
St. Vincent's O'Toole Building. Yes, there are people in there.Photo: JetCity J's flickr
The building "presents an alternative to the orthodoxy of an International Style sheer-glass curtain wall," gushed Michael Gotkin of the Modern Architecture Working Group, who turned out for the talk. "It has good scale, it has texture, it has rhythm," said John Kriskiewicz, a Parsons architectural-history professor, of the current building. The architect, who now lives in New Orleans, said he'll gladly come back to New York to testify on the building's behalf. "If it were removed, it would be very well missed," Ledner declared, cheerfully unaware that at least as many people detest the building as cherish it. But there's another modernist structure in town he'd part with: Edward Durrell Stone's 2 Columbus Circle — which, also unknown to Ledner, is undergoing a major redesign after preservationists lost a battle to maintain it. "I always thought that building had some strange elements," he shrugged, when we told him. Like an oddly windowless façade? —Tim Murphy
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