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111 8th Avenue : ウィキペディア英語版
111 Eighth Avenue

111 Eighth Avenue is a full-block Art Deco multi-use building located between Eighth and Ninth Avenues, and 15th and 16th Streets in the Chelsea neighborhood of the Manhattan borough of New York City.
At , it is currently the city's fourth largest building in terms of floor area . It was the largest building until 1963 when the Met Life Building opened. The World Trade Center (which opened in 1970-71) and 55 Water Street , which opened in 1972, were also larger but the World Trade Center was destroyed in 2001. When One World Trade Center, with its 3.5-million-square-foot area, opened in 2014, 111 became the city's fourth largest building.
The building, which has been owned by Google since 2010, is one of the largest technology-owned office buildings in the world. It is also larger than Apple Inc.'s new circular "spaceship" () headquarters being built in Cupertino, California.
==Port Authority Commerce Building/Union Inland Terminal #1==
The building was designed by Lusby Simpson of Abbott, Merkt & Co. and completed in 1932.〔〔, p. 183.〕 The building had a multipurpose design when it opened in 1932 with the first floor and basement designated as "Union Inland Terminal #1" which was to be used to transport goods by truck to and from railroad lines and/or shipping piers. The second floor was the Commerce section designed for exhibitions and the upper floors were designed for manufacturing. The Union Inland Terminal was built by the Port Authority to be a warehouse/union station to handle less than carload (LCL) shipments, consolidating the shipping functions of the Hudson River piers two blocks west of the building, the eight trunk railroads that operated a block west of the building and truck operations (an inland terminal by definition is a warehouse that is not immediately next to railroad lines/piers but is nearby and is used to relieve congestion at the transfer points).〔〔
At its peak in the 1930s the Port Authority said it was handling more than half of the LCL freight operations south of 59th Street in Manhattan with more than 8,000 tons of goods passing through it each month. On one day alone in 1937 in was reported that 650 trucks had used the facility.〔〔 The railroads involved were the Pennsylvania Railroad; Lehigh Valley Railroad; Baltimore & Ohio; Erie Railroad; Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad; Central Railroad of New Jersey; New York Central Railroad; New York, New Haven & Hartford.〔〔 The building included four freight elevators that could carry fully loaded 20 ton trucks.〔〔 Because of the warehouse mission of the building it was able to avoid some of the setback rules that greatly reduced the buildable space available for the skyscrapers that mark the Manhattan skyline. As a result, the 15-story building with its football field size floors has more available rentable square footage than the 102-story Empire State Building which has 2.2 million square feet.〔〔 The construction occurred at a time of a massive projects built to deal with what at the time was street level freight railroad traffic on Manhattan's west side. Other projects in the neighborhood in the era included construction of the High Line and Starrett-Lehigh Building.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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