What was the first skyscraper in New York

In New York City, the history of skyscrapers started with the erection of the World Building in 1890, which reached to a height of 349 feet (106 m). Though not the city's first high-rise, it was the first structure to surpass Trinity Church's 284-foot (87-meter) tower. The building was designed by William Waldorf Astor, who had just been elected chairman of the board of directors of the newly formed Real Estate Board of New York.

The next major step forward in the development of skyscrapers came with the opening of the New York Tribune Tower in 1910. Designed by Graham, Anderson, Probst and Simpson, this 381-foot (116-meter) structure is still one of the highest buildings in New York City. It was followed by several other tall buildings, such as the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Tower, which was completed in 1990 at 1 Wall Street. This structure rises 468 feet (140 meters) - the second tallest building in New York after One World Trade Center, which will be completed in 2014 at 1,079 feet (329 meters)

The early 20th century saw the emergence of the office tower as we know it today. Before that time, most skyscrapers were used for commercial or residential purposes. The first true office building was the Rookery, which was erected in Chicago in 1891. It was followed by more than a dozen other such buildings throughout the United States.

The name "skyscraper" was coined in the 1880s, shortly after the first tall buildings were built in the United States, however towering buildings had been there for hundreds of years. Engineers have been fighting for the sky since the Middle Ages. There were towers before there were skyscrapers. But what's so new and revolutionary about skyscrapers? They combine high rises with heavy industry inside single building-montrals. They're one step away from cities in ruin and collapse.

Towers have been used in warfare for centuries. The Chinese invented the gunpowder bomb around 1180 and the British developed their own version called the black powder bomb which caused much damage during the American Civil War. Later improvements to gunpowder made it less explosive but more reliable. By the late 19th century, guns were powerful enough to destroy most buildings without lifting a finger. The only real defense against such attacks was high ground or underground space. Towers offered this protection while letting people view the surrounding area for bandits or enemy soldiers.

In modern times, the word "skyscraper" originates with the Chicago School of Architecture. Its leaders believed that the best architecture should serve as advertising for its creators. So they came up with ways to make their buildings stand out on Chicago's windy streets. One idea was to create buildings that went as high as possible so that they could be seen from far away.

There are 257 skyscrapers in New York City. New York City has the most skyscrapers in the United States, with 257 structures rising above 490 feet. There are 119 skyscrapers in Chicago. There are 1,315 tall structures in Chicago. Taller is not always better-looking, but it is in the case of skyscrapers, which are generally assumed to be ugly unless they're sculpted by Frank Lloyd Wright or Louis Sullivan.

The number one reason people hate skyscrapers is because they are believed to be ugly. But there are other reasons too: they block out the sun, kill trees, and use up valuable space that could be used for something else. Although some people love them, others think they are blight on the landscape and cause pollution through their cooling systems. There are even conspiracy theories about buildings being weapons aimed at destroying enemy cities.

The first skyscraper was built in New York City in 1881. It was called The Manhattan Company Building and was used for corporate headquarters. Today, more than 100 years later, the city has almost completely destroyed all previous building designs and replaced them with more skyscrapers. New York City has the second largest number of skyscrapers in the United States after Chicago.

In 2016, a new building called The Trump Tower will rise in New York City.

Manhattan, it turns out, contains bedrock that is exceptionally adapted to the construction of very tall structures, with many of them only a few meters below the surface. The solid land, however, vanishes in the gooey core of the island, restricting the city's development heights for a long time. Location of Manhattan buildings between 1890 and 1915. Mr. Koolhas describes this as a gap in development because there were no tall buildings on the island until after World War II.

In fact, the reason why there are so few skyscrapers in the city is not only due to the soil conditions but also because of the law. In New York City, all building floors must be made of concrete or steel frames with glass walls. The lack of availability of raw materials during World War II was one of the reasons why most buildings before then were under-sized.

But even though the law prohibits any other kind of material being used for building floors, it has never stopped real estate developers from trying out new things. In fact, the first true skyscraper built in America was actually located in New York City. It is known as the Singer Building and its height of 407 feet makes it currently the third highest building in the country. But despite its great success, it wasn't enough to encourage more people to use this new technology.

The next major breakthrough came just over 10 years later when Chicago became the first city in the world to build a completely metal frame structure for a large office block.

By Jason M. Barr       October 7, 2017

What was the world’s first skyscraper? If you do have an answer, you would be, most assuredly, wrong (sorry). Any skyscraper that we claim as the “first” is merely a convenience—a social convention to provide a simple answer to a complicated question.

But why would it be wrong? For two reasons. First, there is no universal definition of a skyscraper. Is it a relatively tall building, or a building that rises above some threshold (say 80, 90, or 100 meters), or perhaps both?

Alternatively, is it based on the materials and technology used? This definition leads to the second problem. After the Civil War, there were many buildings that incorporated some innovation, and thus we can point to any one of those structures to suggest it was the Original Skyscraper.

The most popular answer is that the ten-story Home Insurance Building in Chicago, completed in 1885, was the first true skyscraper. Why? Because the belief is that it was the one—the iphone of real estate—that fundamentally altered the world by applying the currently-available technology in a new way.

