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Boak & Paris was an American architectural firm best known for designing multiple pre-war buildings in Manhattan before and during the Great Depression. It was founded by Russell M. Boak and Hyman F. Paris.

History

Russell M. Boak and Hyman F. Paris were alumni of architect Emery Roth,[1] who had designed pre-war luxury residential buildings such as The San Remo and The El Dorado. Boak and Paris established their own architectural practice in 1927.[1]

Founders

Russell M. Boak

Russell M. Boak was born on September 25, 1896, in the Bronx, New York.[1] He attended public school and after eighth grade, he started as a draftsman in the office of Emery Roth.[1]

Hyman F. Paris

Little is known about the early years of Hyman Paris. He was born in Austria.[2] Records indicates that he was not registered as an architect until 1922, and had been employed by George F. Pelham in 1917 and by Emery Roth from 1912 to 1923.[2]

Buildings

Boak & Paris have designed numerous residential buildings that are now landmark or part of a landmark historic district of the City of New York.


  • 139 East 94th Street (1928)
  • 152 East 94th Street (1937)
  • 315 Riverside Drive (1930)
  • 450 West End Avenue (1931)
  • 45 Christopher Street (1931)
  • 302 West 12th Street (1931)
  • 336 West End Avenue (1932)
  • 2624-2626 Broadway (1933)
  • 143 West 72nd Street (1935)
  • 5 Riverside Drive (1936)
  • 3-11 West 86th Street (1937)
  • 100 Riverside Drive (1938)
  • 20 Fifth Avenue (1940)

References

  1. ^ a b c d Gray, Christopher (July 15, 2001). "2 Little-Known Architects of Distinctive Buildings". The New York Times. Retrieved November 2, 2018.
  2. ^ a b NYC 2015, p. 312.

Bibliography


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