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Ford Foundation Center for Social Justice
Office building in Manhattan, New York From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Ford Foundation Center for Social Justice (also known as 321 East 42nd Street, 320 East 43rd Street, or the Ford Foundation Building) is a 12-story office building in East Midtown Manhattan in New York City. Completed in 1967, it was designed in the late modernist style by architect Kevin Roche and engineering partner John Dinkeloo of Roche-Dinkeloo. The building was commissioned as the headquarters of the Ford Foundation, the largest private foundation in the United States at the time of the edifice's construction.
The building is a glass-and-steel cube held up by piers made of concrete and clad with Dakota granite. The main entrance is along 43rd Street, and there is a secondary entrance on 42nd Street. The large public atrium inside, the first such space in an office building in Manhattan, was designed by landscape architect Dan Kiley and includes plants, shrubs, trees, and vines. Most of the building's offices are north and west of the atrium and are visible from other offices.
Commissioned after Henry Heald became the Ford Foundation's president, the structure was developed on the former site of the Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled. Final plans for the Ford Foundation Building were announced in September 1964, and the building was formally dedicated on December 8, 1967. The Ford Foundation Building underwent a major renovation and restoration project between 2015 and 2018, and it was renamed the Ford Foundation Center for Social Justice. The Ford Foundation Building has been critically acclaimed for its design, both after its completion and after the renovation, and the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission has designated the building and its atrium as city landmarks.
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The Ford Foundation Center for Social Justice is on the south side of 43rd Street, in the middle of the block between First Avenue to the east and Second Avenue to the west. It has addresses at 321 East 42nd Street to the south and 320 East 43rd Street to the north, although the 43rd Street entrance is the main entrance.[2][3][4] The site measures 202 by 200 feet (62 by 61 m), of which the building occupies an area measuring 180 by 174 feet (55 by 53 m).[5] The Hospital for Ruptured and Crippled Children (now the Hospital for Special Surgery) previously occupied the plot.[6][7]
The building is less than one block west of the headquarters of the United Nations, and it is surrounded by the Tudor City development.[4][8][9] The Church of the Covenant is immediately across 42nd Street to the south, and the Daily News Building is diagonally across 42nd Street and Second Avenue to the southwest. In addition, the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design and Beaux-Arts Apartments are one block north.[4]
43rd Street is a one-way street sloping down from Tudor City to the rest of the Manhattan grid.[4][10] Because of the street grid of the area, vehicles traveling to the building must travel eastward on 41st Street from Second Avenue, then turn onto Tudor City Plaza (which crosses 42nd Street), and then turn again onto 43rd Street.[9][10][11] This creates a "scenic" approach for the main entrance.[2][9] One architectural critic said that the complicated approach path was "not an accident but conscious contrivance".[10] Kevin Roche, one of the architects, stated that the approach to the building was intended to be similar to that in a rural setting.[9][11] Due to the topography, the 43rd Street entrance leads to the second floor, while the rear entrance on 42nd Street leads to the first floor. The spaces between the lot lines and the facades on 42nd and 43rd Streets contain red-brown brick pavers.[5]
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Architecture
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The Ford Foundation Center for Social Justice is 12 stories high and reaches 174 feet (53 m)[12][13] or 180 feet (55 m).[14] It was designed by Eero Saarinen Associates (renamed Roche-Dinkeloo in 1966), composed of Kevin Roche and John Dinkeloo,[15][16] who took over the firm after its namesake, their former boss Eero Saarinen, died in 1961. Roche was involved primarily in design, while Dinkeloo oversaw the construction.[16][17] Turner Construction was the contractor for the building.[16] In a 1988 book, Richard Berenholtz wrote that the building was, stylistically, "a thematic descendant of the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Anglo-Chinois garden and of the Victorian conservatory".[15]
