Harold Uris

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Harold D. Uris (1906-March 28, 1982) was an American real estate entrepreneur and philanthropist.[1]

Biography

After earning a civil engineering degree from Cornell in 1925, Harold joined his brother, Percy, who had a 1920 business degree from Columbia University, and their father, Harris, founder of an ornamental ironwork factory, in developing residential real estate. After WWII, the brothers focused on commercial development, with one handling the construction and the other the financial aspects. Claiming to be the largest private developers in New York City, the Uris Brothers primarily used architect Emery Roth. In 1960, they created Uris Buildings Corp. as a real estate investment company. One of the last buildings the brothers built together was the Uris Building housing the Uris Theater.[2] Soon after Percy's death in 1971, Harold sold the corporation (including this building) to National Kinney Corporation, but the assets were soon foreclosed in NY's real estate recession.

Harold and Percy Uris created the Uris Brothers Foundation in 1956, and gave money to Cornell, Columbia, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Harold Uris was a Cornell trustee from 1967 to 1972, and was an influential member of Cornell's Buildings and Properties Committee. Two buildings bear his name on Cornell's Ithaca campus. A social sciences building built in 1972 was named for Uris and his brother Percy.[3] Earlier in 1962, the main University Library building was renamed Uris Library.

In 1983, Uris donated $10 million to establish the Ruth and Harold D. Uris Center of Education at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[4]

He died on March 28, 1982 at the age 76, at St. Mary's Hospital in Palm Beach, Florida.[5]

Notable projects

Uris Brothers developed the following buildings either solely or jointly with others.[6] The Urises maintained ownership of the four buildings in bold.[2]

  • Hotel Carter
  • 930 Fifth Avenue
  • 880 Fifth Avenue (Emery Roth's final building)
  • 2 Sutton Place
  • 55 Water Street, 1972, New York
  • American Tobacco Company Building
  • J.C. Penney Building (333 E 33rd St.)
  • I.T.T. Building
  • RCA Communications Building (60 Broad Street)
  • Paramount Plaza, 1971, New York (also included the Gershwin Theatre then called the Uris Theatre
  • 245 Park Avenue, 1967, New York
  • Hilton Washington, 1965, Washington, DC
  • Credit Lyonnais Building, 1964, New York
  • New York Hilton, 1963, New York
  • Look Building 488 Madison Avenue, 1950, New York (on National Register of Historic Places)
  • 380 Madison Avenue
  • 300 Park Avenue (Colgate-Palmolive Building)
  • 575 Madison Avenue
  • 485 Lexington Avenue
  • 750 Third Avenue
  • 2 Broadway
  • 850 Third Avenue
  • 320 Park Avenue
  • 350 Park Avenue (Manufacturers Hanover Trust Building)
  • 1290 Avenue of the Americas (Sperry Rand Building)
  • 1301 Avenue of the Americas
  • 111 Wall Street
  • 1633 Broadway
  • 10 East 53rd Street

References

  1. Specter, Michael (July 19, 1981). "Harold Uris Recollects with Pride". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-01-28. 
  2. 2.0 2.1
  3. Uris Hall Retrieved 2009-01-28.
  4. Taylor, Kate (October 24, 2007). "The Met Opens Renovated Education Center". New York Sun. Retrieved 2009-01-28. 
  5. Kihss, Peter. "HAROLD URIS, SKYSCRAPER DEVELOPER AND PHILANTHROPIST, IS DEAD AT 76", The New York Times, March 29, 1982. Accessed January 11, 2011.
  6. http://www.emporis.com/application/?nav=company&lng=3&id=103168

External links

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