
Architects
The architects who shaped the corridors.
The Manhattan luxury apartment building was not designed by one architect. It was designed by perhaps thirty across half a century — and a handful of them designed most of what defines the canon today. Each profile lists the buildings.
Most-represented
Architects with multiple buildings in the catalog
J.E.R. Carpenter
12 buildings
Rosario Candela
11 buildings
Emery Roth
8 buildings
George and Edward Blum
7 buildings
Schwartz & Gross
7 buildings
Cross & Cross
4 buildings
Warren & Wetmore
4 buildings
Nathan Korn
3 buildings
Robert A.M. Stern Architects
3 buildings
Emery Roth & Sons
2 buildings
Henry Janeway Hardenbergh
2 buildings
Jacques Delamarre with Irwin S. Chanin
2 buildings
Schultze & Weaver
2 buildings
Wechsler & Schimenti
2 buildings
Single-commission architects
Additional architects represented
AAI ArchitectsAdrian Smith + Gordon Gill ArchitectureBottomley, Wagner & WhiteBuchman & KahnC. Howard CraneCaughey & EvansCharles W. Romeyn & Henry R. WynneChristian de PortzamparcClinton & RussellDelano & AldrichFrank GradFred F. French CompanyGeorge F. PelhamJean NouvelKenneth FranzheimLafayette A. GoldstoneMargon & HolderMayer & WhittleseyMcKim, Mead & WhiteMilliken & MoellerPaul ResnickPelli Clarke Pelli ArchitectsPhilip BirnbaumPhilip Johnson and Costas KondylisPhilip Johnson and John BurgeePickering & WalkerRafael ViñolyRobert T. LyonsSHoP ArchitectsSkidmore, Owings & MerrillStarrett & Van VleckSylvan and Robert BienSylvan Bien and Harry M. PrinceThomas E. StanleyTownsend, Steinle & HaskellW. K. Rouse & L. A. GoldstoneWelch, Smith & ProvotYork & Sawyer