The building is set back about 10 feet (3.0 m) behind the lot line. Its 12-story height was chosen because that was the same height as the second-lowest setback on the adjacent office tower on 42nd Street.[11] The design was intended to highlight the Ford Foundation Building as the eastern terminus of the succession of commercial structures along 42nd Street's northern sidewalk.[18] Roche stated that the building could have been built up to 2+1⁄2 times its ultimate size and thus have more office space that could be rented.[17][19] In addition, zoning regulations allowed the building to rise up to 160 feet (49 m) before setting back.[14] However, the building's developer Ford Foundation wanted it to be at a relatively low height as "a public gesture".[17][20] Roche also wanted the building to be a main part of what author Eeva-Liisa Pelkonen called a "larger urban context".[21]
Facade
The facade includes concrete piers and walls,[11][22] which are used primarily in support columns and walls.[23] The concrete are covered with gray-pink or mahogany South Dakota granite,[11][22] supplied by the John Swenson Granite Company of New Hampshire.[24] There are three granite piers, oriented northwest–southeast at a 45-degree angle to the street, which Roche said were intended to give visitors the impression that they were "partially in the building" even before entering.[11][25] The facade also uses Cor-Ten steel,[11][15][26] particularly in sections of the building that overhang other spaces.[23] The steel was allowed to weather to a deep tan color[27] and was used in place of exposed structural steel, which the city's fire-safety codes did not allow at the time.[28] Interspersed between the steel beams are 60,000 glass panes.[29] These materials were said to "harmonize" with Tudor City's red-brick facades;[11][30] although Roche criticized Tudor City as "a phony piece of stage-set architecture", he still perceived the setting as containing "a fairly nice character".[11][31]
The southern elevation is on 42nd Street. The western part of this elevation is a windowless granite slab. The eastern portion consists of two large granite piers: one at the center of the facade, and one at the southeastern corner. On the eastern section of the facade, the first through tenth stories have a recessed glass wall, while the eleventh and twelfth stories are recessed at a lesser depth and are carried over this recess by a glass-walled enclosure with an I-beam on top. The twelfth story protrudes further out than the eleventh story, and a catwalk hangs underneath the eleventh story. An entrance with a revolving door is between the two diagonal piers, and there is an additional set of doors in the space between the center pier and the western section of the facade.[5] As of 2024[update], the 42nd Street entrance is closed to the public.[32]
The eastern elevation faces Tudor City. It is similar to the 42nd Street elevation: the northern section is clad with granite while the southern section is a recessed glass wall, and there is a diagonally-oriented pier in the center of the facade. The southeast-corner pier does not face onto the eastern elevation. The eleventh and twelfth floors, as well as the catwalk, are also recessed to a lesser extent than the first through tenth floors.[5]

The northern elevation is on 43rd Street. The easternmost part of the facade is a windowless granite slab. The rest of the facade is composed of glass-walled offices between four narrow granite piers that divide the windows into three vertical bays.[5] The second-floor entrance is recessed significantly inward, creating a brick-paved porte-cochère behind the four piers. There are two brass double doors at this entrance.[33] The third and fourth stories are recessed as well, but at a progressively smaller scale, and the eleventh and twelfth stories are also slightly recessed.[5][30][34] The setbacks on this elevation were designed to reflect the terraced garden inside.[34]
The western elevation faces a private driveway. It is faced with granite, with a narrow bay of windows and two wider window bays from north to south. This private driveway also has brick pavers, a loading dock, and garage and service entrances.[6] When the building was completed, the western elevation was virtually imperceptible from Second Avenue, as the color of the granite blended in with that of other buildings.[35]
Interior
The Ford Foundation Building is built around a 1⁄3-acre (0.13 ha) public atrium[3][28] with a ceiling 160 feet (49 m) high.[28][36] The garden inside the atrium was designed by Dan Kiley, one of Saarinen's frequent collaborators.[22][34][37] The atrium takes up much of the building's southern and eastern elevations.[18][38] Above ground level, most of the upper stories are composed of narrow wings on the northern and western sides of the atrium,[18][39] arranged in a similar fashion to Spanish buildings with interior courtyards.[40] These wings measure 30 feet (9.1 m) wide, facing either the atrium or the street.[35] The eleventh and twelfth floors are suspended from a pair of girders[41] and overhang the lower floors and the atrium.[30][42] Unlike the lower floors, they have open-plan workspaces on all four sides, surrounding square openings at their centers.[18][30] The interiors cover 415,000 square feet (38,600 m2),[13] of which 290,000 square feet (27,000 m2) could be used as offices.[43]
The interior spaces were designed by Warren Platner.[44] The parquet floors are made of white oak,[45] interspersed with raised floor tiles made of ceramic.[27] Almost every decorative metal piece in the building was originally made of brass,[46] and marble drinking fountains and linen wall coverings were also used.[45] Other decorations were made of natural materials, including wool rugs inset into the oak flooring, as well as furniture made of leather and mahogany.[28][35] The original custom-designed furniture was costly; the chairs for each of the Ford Foundation's directors each cost $500,[I] and the smallest mahogany desks each cost $700.[II][45] The building also included works of art, including lithographs, from Old Masters when it opened.[45]
Atrium

The atrium is open to the public during the daytime and is free to visit.[32] The garden contains several tiers sloping up from 42nd to 43rd Street, with an elevation change of 13 feet (4.0 m).[13][30][39] The atrium is more easily accessed from 42nd Street, while the building's lobby is closer to 43rd Street.[48] At the building's northwest corner, the lobby links with several elevator banks.[18][32][46] A stair within the atrium's western section ascends to the lobby.[42] There are also several smaller stairs and ramps. A wheelchair lift at the atrium's southeast corner connects the garden's tiers.[32][49] The floor pavers are oriented west–east[50] and are made of brick, with iron embedded in the pavement.[27]
As originally arranged, the atrium had 18 aquatic plants, 37 trees, 148 vines, 999 shrubs, and 22,000 ground cover plants.[16][39][a] Kiley primarily selected woodland plants that could survive the atrium's highly variable humidity, which ranged from 10% in the winter to 50% in the summer.[51] There were also 250 movable pots with flowers in different colors, which were rotated out fortnightly.[51] The plantings were arranged in and around a central square fountain;[37][49][51] coins thrown into the fountain were used to help finance the atrium's upkeep.[45] Kiley transported some eucalyptus plants from California in the ultimately unrealized expectation that they would grow to 80 feet (24 m),[49] thereby providing shade for the upper-story offices.[52] Root balls were embedded in the soil, which itself rested atop a fiberglass membrane and layers of gravel and rocks.[51][53]
The garden originally had numerous drainage, irrigation, sprinkler, and lighting systems to ensure that the plants grew.[54] A pipe deposits rainwater from the roof into a storage tank in the basement.[55] A sprinkler system is installed under the garden, and a cistern at the building's southeastern corner collects condensation, which is used to water plants.[51] Because of the presence of skyscrapers nearby, artificial light illuminates the garden.[56] The atrium was originally lit by 76 spotlights on the eleventh floor and 43 lights at ground level,[28] although these lights were subsequently replaced.[42] Several Dakota granite piers support a glass roof above the atrium, and the paths are made of red-brown brick pavers.[48] A glass roof composed of greenhouse-like "sawtooth" panels is above the atrium.[42] Kiley had projected that the garden would have "a Darwinian struggle of the fittest", with only some plants surviving the atrium's difficult climactic conditions.[34] Even so, over the years, many of the original plants had to be replaced.[13][54][57] By the late 2010s, landscape designer Raymond Jungles of Jungles Studio had replanted the atrium with subtropical flora.[13]
At the time of the building's completion, the city government did not have zoning guidance specifically for indoor public areas.[49] Roche had intended for the atrium to spur informal encounters and serve as a meeting area,[58] and the Ford Foundation wanted to avoid the cramped feeling of other office structures like the nearby United Nations Secretariat Building.[59] The public atrium contrasted with contemporary International Style structures, which had plazas outside their respective buildings.[11][60] The greenery resembled the small parks within Tudor City to the east.[15][37] Roche stated in 1963 that an indoor garden had not previously been constructed in a contemporary building but, when interviewed later, stated that such gardens had become more common.[48][61] Despite Roche's intentions, the atrium originally had no benches (to prevent homeless people from sleeping there overnight), nor did it offer food concessions.[62] A single bench was subsequently added near the pool.[63] There was originally a guard to ensure that people did not loiter or lean on the steps.[64][45] The atrium remained publicly accessible after the September 11 attacks in Lower Manhattan in 2001, when other public spaces citywide were being closed off.[65]
Offices
Offices were generally divided into a grid of 6-foot-wide (1.8 m) modules. The offices of department heads typically measured nine modules wide, while lower-ranking officials had six-module-wide offices.[14] Generally, senior employees occupied the offices that faced the atrium, which Pelkonen called "a utopian suggestion suggesting a cathedral of labor".[66] The effect was blunted by the fact that there were gypsum walls separating the private offices from the corridors behind them. In the late 2010s, these walls were replaced with 42-inch-high (110 cm) workstations, allowing a full view across the atrium.[13]
The northern portions of the fourth through sixth stories are slightly set back behind the floors underneath them, creating three terraces that face the atrium.[30] Planters were placed atop the terraces.[16] The spaces have offices facing either the atrium or outside onto 43rd Street, allowing workers to see each other.[37][1][50] Roche said: "It will be possible in this building to look across the court and see your fellow man [...] There will be a total awareness of the foundation's activities."[37][1] According to Pelkonen, Roche had indicated in multiple interviews that the atrium's occupants "could not think of themselves as separate from their colleagues".[58] The offices and hallways facing the atrium had sliding doors and windows.[30][41] The atrium's glass walls are interspersed with weathering steel, while I-beams are used to support each floor.[42]
The presidential office suite originally covered 2,535 square feet (235.5 m2)[12] but was divided into three conference rooms in the 2010s.[13] As originally designed, the eleventh floor had a 130-foot-long (40 m) balcony overhanging the atrium.[12] This balcony led to a reception room with mahogany panels on the walls that hid filing cabinets. The chief executive's suite was 895 square feet (83.1 m2), containing a pantry and restroom. Another door led to a conference room, which could seat 40 persons around a 12-foot-long (3.7 m) table with a leather surface.[12] There was also a dining room on the 11th floor and a smaller executive dining room nearby,[27] though the executive dining room was eliminated in the 2010s.[13] To meet fire-safety regulations, the eleventh floor has sprinklers, a fire curtain, and an exhaust system.[13]
Other interior spaces
The elevators and one set of emergency stairs are on the western side of the building, near the northwest corner. Another set of emergency stairs are on the northeast corner. There are also emergency stairs within the diagonal piers on the eastern and southern sides of the building, at the ends of the northern and western wings respectively.[18][46] The Ford Foundation's library, which originally included 18,000 volumes, is located beneath the lobby.[27] The basement has a conference room and an auditorium,[27][67] the latter of which is decorated with a tapestry by Sheila Hicks.[68][49] There are 54,000 square feet (5,000 m2) of event space, as well as an art gallery and office space, all of which can be rented out.[49]
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History
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The Ford Foundation was established in Michigan in 1936 as a foundation for the family of Henry Ford, who had founded the Ford Motor Company.[69][70] In 1949, after a report by Horace Rowan Gaither, the foundation was reorganized to focus on economic improvements, education, freedom and democracy, human behavior, and world peace.[17][71][72] By 1950, it was the largest private foundation in the United States,[73] and its assets were valued at about $474 million.[III][17] The foundation had its main offices in Pasadena, California, and satellite offices in Detroit and New York City.[17] The New York office was at 477 Madison Avenue, where the foundation leased nine floors.[74] The New York location became the main office when the Pasadena location closed in 1953,[17] and the foundation leased three more floors at 477 Madison Avenue the next year.[75]
Planning and construction

The foundation's activities were changed in 1962 to focus on education, public, economic, and international affairs, as well as the arts and sciences.[17][76] The next year, the foundation bought land facing 42nd and 43rd Streets for its headquarters.[17][76] At the time, few private foundations were constructing prominent headquarters buildings,[17] and there were many office structures being built along 42nd Street.[77] The foundation's president at the time, Henry Townley Heald, had previously headed the Illinois Institute of Technology while its new campus was being built.[17][78] The building was to be designed by Joseph N. Lacy, John Dinkeloo, and Kevin Roche of Eero Saarinen Associates.[1] During the planning process, Roche created colorized diagrams of the site, which he presented to the Ford Foundation's leadership.[14]
Final plans for the Ford Foundation Building were announced in September 1964 at a cost of $10 million.[IV][1] At the time, construction was to begin the next month and be finished in 1966.[1] Rather than having the offices occupy all the space available under the city's zoning laws, Roche decided to include a large atrium, as he felt that most office buildings "tend to isolate the individual and store him away in a cubicle".[80] In designing the building, Roche said: "It's really very important in that kind of community for each to be aware of the other, for their common aim to be reinforced."[21] This philosophy influenced his decision to place offices only on two sides of the atrium.[14] During construction, in April 1967, a construction crane fell onto 42nd Street and injured four people.[81][82] Work was also delayed by a plumbers' strike that lasted five months.[83][84]
Usage
The Ford Foundation Building opened on December 8, 1967;[16] sources disagree over whether it had cost about $16 million[28][60] or $17 million.[41][45][59][V] Though the building was intended to accommodate 600 workers,[85] it initially had 400 employees.[35][41] It cost about $700,000 annually to maintain the building,[45][VI] including $70,000 just for the atrium garden.[51][VII] Due to the design of the building's glass walls, it was difficult for window washers to clean the structure, as they could only access the facade from the ground. As such, only the windows on the lowest two floors could initially be cleaned. The New York State Board of Standards and Appeals, which oversaw window-washing operations for the state's buildings, refused to approve a plan for the Ford Foundation Building's windows to be cleaned, so the windows gathered dust for the first two years after the building's completion.[29] After the Foundation modified the location of the window-washing terminals for safety reasons, the Board approved a window-washing plan in 1969.[29][86]
In 1975, during the ongoing recession, the Ford Foundation announced that it would lay off half its employees due to portfolio losses, and would consider renting out office space in the building.[87] The foundation's grants decreased significantly during the recession, from $197 million in 1973 to $75.8 million in 1979, though it still remained the largest private foundation in the U.S. When Franklin A. Thomas became CEO of the foundation in 1979, several rumors about his office at the building circulated, including that he had installed planters at the windows outside his office, or that he had requested all 10th floor offices except his own to be vacated.[85]
The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) designated the Ford Foundation Building's exterior and atrium, along with the exteriors of the Manufacturers Trust Company Building and the CBS Building, as city landmarks on October 21, 1997.[88] The Landmarks Preservation Commission called the building "one of the most successful and admired modern buildings to emerge in New York City following World War II."[2] For several years afterward, the Ford Foundation Building was the youngest building to have city landmark status, having been completed 30 years prior to its designation.[89][b] The design of the Ford Foundation Building, as well as its namesake's wealth, preserved the building during the early 21st century, when several other 1960s-era structures by Roche and other architects were being destroyed.[91]
In 2015, the Ford Foundation announced that the building would be renovated for $190 million. The building no longer complied with fire-safety codes, and the building would become environmentally friendly and compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.[12][92] The LPC approved the plans in April 2016.[93][94] During the renovation, the foundation moved to temporary offices nearby. Darren Walker, president of the Ford Foundation, wanted as many of the elements of the original structure to be preserved as possible, though the presidential suite would be removed to create a less imposing environment.[12] The renovation also added some event space.[49] The project, designed by architecture firm Gensler, was finished in late 2018 and cost $205 million. After the renovation was finished, the building became known as the Ford Foundation Center for Social Justice, reflecting the fact that the renovation had added space for social-justice groups.[22][95][36]
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Impact
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Reception
When the building was completed, Wolf Von Eckardt of The Washington Post characterized its design as challenging "sterile downtown architecture", particularly because its atrium was so different from other privately-owned public spaces in the city, which he considered to be clichéd.[35] According to The New York Times, the Ford Foundation Building "established [Roche] firmly as a designer on his own", where previously his work had been associated mainly with Saarinen.[96] Critics noted that the Ford Foundation Building's design deviated from that of major corporate headquarters.[17] One observer, James Burns Jr., said that "this building could not and would not have been built by a corporation", citing the Seagram Building, Lever House, and CBS Building as instances of corporate structures with distinctive designs.[97] Detractors claimed that the design was too costly for the headquarters of a nonprofit organization.[41]
Several architectural critics characterized the Ford Foundation Building as a symbol. Paul Goldberger said the building's "very presence [...] benefits the entire city",[98] William Zinsser described it as "an act of faith in the midst of ruin",[99] and Ada Louise Huxtable and Herbert Muschamp of The New York Times both praised the excellence of the design,[28][64] Another New York Times critic said the "design concept is fresh and radical change from the four-sided, glassed-in box".[51] The critic Jonathan Barnett described the building's cube-like form as "an ancient symbol of power" similar to that utilized in religious institutions.[46] Justin Davidson wrote for New York magazine in 2017: "The Ford Foundation has an imposing look of perpetuity. The foundation's mission is to battle the full panoply of timeless injustices around the world, and its home base is a see-through fortress, braced for an endless war."[100]
After the 2018 renovation, Archpaper said "you'd never know the crisp and clean, 415,000-square-foot building felt darker and smaller just four years ago."[95] Metropolis magazine said "The reimagining is refreshingly restrained and in keeping with Roche Dinkeloo's original tailored look and feel",[36] while a Times reporter stated that the design prior to the renovation had been "a Mad Men-era version of a Gesamtkunstwerk, a complete work of art".[22] After Roche's death the following year, Goldberger said in the Times that the building had managed to combine Kiley's atrium with Roche's predilection for steel, masonry, and glass.[101]
Atrium commentary
The atrium was also the subject of acclaim[48] and inspired the inclusion of indoor gardens in other buildings citywide.[102] Goldberger called the atrium "one of the city's most spectacular interior spaces",[98] and Barnett called it a gift to the city.[30] Vincent Scully characterized the structure as having a "military scale" with a "sultanic inner garden".[5][14][103] A critic wrote for Artforum that Roche and Dinkeloo had "pioneered the use of private space as a public amenity".[50] Olga Gueft wrote for Interiors magazine that the atrium's terrain and pathways were interesting to explore,[48][104] while Huxtable characterized it as "probably one of the most romantic environments ever devised by corporate man".[28][48]
Some publications, such as the first edition of the AIA Guide to New York City and Interiors magazine, characterized the atrium as pragmatic because it provided fresh air to the offices.[104][105] A writer in the British magazine Country Life said that the atrium, one of the relatively few areas of greenery in Midtown Manhattan, probably inspired enthusiasm for the headquarters' opening,[48][106] Conversely, Muschamp wrote that the atrium was unwelcoming compared to the contemporary Paley Park in Midtown,[62][107] while critic Emily Genauer said that she felt "an oppressive and breathless of sense of enclosure in a mammoth terrarium", saying its design could be oppressive for employees who had to see it every day.[38]
Awards and landmark status
The design won several architectural accolades as well. In 1968, the Ford Foundation Building and Paley Park shared an Albert S. Bard Civic Award, distributed to structures that exhibited "excellence in architecture and urban design".[5][108][109] The same year, local civic group Fifth Avenue Association gave the Ford Foundation Building and the Whitney Museum's Madison Avenue building a "Wish You Were Here" urban-design award.[110] In addition, the building won the AIA Twenty-five Year Award in 1995.[64][111] A year before the building became a city landmark in 1997, architect Robert A. M. Stern described the Ford Foundation Building as one of his favorites out of a list of 35 structures that he thought should have city landmark status.[112] Despite this, Roche only visited the building "three or four times" in the four decades after its completion.[113]
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