54th Street is a two-mile-long (3.2 km), one-way street traveling west to east across Midtown Manhattan in New York City.
Notable places, west to east
Twelfth Avenue
Eleventh Avenue
Tenth Avenue
Ninth Avenue
Eighth Avenue
- The section between Eighth and Broadway is signed Señor Wences Way, for the ventriloquist who had appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show (produced nearby) and who lived in the Ameritania Hotel.
- The Marc, 260 West 54th, 42-floor, 142 m / 464 ft apartment tower on top of municipal garage (south)
- Studio 54 (south)
- Ameritania Hotel (south)
Broadway
- The corner of Broadway and 54th is signed "Big Apple Corner" in honor of writer John J. Fitz Gerald who lived there and popularized the phrase Big Apple.
- 1700 Broadway, 42-story, 162 m / 533 ft office tower that is headquarters of King World Productions
Seventh Avenue
- 1325 Avenue of the Americas (north) (actually closer to Seventh Avenue) 35-story 153 m / 502 ft, is the office tower that was portrayed in Seinfeld as Elaine's workplace. It is connected to the Hilton Hotel. (south)
- Conrad (formerly The London NYC), 54-floor 180m/590ft mixed-use tower; tallest building on West 54th (north)
- Ziegfeld Theatre (north)
- New York Hilton Hotel, 49-floor, 148 m hotel completed in 1963. Designed by Lapidus, it was originally supposed to resemble Miami Beach's curved Fontainebleau Hotel, but was later changed to resemble the nearby New York Sheraton which Lapidus had also designed. (south)
- 1345 Avenue of the Americas, 50-story, 191 m / 625 ft office tower (north)
Sixth Avenue
- 1330 Sixth Avenue, called "Brown Rock" when it was headquarters of ABC Television (south)
- Financial Times Building, 41-story, 151 m / 496 ft office tower completed in 1965 (south)
- The Warwick Hotel, 36-story, 111 m / 363 ft hotel completed in 1927 (north)
- Tower Verre, an under-construction 77-story, 320 m / 1,050 ft tower at 53 West 53rd Street (south)
- Museum of Modern Art (south)
- Museum Tower 52-story Cesar Pelli tower completed in 1985
- Rockefeller Apartments, a New York City landmark
- Residences at 5âÂÂ15 West 54th Street, a series of townhouses built in the late 1890s. All of these are New York City designated landmarks and collectively form a National Register of Historic Places district called the Residences at 5-15 West 54th Street.
- 13 and 15 West 54th Street occupied by John D. Rockefeller Jr. and Nelson Rockefeller
- 9âÂÂ11 West 54th Street, occupied by James J. Goodwin and Josephine Goodwin
- 7 West 54th Street occupied by Philip Lehman and Robert Lehman
- 5 West 54th Street, occupied by Moses Allen Starr and Alice Dunning Starr
- 4 West 54th Street, Mansion and Residence of John D. Rockefeller (now Museum of Modern Art)
- University Club (north)
Fifth Avenue
Madison Avenue
Park Avenue
Lexington Avenue
Third Avenue
- Lipstick Building (south)
- 909 Third Avenue, 32-floor tower built above the FDR Station (a post office) (north)
Second Avenue
First Avenue
- Rivertower Apartments, 39-floor apartments (south)
- Saint James' Tower, 30-floor apartments
Sutton Place South
References
External links