UNITED NATIONS HOTEL (now One UN New York), first floor interiors, consisting of the Ambassador Grill and part of the lobby

September 20, 2016

1 and 2 United Nations Plaza
(aka 783-793 First Avenue, 335-343 East 44th Street, 323-333 East 44th Street, 322-334 East 45th Street)
Built: 1969-76 (Ambassador Grill), 1979-83 (lobby)
Architect: Kevin Roche Dinkeloo Associates
Style: Late Modern and Post Modern
Action: Item proposed for the Commission's Calendar on September 20, 2016

September 20, 2016 - LPC

The Ambassador Grill and Hotel Lobby are significant examples of Late and Post-Modern design by the internationally-acclaimed architectural firm Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates. Lavish and exceptionally well preserved, these sparkling public interiors skillfully blend modern and historical forms. Completed seven years apart, they incorporate distinct stylistic vocabularies that express the shifting character of American architecture in late 1970s and early 1980s.

Part of a hotel-and-office complex built by the United Nations Development Corporation, both interiors are located on the first floor. The theatrical U-shaped Ambassador Grill opened in 1976. It has mirrored walls and a dramatic, vaulted, faux skylight, backed by illuminated mylar panels. The expanded lobby, facing East 44th Street, is especially elegant. Completed in 1983, the atrium-like reception area features a stepped octagonal glass dome and a ramped hallway flanked by free-standing columns of unusual design. Such classicizing features suggest the growing influence of Post-Modern aesthetics during this era.

These interiors were celebrated by many architecture critics. Paul Goldberger called the Grill "New York's first good hotel dining room since the 1920s." Carter Wiseman described it as a "glittering piece of public theater" and Ada Louise Huxtable wrote that these spaces "have real style – the style and conviction of their own times." In her 2011 monograph on Roche, architectural historian Eeva-Liisa Pelkonen called these public spaces significant representations of the era: "With its over-the-top interiors the hotel became a destination and an active participant in the disco era of the late 1970s and the 1980s, when New York's economy finally turned around."

Major works by Roche Dinkeloo include the Oakland Museum of Art (1961-68) and the Ford Foundation (1963-68, a New York City Landmark and Interior Landmark), as well as numerous additions to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, including various interiors (1967-2012). Roche was awarded the Pritzker Prize in 1982, the field of architecture’s top prize, and the Gold Medal from the American Institute of Architects in 1993.

September 20, 2016 - LPC

Photos: Courtesy KRJDA