420 West 116th Street
420 West 116th Street (sometimes referred to as King's Crown) is a law school-only apartment building managed by University Apartment Housing with furnished and unfurnished studios and one bedroom apartments, as well as a single two-bedroom unit on the top (10th) floor.[1] Its ground floor is also home to the Deutsches Haus, which hosts academic, cultural and social events of Columbia's Department of Germanic Languages.[2]
Contents
History
Built in 1907 as a hotel, the building hosted the Hotel Westminster and later the Hotel King's Crown.[3] The building was purchased in the 1970s by the Trustees of Columbia University and transformed into residence units for Law School faculty and students.
Advantages and disadvantages
Advantages
- Unbeatable proximity to the Law School main building (across the street)
- Easy access to both the 1 train (via Campus) and the B, C trains (via Morningside Park)
- Hardwood floors in most units
Disadvantages
- "D" units only have windows on a tiny shaft that does not let direct sunshine into the apartment. Since the "view" is basically the concrete wall of the "Little Warren" building (410 W 116th Street) literally at your fingertips, these units are very dark, especially on the lower floors.
- The only elevator is extremely slow and often out of order
- Cockroaches in some units
- Poor insulation
Famous residents
Physicist Leó Szilárd and Nobel laureate Enrico Fermi lived in King's Crown Hotel in the late 1930s.[4] Their accidental encounter in the King's Crown Hotel's lobby in January 1939 led to "one of the more colorful - and contentious - partnerships in the history of science" and turned out to be of fundamental importance for the success of the Manhattan Project.[5]
Pictures
References
- ↑ [1]
- ↑ Website of Deutsches Haus
- ↑ Old Postcard of the King's Crown Hotel before "Little Warren" (410 W 116 St) was built
- ↑ Peace and Security: The Next Generation, edited by George A. Lopez & Nancy J. Myers, (c) 1997 Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, ISBN 0-8476-8594-2, page 13
- ↑ William Lanouette, The Odd Couple and the Bomb in: The Science of War: Nuclear History, Scientific American - Exclusive Online Issues