What was the first skyscraper in New York
Home Insurance Building, (1885), Chicago

Most significant is that the architect, William Le Baron Jenney, had the key insight to use iron (later replaced by steel) framing. Previously, large buildings used the walls to bear the load of the structure. But as the need for taller buildings arose in the late-19th century, this approach was no longer practical. The higher the building went, the thicker would be the walls on the lower floors, eating into the rentable space and rendering the project unprofitable.

However, in some sense, Jenney’s structure was a prototype, since the iron beams were embedded in the masonry walls, which also helped carry the load. Later buildings would use pure steel frames, or skeletons, while the walls were mere “curtains,” only needed to keep the elements out.

Historian Carl Condit writes,

The utilitarian advantages of steel framing were enormous and immediately obvious to architects, builders and owners. First was the possibility of getting rid of a supporting wall, with a consequent reduction in weight and an immense increase in height. The steel necessary to carry a tall building weighs only one-third as much as bearing masonry for an equal number of stories. The virtually unlimited increase in glass area, up to 100 per cent of coverage, allowed the maximum admission of light. The slender columns and wide bays offered greatly increased freedom in the disposition of interior space. Economy in cost of materials together with speed and efficiency of construction convinced even the most skeptical owners of the superiority of steel or wrought-iron framing.

In 1889, New York City soon entered the skyscraper game with the construction of the Tower Building at Lower Broadway. Architect Bradford Lee Gilbert also had an Eureka moment on how to build tall on the narrow lot. In 1905, he recalled that,

One day the idea came upon me like a flash that an iron bridge truss stood on end was the solution to the problem.

Gilbert’s building, also, was not a pure skyscraper, since the top floors included load-bearing masonry walls. New York and Chicago each tried to say they were the first. But after reviewing the evidence, Sarah Landau and Carl Condit write,

The only fair conclusion to be drawn is that architects, engineers and builders in New York, Chicago and Minneapolis were simultaneously and independently developing the iron skeleton system.

What was the first skyscraper in New York
Tower Building (1889), New York City

While the steel skeleton—and elevator—are perhaps the sine qua non of the skyscraper, there are also about a dozen or so systems that go together to create the whole skyscraper machine.  Necessary is the technology for wind bracing; anchoring the structure to the ground; fireproofing; heating, cooling, and ventilation; plumbing; and lighting and electrical wiring. Based on his research, Condit concludes,

If we are tracking down the origins the skyscraper we have certainly reached the seminal stage in New York and Chicago around the year 1870.

So 1870, 1885 or when?  Well, the debate about which was the first can be tedious, but here are other candidates that have been put forth.

In 1870, the Equitable Life Assurance Society completed its 7-story headquarters in lower Manhattan. Its revolutionary idea: include two steam-powered elevators for the office tenants. Perhaps for the first time in human history, businesses paid more money to rent the higher floors than the lower ones. Again, Landau and Condit:

All the exceptional features of the Equitable Building—its elevator-predicated height, “fireproof” constructions, extensive iron framing, large window area, and rent-free owners quarters—justify the title “first skyscraper.”

What was the first skyscraper in New York
The Equitable Life Assurance Society Building (1870), New York

Another possibility is the Tribune Building, completed in New York in 1875. It was likely the first office building to use height to show off the power of its occupant, the New York Tribune—the brainchild of Horace Greeley.  Media Studies expert, Aurora Wallace, writes,

The nine-story height ensured that the tower would be taller than any existing New York office building and was thus neither an arbitrary choice of height nor one based on the functional space requirements of the newspaper. The design and size of the Tribune building was primarily governed by the enhanced public image that would be garnered for the newspaper and only tangentially by the potential economic benefits of building tall.

What was the first skyscraper in New York
Tribune Building (1875), New York

Or perhaps the first skyscraper was the first building to actually receive the moniker “skyscraper.” Before they were applied to tall buildings, the word referred to other extremely tall or high phenomena, including sail masts, horses, and fly balls in baseball.

As late as 1883, the Chicago Daily was referring to a series of buildings in New York and Chicago as “sky-scrapers.” My searches through historical newspaper archives produced a December 19, 1882, New York Sun article entitled, “Another Sky Scraper Down Town,” which specifically refers to the construction of the Mutual Life Insurance Company building in Lower Manhattan, completed in 1884.

We can continue in this way ad naseum. While I, too, cannot provide a definitive answer, here’s my opinion. There are three characteristics that make a skyscraper a skyscraper: (1) a building that is significantly taller than typical buildings in a given locale; (2) uses an all-steel skeleton frame, and (3) satisfies an economic need.

Based on this criteria, the first skyscrapers would be the 10-story Lancashire Insurance Building in New York (1890) and the 16-story Manhattan Building in Chicago (1891), designed by William Le Baron Jenney.

What was the first skyscraper in New York
Lancashire Insurance Building (1890), New York
What was the first skyscraper in New York
Manhattan Building (1891), Chicago

Regardless of which building is chosen, what is certain is that by 1890, most of the technological barriers to building height had been removed in a way that allowed for supertall structures which could rise beyond 15 stories. By the turn of the 20th century, 25 to 30 floors (100 meters) were at the vanguard.

In the next post, we will review the history of building height over the 20th century and see how the skyscraper grew up.