In 1929 the Stewart & Company woman's department store building opened. Designed by Warren and Wetmore, the firm who designed Grand Central Terminal, this building was somewhat of a departure for the firm, whose work was usually firmly entrenched in a very traditional Beaux-Arts style.
A massive retail addition to a growing commercial neighborhood, the hulking exterior was somewhat unadorned except for a detailed entranceway of limestone, bronze, platinum, and hammered aluminum and near the top of the facade, limestone relief panels of two nearly naked women. The interior was laid out as a series of shops, fashioned in a myriad of rich and exotic woods and plush modern furniture.