The Bankers Trust Building, ca. 1938.
The original granite clad, Neoclassical tower, topped with a monumental stepped pyramid, rises on the corner of Broad and Wall Streets from a site ninety feet square. The pyramid, which was once the trademark of the now-defunct Banker’s Trust, is modeled on the classical Mausoleum of Halicarnassus. Until this point, the more prominent banks and investment houses of Wall Street had eschewed the novelty of high-rise construction. Trowbridge and Livingston were also the architects of the J.P. Morgan Building, diagonally across the street, and the New York Stock Exchange Extension, across Wall Street. They imbued the tower’s design with a sense of monumentality.
Note how the deeply set windows in the ground and first floor give the base a sense of real solidity -- an effect also achieved by the deep-set Ionic colonnade below the pyramid top. An L-shaped Art Deco extension surrounds the tower on three sides. While the extension employs a modernist vocabulary, its design defers to the architecture of its origins. Shreve Lamb & Harmon were also the architects of the Empire State Building. Until recently the tower contained one of the most beautiful Art Deco banking halls in the city and was home to the Skyscraper Museum from 1998-1999. It has since been converted to a health club.