Emery Roth - Work By Emery Roth

Work By Emery Roth

See also category: Emery Roth buildings
  • Hotel Belleclaire, Broadway (1903)
  • The Adath Jeshurun of Jassy synagogue, 58 Rivington Street (1903)
  • 601 West End Avenue (1915)
  • The First Hungarian Reformed Church East 69th Street (1916)
  • 1000 Park Avenue,at the northwest corner of 84th St. (1916)
  • 151 East 80th Street (1922)
  • The Whitby, 325 West 45th Street (1924)
  • 110 West 86th Street (1924)
  • Chester Court at 201 West 89th Street (1924)
  • 243 West End Avenue (1925)
  • 221 West 82 Street (1925)
  • 930 Fifth Avenue (1925)
  • Ritz Hotel Tower (1925); with Carrère and Hastings. New York's first residential skyscraper introduced terraces at the setback levels.
  • 41 West 96th Street (1926)
  • 65 Central Park West (1926)
  • The Alden, 225 Central Park West (1927)
  • The Oliver Cromwell, 12 West 72nd Street (1927)
  • Warwick Hotel (1927)
  • Hotel Benjamin (1927)
  • Manchester House, 145 West 79th Street (1928)
  • The Eldorado (1929–31)
  • The Beresford (1929), 211 Central Park West
  • 300 West 23rd Street (1929)
  • 35 Prospect Park West (1929) (Brooklyn)
  • Hotel St. George (1930)
  • Hotel St. Moritz (1930)
  • 784 Park Avenue (1930)
  • The San Remo, Central Park West (1930). The first of the twin-towered residential skyscrapers.
  • The Ardsley (1931); Roth's outstanding Art Deco residential skyscraper
  • 275 Central Park West (1930–1931)
  • 140 East 28th Street (1932); residential building
  • 880 Fifth Avenue (1948)
  • 47 West 96th Street
  • 310 West End Avenue
  • The Normandy, 140 Riverside Drive. Last of the twin-towered residences, and Roth's choice for his retirement apartment.
  • 10 Sheridan Square (Shenandoah Apartments)
  • 888 Grand Concourse (1937) (Bronx)

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Famous quotes containing the words work and/or roth:

    “The work is done,” grown old he thought,
    “According to my boyish plan;
    Let the fools rage, I swerved in nought,
    Something to perfection brought;”
    But louder sang that ghost “What then?”
    William Butler Yeats (1865–1939)

    Undermining experience, embellishing experience, rearranging and enlarging experience into a species of mythology.
    —Philip Roth (b. 1933)