Flatiron Building, steel-framed skyscraper in New York City that was completed in 1902. It is one of the city’s oldest surviving skyscrapers.
The Flatiron Building on Fifth Avenue is significant not only in its unusual appearance but also as one of the key buildings in the Beaux-Arts Classicist movement. Its architect, New York–born Daniel Burnham, is better known for his work and plans in Chicago, where he based his practice, than in his city of birth. In 1873 he formed a partnership with John Wellborn Root that was significant in creating a group of architects and engineers called the Chicago School.
The commercial office tower scheme, named initially after the building’s promoter George Fuller, is situated on a tight triangular site in the Madison Square Park area of Manhattan, the diagonal orientation of Broadway dictating the building’s unusual shape. With a steel skeleton, it is constructed in three horizontal sections, like a Greek column, evoking the a Renaissance palazzo. Atypically for the time, it uses extensive elevators, some leading to an observation deck that once offered commanding views of midtown Manhattan. Its name, Flatiron, comes from its resemblance to the clothing irons used at the turn of the 20th century. At its narrowest point at the very top of its 22-story 285-foot (87-meter) structure, the building is unusually narrow—just 6.5 feet (2 meters) wide.
The Flatiron Building is a popular landmark in the New York landscape—so much so that the district it sits in became known by the building’s name. No longer used as an office building, the Flatiron Building has been proposed for redevelopment as residential space.