Boak & Paris
Boak & Paris | |
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Practice information | |
Key architects | Russell M. Boak Hyman F. Paris |
Location | New York City |
Boak & Paris was an American architectural firm best known for designing multiple pre-war buildings in Manhattan before and during the Great Depression. It was founded by Russell M. Boak and Hyman F. Paris.
History
[edit]Russell M. Boak and Hyman F. Paris were alumni of architect Emery Roth,[1] who had designed pre-war luxury residential buildings such as The San Remo and The El Dorado. Boak and Paris established their own architectural practice in 1927.[1]
Founders
[edit]Russell M. Boak
[edit]Russell M. Boak was born on September 25, 1896, in the Bronx, New York.[1] He attended public school and after eighth grade, he started as a draftsman in the office of Emery Roth.[1]
Hyman F. Paris
[edit]Little is known about the early years of Hyman Paris. He was born in Austria.[2] Records indicates that he was not registered as an architect until 1922, and had been employed by George F. Pelham in 1917 and by Emery Roth from 1912 to 1923.[2]
Buildings
[edit]Boak & Paris have designed numerous residential buildings that are now landmark or part of a landmark historic district of the City of New York.
- 139 East 94th Street (1928)
- 152 East 94th Street (1937)
- 315 Riverside Drive (1930)
- 450 West End Avenue (1931)
- 45 Christopher Street (1931)
- 302 West 12th Street (1931)
- 336 West End Avenue (1932)
- 2624-2626 Broadway (1933)
- 143 West 72nd Street (1935)
- 5 Riverside Drive (1936)
- 3-11 West 86th Street (1937)
- 100 Riverside Drive (1938)
- 20 Fifth Avenue (1940)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Gray, Christopher (July 15, 2001). "2 Little-Known Architects of Distinctive Buildings". The New York Times. Retrieved November 2, 2018.
- ^ a b NYC 2015, p. 312.
Bibliography
[edit]- Alt, Annice M. (2014). Boak & Paris / Boak & Raad: New York Architects. Xlibris. ISBN 978-1499054101.
- Betts, Mary Beth (June 23, 2015). Riverside-West End Historic District Extension II Designation Report (PDF). NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission.