New York, New York
90 Church Street was one of the largest federal buildings constructed during the Great Depression and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
90 Church Street - which houses the United States Post Office Church Street Station and Federal Office Building - was designed by Cross and Cross and opened in 1937. The National Register-listed building is one of the finest examples of a Works Progress Administration (WPA)-era federal building, blending formal classicism with an Art Deco ornamental program.
The fifteen-story building occupies a full square block at the northeast corner of the World Trade Center site. Its massing includes a six-story base with a recessed H-shaped tower rising above. The building is steel framed while the façade is clad in limestone with brick and terra cotta backup masonry. The building also has steel windows, cast aluminum decorative spandrel panels and grilles. The stonework exhibits bold sculptural elements including oversized triglyphs and stylized corner eagles at the base, large acroteria at the parapet corners of the tower and round reliefs executed by sculptor Carl Paul Jennewein.
We provided structural renewal, envelope renewal and historic preservation services for the restoration of the building to Boston Properties who manages the property.