New York Tribune Building


The New York Tribune Building was a building built by Richard Morris Hunt in 1875 in Manhattan, New York City. It was built as the headquarters of the New-York Tribune, and was a brick and masonry structure topped by a clock tower. It was tall, and in its early years, the second-tallest building in New York, after Trinity Church. It was demolished in 1966.
The Tribune Building was located at 154 Printing House Square at Nassau and Spruce streets, on the site of an earlier Tribune building. In 1890 the New York World Building, headquarters for the New York World newspaper, was built one block away. The Tribune Building was one of the first high-rise elevator buildings.
The Tribune Building was originally a nine-story building. Between 1903 and 1905, nine more floors were added by the architects D'Oench & Yost and L. Thouyard to make it an 18-story building. The building has been put forward as a candidate for the first ever skyscraper.
Pace University held its first classrooms in the building, renting out one room in 1906.
The building was demolished in 1966 to make room for the 1 Pace Plaza building.