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Fulton Building

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The Fulton Building is an historic structure in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania . Named after inventor Robert Fulton , the building was designed by architect Grosvenor Atterbury and completed in 1906. Construction was funded by industrialist Henry Phipps .

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5-399: Completed in 1906, the building was designed by architect Grosvenor Atterbury . Its construction was funded by industrialist Henry Phipps . It was subsequently named after noted inventor Robert Fulton . On May 26, 1943 the building hosted America's first night-court for gasoline war ration violators . Since 2001, it has been the home of the city's Renaissance Hotel . It was listed on

10-590: A number of celebrated experimental housing projects in Frankfurt. In this way Atterbury can be considered a progenitor of the Modern Movement. Atterbury was elected to the National Academy of Design in 1918 as an Associate member, and became a full member in 1940. Atterbury worked on various projects with John D. Rockefeller, Jr., in the 1930s, including what today is Stone Barns Food and Agriculture Center, and

15-634: The National Register of Historic Places in 2002. Grosvenor Atterbury Grosvenor Atterbury (July 7, 1869 in Detroit , MI – October 18, 1956 in Southampton , NY) was an American architect, urban planner and writer. He studied at Yale University , where he was an editor of campus humor magazine The Yale Record After travelling in Europe, he studied architecture at Columbia University and worked in

20-576: The offices of McKim, Mead & White . Much of Atterbury's early work consisted of weekend houses for wealthy industrialists. Atterbury was given the commission for the model housing community of Forest Hills Gardens which began in 1909 under the sponsorship of the Russell Sage Foundation . For Forest Hills, Atterbury developed an innovative construction method: each house was built from approximately 170 standardized precast concrete panels, fabricated off-site and assembled by crane. The system

25-460: Was sophisticated even by modern standards: panels were cast with integral hollow insulation chambers; casting formwork incorporated an internal sleeve, allowing molds to be "broken" before concrete had completely set; and panels were moved to the site in only two operations (formwork to truck and truck to crane). Atterbury's system influenced the work of mid-1920s European modern architects like Ernst May , who used panelized prefab concrete systems in

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