EMPIRE STATE BUILDING, Observatory

Your browser doesn't support HTML5 audio

Among the various Art Deco elements in the marble foyer of the Empire State Building, I’d like to draw your attention to the striking painting on the ceiling, in honor of the machine age, and, to the medallion on the wall behind the reception, in which the skyscraper is depicted as a kind of lighthouse with light radiating from the spire.

Now press pause and head towards one of the elevators on the second floor which, in a supersonic journey lasting just 60 seconds, will take you up to the first of the two observatories.

On the remarkable terrace of the 86th floor, if you’re not scared of heights, you can enjoy breath-taking views of the entire city; on a particularly clear day, you can even spot the four States that border New York: Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

You might be surprised to learn that this main observatory, which attracts thousands of people each day, was the saving grace of the skyscraper. When the building was completed, at the beginning of the Great Depression, most of the offices remained vacant, earning it the sarcastic nickname of “Empty State Building”....

Scarica MyWoWo! La Travel App che ti racconta le meraviglie del mondo!