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Times Square Building (Rochester)

Art Deco architecture in Rochester, New YorkArt Deco skyscrapersOffice buildings completed in 1930Ralph Thomas Walker buildingsSkyscraper office buildings in Rochester, New York
Times Square Building
Times Square Building

The Times Square Building is an Art Deco skyscraper designed by Ralph Thomas Walker of the firm Voorhees, Gmelin, and Walker located in Rochester, New York, United States. At 260 feet (79 m), it is the eighth-tallest building in Rochester, with 14 floors. The former Genesee Valley Trust Building is a streamlined twelve-story building supporting four aluminum wings 42 feet (13 m) high, known as the "Wings of Progress", each weighing 12,000 pounds (5,400 kg). These structures are among the most distinctive features of the Rochester skyline. The trompe-l’oeil style is used for the decor throughout the building's interior and features various depictions of stylized wheat in reference to Rochester's presence as "the flour city". The building originally hosted a Depression era mural by Carl William Peters (1897-1980) on exhibit from its opening that was later destroyed.The cornerstone of this bank was laid on October 29, 1929, "Black Tuesday" of the 1929 stock market crash.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Times Square Building (Rochester) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Times Square Building (Rochester)
Exchange Boulevard, City of Rochester

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N 43.15465 ° E -77.61253 °
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Times Square Building

Exchange Boulevard 45
14614 City of Rochester
New York, United States
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Times Square Building
Times Square Building
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Reynolds Arcade (1829–1932)
Reynolds Arcade (1829–1932)

The Reynolds Arcade (1829–1932) was a commercial building constructed by Abelard Reynolds in 1829 on Buffalo Street (now Main Street) in Rochester, New York. According to Joseph W. Barnes, a Rochester City Historian, it was, "the center of Rochester downtown life for more than a century." After it was demolished, an office building with the same name was constructed on the same site. Built of brick, it was four-and-a-half stories tall and almost 100 feet wide. It contained 86 rooms arranged on either side of a 15-foot-wide, skylighted corridor that extended from the primary entrance on Main Street to the rear entrance on the next street to the north. On top, it had an observation tower, and it had 14 cellars. It housed six stores that opened directly onto Main Street. The other shops and offices on the first floor opened into the interior corridor, while those on the second floor opened onto a balconied gallery that overlooked the corridor. Hotel rooms were on the upper floors. The town post office was in the building, enhancing the arcade's role as the city hub. When Rochester received its city charter in 1834, the inauguration ceremony for its first mayor, Jonathan Child, was held in the Reynolds Arcade. In later years, the arcade served as the main entranceway to Corinthian Hall, which was built by Reynolds in 1849 and located across the street from the arcade's rear entrance. The hall was a prominent location for lectures, concerts, plays, balls, parties and fairs. Directly across the street from the arcade's Main Street entrance was the office of the North Star, the abolitionist newspaper operated by Frederick Douglass. Douglass, who had escaped from slavery, delivered his "What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?" speech in 1852 in Corinthian Hall, a speech that one biographer called, "perhaps the greatest antislavery oration ever given." Two major corporations trace their origins to the Reynolds Arcade. The headquarters of the young Western Union telegraph company was located in the arcade from 1856 to 1866. Western Union eventually became the dominant telegraph company in the United States. Bausch & Lomb, which grew into one of the world's largest eye-care companies, began in 1853 as a daguerreotype shop in the Reynolds Arcade. The shop sold eyeglasses at first as a sideline, but after the two partners devised a way to make eyeglass frames that cost less, eye care products became the focus of their business. The arcade was the scene of abolitionist activity by both blacks and whites who owned businesses there, including the Francis and Cleggett barber shop. Benjamin Cleggett, whose father had escaped from slavery, worked as a barber in Rochester before moving to Geneva, New York. He married Frances Nell, whose brother, William Cooper Nell, worked in Douglass's North Star newspaper office. The arcade was home to the Reynolds Library, the city's main reference library, from 1886 until the arcade was demolished. The Reynolds Library was then merged with the Rochester Public Library. By the 1920s, the arcade was becoming increasingly outdated in addition to being a fire hazard. It was demolished in 1932 and replaced the following year by a ten-story office building that, in honor of its predecessor, was also named the Reynolds Arcade.