The Century
25
Central Park West

The Century is a
1931 Art Deco apartment building located along Central Park West in Manhattan, New York
City.
It was
constructed at a cost of $6.5 million dollars and designed by the firm owned by Irwin S.
Chanin.
The Century
apartment building is located on the former site of the Century Theatre, which was demolished in 1930-31 to make
way for the apartments.
A tenant-landlord
dispute at The Century was ongoing for most of the 1980s.
By 2007
properties within the building sold for as much as $12,000,000.
Architecturally
it is cast in the Art Deco style, which causes it stand out from many of its neighbors, which are designed in the
Beaux-Arts style.
The building
name, The Century, is derived from the common name of the theater which had occupied the
site.
The structure was
added to the National Register of Historic Places, as a contributing property to the Central Park West Historic
District, in 1982.
The building,
also part of a local historic district, is one of the three tallest structures within the boundaries of the
district.
Architect Irwin
S. Chanin's office executed a $1.25 million bond to guarantee the construction of "a twenty-nine story apartment
building" at 25 Central Park West on October 25, 1930.

The construction
was handled by another Chanin company, Chanin Construction Company.
Construction
would require over 3,000,000 ft (914,400 m) of electrical wiring, three times what was required for the 56-story
Chanin Building.
The address,
between 62nd and 63rd Streets was once the site of the Century Theatre, which Chanin acquired in order to build on
the site.
The Century
Theatre was initially well-backed by many wealthy New Yorkers but it quickly lost money.
The theater was
still being demolished in late October 1930 when Chanin's firm secured a $6.5 million loan from the Metropolitan
Life Insurance Company for the construction of The Century.
As the moves to
begin The Century project were occurring, Chanin's The Majestic was already under construction nearby, in the 100
block of Central Park West.
Theater
demolition pushed forward through early November.
In the November
9, 1930 edition of the New York Times Irwin Chanin remarked regarding construction of The Majestic and The
Century.
He noted that,
together, the two projects would employ a daily average of 3,000 men with rates of pay identical "those in vogue
during the boom days of 1927 when we were erecting the Chanin Building."
In January 1931, with demolition at the theater site winding down, a time capsule was pulled from the cornerstone
of the Century Theatre.
Among its
contents was a congratulatory letter from U.S. President at the time of the theater's construction, Theodore
Roosevelt.
October 1930
predictions had scheduled the building for completion by October 31, 1931.
By April 1931
construction began and by the end of May 1931 the steel structure for The Century was complete up to its 15
floor.
Within thirty
days the entire steel structure was complete, rapid progress made possible by, according Irwin Chanin "coordination
and overlapping of various trades employed."
On June 21, 1931
it was reported that the average number of workers since the beginning of construction was 1,050, with up to 1,400
employed at one time.
Original
predictions, by Chanin, estimated 1,500 men would be employed, on average per day, for a period of one year during
construction.
By September 1931
work on The Century was nearing completion and apartments were already being offered for
rent.
The 1980s saw
controversy surround The Century.
The building was
purchased in 1982 by an investment group and a proposal that thirteen months would have created a cooperative
corporation of The Century.
The proposal
offered to sell the building, purchased for $36 million, to the tenants for $110 million.
That proposal was
quickly nixed by the New York State Attorney General's Office but it engendered a long running "kill or be killed
relationship" between the building's tenants and its owners.
In 1983 tenants
accused owners of neglecting to maintain the property and sought court action against the
owners.
Lawyers
representing about 200 tenants described the building as a slum "with crumbling walls both inside and out, vermin
infestation, extensive leaks, and virtually everything else that can go wrong with a
structure."
The move was one
in a tenant-owner dispute that would last until 1989 when an agreement was finally
reached.
The New York
Times called the dispute, "one of the longest, bitterest conversion fights in Manhattan apartment house
history."
It ended with a
compromise that allowed tenants in 229 of the 410 apartments to purchase their apartments at prices which were
estimated to be one half or one third the market rate.
By February 1989
several of the apartments new owners had sold their individual properties at profits exceeding
$1,000,000.
The investment
group that purchased the building in 1982, Century Apartment Associates, saw their investment rise in value from
$36 million to around $140 million.
In the 21st
century, as it has been historically, The Century is largely an upscale apartment house.
As of February
2007 four bedroom apartments in The Century sold for around $12,000,000 with one bedrooms selling for between
$875,000 and $1,200,000.
“A sophisticated
essay in Art Deco design exhibiting a complex balance of horizontal and vertical elements.” —NYC Landmarks
Commission
The Century,
along with its one year older sister building, The Majestic, was among the first residential buildings to use what
had been predominantly an office building style of architecture.
Both The Century
and The Majestic stand 30-stories and their Art Deco motifs stand in contrast to the Beaux-Arts buildings that
surround them.
The building was
designed by the Office of Irwin S. Chanin, with Architectural Director Jacques Delamarre at the head of the design
team.
It was then
constructed in 1930 and/or 1931, sources vary slightly.
The Century
features art deco "machine-inspired" towers and cantilevered floor slabs.
The floor slabs
prevent the necessity of corner columns thus allowing the building to be fitted with large corner
windows.
The three ornate
entrances face Central Park West, 62nd, and 63rd Streets.
During the 1980s
the building held 410 apartments, ranging in size from one to eight bedrooms; 52 of the apartments had large
terraces.
The main lobby,
on the ground floor, houses professional offices.
The building is a
contributing property to the Central Park West Historic District, which was recognized by the U.S. National
Register of Historic Places when its nomination was accepted on November 9, 1982.
It is one of four
"twin-towered" structures in the historic district, including The Eldorado, and The San
Remo.
Collectively
these buildings contribute to the unique skyline of the Upper West Side along Central Park
West.
The Century was
designated a local landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission on July 10,
1985.
The designation
subjects improvements and changes to the property to various local regulations and rules administered by the
Landmarks Commission.
Upon its
designation as a local landmark the Commission staff remarked that The Century was a "sophisticated essay in Art
Deco design exhibiting a complex balance of horizontal and vertical elements."
At 30 floors it
and two other structures hold the title of the tallest building in the federally designated Central Park West
Historic District.
The height of the
buildings were shaped primarily by the Multiple Dwelling Act of 1929 which allowed apartment buildings no higher
than 19 stories.
The law provided
an exclusion for taller buildings, such as The Century, if a building site was sufficiently large and the building
itself occupied no more than 20% of the site.
The apartment
building shares a name with its site's predecessor, the Century Theatre, which was commonly known as simply, The
Century.
The Century Theatre

Built as "New Theatre" by Carrer & Hastings. Opened 6 Nov
1909.
And was host to the world premiere of Sergej Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No. 3 (Nov
28th, 1909) .
Operated as a non-profit theatre with classic and standard repertoire drama performances.
Also popularly known as "Millionaires' Theatre" referring to the theatre's rich sponsors, Ott Kahn.
1911 renamed "Century Theatre".
Subsequently mostly used for musical performances.
1920 bought by the Shubert Company. Subsequently used for operetta and musical performances. 2318
seats.
Demolished 1930 in favour of the apartment block, "Century Apartments".
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