666 Fifth Avenue

at 666 Fifth Avenue, New York

666 Fifth Avenue is a 41-story office building on Fifth Avenue between 52nd and 53rd Streets in Midtown Manhattan, New York City.The Tishman family via Tishman Realty and Construction built the 1,500,000-square-foot (140,000 m2) tower in 1957.[2] It was designed by Carson & Lundin and the building was called the Tishman Building. One of its most famous exterior features was the prominent 666 address emblazoned on the top of the building. The other distinctive exterior features are embossed aluminum panels. The original design included lobby sculptures by Isamu Noguchi including the "Landscape of the Cloud" which consists of sinuously cut thin railings in the ceiling to create a cloud effect. The cloud is also carried into a ceiling to floor waterfall. The penthouse was occupied by the Top of the Sixes restaurant. For many years the building had a distinctive feature of a T-shaped atrium walk-through open to the sidewalks on 52nd Street, 53rd Street and Fifth Avenue with glass storefronts inside the walk-through. This included a bookstore and another area used for years by Alitalia Airlines. The entrance to 666 Fifth Avenue was inside this walk-through. The lunch scene from The Wolf of Wall Street was actually filmed at the Top of the Sixes.

Address and contacts of 666 Fifth Avenue

place map
666 Fifth Avenue
666 Fifth Avenue
New York , NY 10103
Email

General Info

new york office building!

Company Rating

Summary

666 Fifth Avenue is New York based place and this enity listed in Architectural Site category. Located at 666 Fifth Avenue NY 10103.

Points of Interest category, New York

Elaine's Restaurant
1703 2nd Avenue New York , NY 10128 null

Woody Allen frequents this classic New York restaurant and featured it prominently in the movie Manhattan. This is where the film begins, as Allen is discussing the ups and downs of dating a 17-year old to his friends. Elaine's was an Upper East Side bar and restaurant, located near the corner of 2nd Avenue and East 88th Street in Manhattan which shut its doors for the last time on May 26, 2011. Established in 1963, Elaine's is famed both for the writers and other New Yorkers such as Woody Allen, Mia Farrow, George Plimpton, Gay Talese, Tom Wolfe, William J. Bratton, Peter Maas, Clay Felker, Joseph Heller, Norman Mailer, Helen Frankenthaler, Robert Motherwell, Mario Puzo, Mark Simone, Sally Quinn, Chris Noth and Sidney Zion, who had been regulars over the years, and for its late chain-smoking namesake and proprietress Elaine Kaufman, who ran the restaurant for over four decades. Visitors included Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Mick Jagger, Clint Eastwood, Leonard Bernstein, Eli Wallach, Kirk Douglas, Michael Caine, Elaine Stritch, Luciano Pavarotti and Willie Nelson, among others. The restaurant was noted for its Oscar night, where celebrities and visiting Hollywood stars congregated to watch the Academy Awards ceremony. Billy Joel immortalized the establishment in his song "Big Shot" supposedly about a date gone wrong which included a stop at the eatery with the lyrics, "they were all impressed with your Halston dress and the people that you knew at Elaine's". A scene from Woody Allen's Manhattan was filmed at the restaurant, as was a short sequence in the 2010 film Morning Glory of Elaine Kaufman herself at the bar of Elaine's (where the producer played by Rachel McAdams is trying to track down the television host played by Harrison Ford and Elaine relates at what time he left). In the 1988 hit comedy Big Business, to divert a mismatched set of twins (played by Bette Midler and Lily Tomlin) from upsetting an important shareholder vote, Midler's alter-ego character offers to take them to Elaine's. Elaine's is also immortalized in the Stone Barrington novels by author Stuart Woods. The first chapter always begins with "Elaine's. Late". In 2003, New York City banned smoking in restaurants. Kaufman claimed to have quit smoking several years earlier, but was unhappy about her customers being forced to forgo tobacco at their seats. She died from chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder and pulmonary hypertension on December 3, 2010, aged 81. Kaufman willed the establishment to longtime manager Diane Becker. Becker later explained her reason for closing the restaurant, "The truth is, there is no Elaine’s without Elaine...the business is just not there without Elaine."

La Esquina Corner Deli (filming location for C.H.U.D.)
114 Kenmare St New York , NY null null

Situated in NYC's vibrant Nolita and most recently in Wiliamsburg, Brooklyn. La Esquina offers an innovative rendition on tasty Mexican inspired street food. This diner also served as the filming location for the hilarious 80's horror flick C.H.U.D (which stands for cannibalistic humanoid underground dwellers). If you haven't seen it, you should. It features one of the first appearances by John Goodman in a film, and features a race of creepy cannibals living below the streets of New York. The locations remains largely unchanged to this day. For Soho Location: J/Q/R/N/Canal J Bowery M/F/B/D Broadway Lafayette 6 Spring

Carroll Street Bridge
Carroll St New York , NY 11217 null

Points of Interest in New York, NY