Park Avenue Armory
Completed in 1861, occupying an entire city block, this Gothic-style brick building is now an arts center but was originally the headquarters, foot drill hall, and social club for the Seventh Regiment, a National Guard unit called the "Silk Stocking" regiment because its members were mainly drawn from wealthy Gilded Age families. The reception rooms on the first floor and Company Rooms on the second floor were designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany, Stanford White, and other fashionable designers of the time. A major renovation included restoring the Tiffany- and White-designed Veterans Room and the building's facade. These days the armory is used for trade shows, huge art installations, plays, and concerts, which take full advantage of the 55,000-square-foot drill hall. Intimate artist conversations, recitals, and experimental performances are held in the smaller, first- and second-floor spaces. A 75-minute walking tour visits the first-floor period rooms, the drill hall, and part of the second floor; buy tickets in advance.