A fact from 218 West 57th Street appeared on Wikipedia's
Main Page in the Did you know column on 6 January 2021 (
check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
Did you know... that the former ASCE Society House in New York City has been home to a tire showroom, a restaurant, and an art shop?
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... that the former ASCE Society House(pictured) in New York City has been home to a tire showroom, a restaurant, and an art shop? Source:
NY Tımes 2000
ALT1:... that the
American Society of Civil Engineers claimed its society house(pictured) was the first building in the United States built exclusively for a "professional engineering society"? Source: American Society of Civil Engineers (1903). The House of the American Society of Civil Engineers, 220 West Fifty-seventh Street, New York City. Unpaged, "Historical" chapter.
ALT2:... that the ASCE Society House(pictured) in New York City was preserved by the developers of a nearby skyscraper, partially in exchange for a height bonus? Source:
NY Times 1968
ALT3:... that the
American Society of Civil Engineers only occupied its society house(pictured) for twenty years before it became a tire showroom, a restaurant, and an art shop? Source: NY Times 2000
New article that's well over the length requirements, well cited, no evidence of copyvio, properly illustrated and the whole nine yards. QPQ is good. Image is appropriately licenced, reasonably clear @ the DYK pixels, though it's not the most visually exciting. All hooks verified, except AGFing for ALT2, which isn't the best hook imo because it's not clear what "partial exchange" really means. Hooks are reasonably interesting, I'd say ALT0 is probably the best, though you might be able to cut 'over its history', seems redundant to me. A nice building article that's good to go. Cheers,
Eddie891TalkWork02:54, 20 November 2020 (UTC)reply
@
Eddie891: Thanks for the review. I modified ALT2 a bit so that it's clearer that preserving 220 West 57th was part of the deal where 888 Seventh could be taller, i.e. "partially in exchange".
epicgenius (
talk)
03:30, 20 November 2020 (UTC)reply