headquarters is a historic bank building located on the corner of Montague and Clinton Road in Brooklyn Heights. The headquarters inspired by the Italian Renaissance was built between 1913 and 1916 by the York and Sawyer architecture firms. It was modeled after the Palazzo della Gran Guardia in Verona.

The building is built on the same site as the previous bank headquarters. Marc Eidlitz & amp; Son Builders N.Y.C. building a building in two phases. The first half began at the corner of Clinton and Pierrepont Road at the end of 1913 and was completed in September 1915. The second stage began in October 1915 and was completed in August 1916. The entire construction process was photographed monthly by Irving Underhill.

The main interior space is inspired by ancient Roman and Italian Renaissance architecture. The banking hall had large hanging chandeliers dangling from vaulted ceilings, staircases, curved windows, and Cosmati-style marble mosaics. The building was erected in 1996. The interior is also marked. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2009.

The building was sold for $ 9.7 million in 2007 by JPMorgan Chase, successor of the Brooklyn Trust Company through the Manufacturers Trust Company. It was bought by Brookfield Asset Management who in turn sold it to Stahl Real Estate Company. The building is occupied primarily by law firms but Chase Bank still leases the ground floor to maintain its retail banking branch.

177 Montague Street - Curbed NY
src: cdn.vox-cdn.com


Gallery


177 Montague Street - Curbed NY
src: cdn.vox-cdn.com


References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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