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| [[Image:EmpireStateBuilding 2007 amk bw.jpg|right|250px|thumb|Empire State Building]]
| | Greetings! I am Myrtle Shroyer. Doing ceramics is what her family members and her enjoy. For many years I've been operating as a payroll clerk. For a whilst I've been in South Dakota and my mothers and fathers reside close by.<br><br>Feel free to visit my website ... [http://www.adosphere.com/poyocum www.adosphere.com] |
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| '''Shreve, Lamb, and Harmon''' was the [[architect|architectural firm]] best known for the 1931 [[Empire State Building]], the tallest building in the world at that time.
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| The firm was formed in 1924 as '''Shreve & Lamb''', a partnership of the Canadian [[Richmond Shreve|Richmond Harold ("R.H.") Shreve]] and [[William F. Lamb]] from Brooklyn, in which Shreve was the businessman and organiser, and Lamb was the designer. The two had met while working at [[Carrère & Hastings]], and in 1920 formed the successor firm of Carrère & Hastings, Shreve & Lamb. In 1929 [[Arthur Loomis Harmon]] from Chicago joined Shreve & Lamb, and the firm became Shreve, Lamb & Harmon.<ref>Klose, Oliivia. [http://www.nyc.gov/html/lpc/downloads/pdf/reports/2427.pdf "500 Fifth Avenue Designation Report"] [[New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission]] (December 14, 2010)</ref>
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| When Harmon came into the partnership, the Empire State Building was already underway. In their first meeting with the client [[John J. Raskob|John Jacob Raskob]], Lamb asked Raskob about his vision for the building. Raskob stood a pencil on end and said, "How high can you make it so that it won't fall down?"
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| ==Notable buildings==
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| All in [[New York City]] unless otherwise indicated:
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| *[[Reynolds Building]], [[Winston-Salem, North Carolina|Winston-Salem]], 1929
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| *[[521 Fifth Avenue]] (also known as the ''Lefcourt National Building''), 1929
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| *[[740 Park Avenue]] (with [[Rosario Candela]]), 1930
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| *[[500 Fifth Avenue]], 1931, <!-- [[based in New York]] (heading says that) -->
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| *[[Empire State Building]], 1930–1931 <!-- [[another one based in new york]] (heading says that)-->
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| *[[14 Wall Street]] (formerly the ''Bankers Trust Company Building'') addition, 1931–1932
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| *[[Joel W. Solomon Federal Building and United States Courthouse]] (with [[R. H. Hunt]]), [[Chattanooga, Tennessee|Chattanooga]], [[Tennessee]], 1932
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| *[[99 John Deco Lofts]] (formerly ''The Great American Insurance Company Building''), 1933
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| *[[Jerusalem International YMCA]] (architect [[Arthur Loomis Harmon]]), [[Jerusalem]], [[Israel]], 1933
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| *[[Acacia Building]], [[Washington, D.C.]], 1936
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| *[[Hill Building]] (formerly the ''SunTrust Tower'', ''CCB Building'' or ''Central Carolina Bank'', and ''Durham Bank and Trust Building''), [[Durham, North Carolina|Durham]], North Carolina, 1935–1937
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| *[[Lever Brothers Co. Headquarters (now MIT Sloan School, Building E52)]], [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]], 1938
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| *[[Hunter College]], 1940
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| *[[Parkchester, Bronx|Parkchester]] buildings, 1939–1942
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| *[[Best & Co.#Flagship store|Best & Company Building]] (demolished), 1947
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| *[[Mutual of New York Building|1740 Broadway]] (formerly the ''MONY Building'' or ''Mutual of New York Building''), 1950
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| *[[New York Supreme Court|New York Supreme Court, Kings County]], 1957
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| *[[Columbia University|Carman Hall]], 1960
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| *[[United Engineering Center]] (demolished in 1997), 1961
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| *[[280 Park Avenue]] (formerly the ''Bankers Trust Building'', with [[Emery Roth & Sons]]), 1961
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| *[[222 Broadway]] (formerly the ''Western Electric Building''), 1961
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| *[[Calyon Building]] (formerly the ''Crédit Lyonnais Building'' and ''J. C. Penney Building''), 1964
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| <!--*[[Uniroyal Giant Tire]], [[Allen Park, Michigan|Allen Park]], [[Michigan]], 1964 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shreve,_Lamb_and_Harmon&action=edit§ion=1#تثجحذشصكمنيؤئنסℕℕℕℕℍℍℍℍℍ<math>⊈Ō</math> faulty version -->
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| *[[Uniroyal Giant Tire]], [[Allen Park, Michigan|Allen Park]], [[Michigan]], 1964
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| *[[245 Park Avenue]] (formerly the ''Bear Stearns Building'', ''American Brands Building'', and ''American Tobacco Company Building''), 1967
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| *[[1250 Broadway]] (formerly the ''Cooper-Bregstein Building''), 1967–1968
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| *[[475 Park Avenue South]], 1969
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| *[[Gouverneur Hospital]], 1970
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| *[[Textron Tower]] (formerly the ''40 Westminster Building'' and ''Old Stone Tower''), [[Providence, Rhode Island|Providence]], [[Rhode Island]], 1972
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| *[[55 Church Street]], [[New Haven, Connecticut|New Haven]], [[Connecticut]], 1974
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| *[[Deutsche Bank Building]] (formerly the Bankers Trust Plaza, now demolished), 1974
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| *[[3 Park Avenue]], 1975
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| ==References==
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| '''Notes'''
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| {{reflist}}
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| ==External links==
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| *{{commonscat-inline}}
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| {{DEFAULTSORT:Shreve, Lamb and Harmon}}
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| [[Category:Architecture firms based in New York]]
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| [[Category:Architecture firms of the United States]]
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Greetings! I am Myrtle Shroyer. Doing ceramics is what her family members and her enjoy. For many years I've been operating as a payroll clerk. For a whilst I've been in South Dakota and my mothers and fathers reside close by.
Feel free to visit my website ... www.adosphere.com