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- 810_Fifth_Avenue abstract "810 Fifth Avenue is a luxury residential housing cooperative in Manhattan, New York City.810 Fifth is located on the northeast corner of East 62nd Street, across the street from the Knickerbocker Club. It was designed by J. E. R. Carpenter for the Bricken Construction Company and built in 1926 on the site of a house owned by Mrs. Hamilton Fish. It is a 13-story, limestone-clad building in Italian Renaissance-palazzo style. It is one of the most expensive addresses in the city.The building contains only 12 apartments: a ground floor maisonette, 10 full-floor apartments and a multi-floor penthouse. Each full floor apartment has 5,000 square feet (460 m2) of space, four bedrooms and four servants rooms. The elevator opens into a private entrance foyer on each floor. Every apartment has windows overlooking Central Park. The detailing of the exterior in "elegant... limestone-clad, Italian Renaissance-palazzo style" is carried into the lobby, which features bronze torchieres and an elaborate carved plasterwork ceiling. The New York Times once speculated that 810 might be the only apartment building in the city to have "more employees than apartments."Nelson Rockefeller lived in a two floor apartment with his first wife Mary Todhunter Clark. The 30-room apartment was renovated for the Rockefellers by Wallace Harrison and decorated by Jean-Michel Frank. She retained the apartment after the divorce, while Rockefeller moved to a penthouse that encompasses the building's top three floors with his second wife, Margaretta Fitler ("Happy") Murphy. The apartment was expanded by purchasing a floor of 812 Fifth Avenue. The two spaces connected via a flight of six steps. Rockefeller and his second wife used the entrance at 812 Fifth while his first wife entered through 810 Fifth.In 1963 former Vice President Richard Nixon bought an apartment in the building. During the 1968 presidential contest, Nixon and Rockefeller used different elevators. Nixon held meetings in his fifth-floor apartment during the campaign, including an early meeting with the man who would become his Vice-President, Spiro Agnew.In 2000, the building's board of directors turned down an application by Gary Winnick to buy the former Nelson Rockefeller apartment.Notable residents have included Felix Rohatyn and former Archer Daniels Midland CEO Dwayne Andreas. David Geffen moved into 810 in 2006 but moved to 785 Fifth Avenue in 2010.".
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageID "25985550".
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageLength "5622".
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageOutDegree "23".
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageRevisionID "643312301".
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink 62nd_Street_(Manhattan).
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink 785_Fifth_Avenue.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Category:Condominiums_and_housing_cooperatives_in_Manhattan.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fifth_Avenue.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Category:Midtown_Manhattan.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Category:Residential_buildings_in_Manhattan.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink David_Geffen.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Dwayne_Andreas.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Felix_Rohatyn.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Fifth_Avenue.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Gary_Winnick.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Hamilton_Fish.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Housing_cooperative.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink J._E._R._Carpenter.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink James_Edwin_Ruthven_Carpenter,_Jr..
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Jean-Michel_Frank.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Knickerbocker_Club.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink List_of_numbered_streets_in_Manhattan.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Manhattan.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Nelson_Rockefeller.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink New_York_City.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink New_York_Times.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Park_Cinq.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Nixon.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Spiro_Agnew.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink The_New_York_Times.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLink Wallace_Harrison.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageWikiLinkText "810 Fifth Avenue".
- 810_Fifth_Avenue hasPhotoCollection 810_Fifth_Avenue.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Convert.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue subject Category:Condominiums_and_housing_cooperatives_in_Manhattan.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue subject Category:Fifth_Avenue.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue subject Category:Midtown_Manhattan.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue subject Category:Residential_buildings_in_Manhattan.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue hypernym Housing.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue type Building.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue type District.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue type District.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue comment "810 Fifth Avenue is a luxury residential housing cooperative in Manhattan, New York City.810 Fifth is located on the northeast corner of East 62nd Street, across the street from the Knickerbocker Club. It was designed by J. E. R. Carpenter for the Bricken Construction Company and built in 1926 on the site of a house owned by Mrs. Hamilton Fish. It is a 13-story, limestone-clad building in Italian Renaissance-palazzo style.".
- 810_Fifth_Avenue label "810 Fifth Avenue".
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- 810_Fifth_Avenue sameAs Q4644471.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue sameAs Q4644471.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue wasDerivedFrom 810_Fifth_Avenue?oldid=643312301.
- 810_Fifth_Avenue isPrimaryTopicOf 810_Fifth_Avenue.