CIA Original
Headquarters Building at Langley,
Virginia, 1961
Harrison & Abramovitzwas
an American architectural firm based in New York and
active from 1941 through 1976, a partnership ofWallace
HarrisonandMax
Abramovitz.
The firm was best known for modernist corporate
towers on the East coast and Midwestern cities. Most
are straightforward. One notable stylistic
innovation was the use of stamped metal panels on
the facade, first at the 1953Alcoa
BuildinginPittsburgh,
and repeated at the 1953Republic
CenterTower
I in Dallas and the 1956 former Socony-Mobil
Building at 150 East 42nd Street in New York City.
Both Harrison and Abramovitz were design architects
and worked independently. Some projects are clearly
attributable to one or the other: for instance the
buildings at University of Illinois at
Urbana–Champaign, Abramovitz's alma mater, are his
designs. Harrison's work at theEmpire
State Plaza"commanded
his attention almost exclusively" for 15 years, from
1962 through 1976,[1]which
implies the other work of the partnership in that
period is primarily attributable to Abramovitz.
After 1976 Abramovitz partnered with others.
The firm was also known asHarrison,Fouilhoux&
Abramovitz(1941
through Fouilhoux's death in 1945),Harrison,
Abramovitz, & Abbe, andHarrison,
Abramovitz, & Harris.