NYU Meyer Hall of Physics (New York City, New York)

USA / New Jersey / Hoboken / New York City, New York / Washington Place, 2-6
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Originally two separate buildings, they were joined internally in 1954, but retain extremely different exteriors. The western half, an 11-story Beaux-Arts store-and-loft building at 4-6 Washington Place, was completed in 1904. It was designed by Henri Fouchaux. The eastern half was built as 707 Broadway, and was completed redesigned by Philip Johnson and reconstructed in 1971 with a new 12-story sandstone facade. This facade has narrow, vertical strips of dark metal and glass windows, matching the other Johnson-designed NYU buildings.

The western portion of the building is also called the Psychology Building, and is itself divided into two halves, with a simpler facade of grey brick with stone sills and lintels and no other ornament on the southern half of the west elevation, facing Mercer Street. The northern half (and the north facade facing Washington Place) are much more ornate. The 2-story base has large stone piers rising from a granite foundation to a dentiled stone cornice. The 2nd floor is enclosed with opaque glass blocks. The upper floors are clad in grey brick, with banding on the 3rd floor and the outer bays, and cornices above the 3rd and 8th floors. The windows have splayed stone lintels on the 3rd floor, and radiating brick lintels above, as well as stone sills. The piers are decorated with cartouches at the 8th & 10th floors. The 10th-floor windows are segmental-arched, and the north half of the building is crowned by a projecting metal roof cornice with large modillions. NYU acquired the building(s) in 1956, and fully converted them to academic use in 1960.
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Coordinates:   40°43'44"N   73°59'39"W
This article was last modified 5 years ago