geology versus agglomeration: bedrock depth and the formation of the manhattan skyline, 1890-1915...
TRANSCRIPT
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Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915
Jason Barr, Rutgers U.Troy Tassier, Fordham U.
Rossen Trendafilov, Fordham U.
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Outline of Talk
The “Debate”: Geology and the Spatial Distribution of Activity Summary of Conclusions Manhattan:
Skyscrapers: 1890-1915 Geology and geography The “Great Leap”
Results Costs Location Choices Some evidence on workers residence locations
Extras (if time) Pictures Some Geological History
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The Skyline
Why do we observe two clusters of skyscrapers in Manhattan and not one continuous one?
Why did builders “jump” from downtown to midtown?
What role did bedrock play in the location of skyscrapers?
How sensitive were building decisions to changes in bedrock depths?
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Causation or Correlation?“[N]ear New York University, the surface bedrock drops appreciably—up to several hundred feet below the street level. Farther south…it comes again to within about one hundred feet of the surface. Dividing Manhattan into the ‘downtown’ and ‘midtown’ districts….That is to say, the skyscrapers of New York City are clustered together into the midtown group, where the bedrock is within several feet of the surface, and the downtown group, where the bedrock again reappears to within forty feet of the surface near Wall Street. In any event, it is readily seen how clearly the accessibility of the bedrock has, to some degree, controlled the architectural planning of the city.”
From The Geology of New York City and Environs, C. J. Schuberth © 1968, pps. 81-82. Emphasis added by me.
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Conclusions Depth to bedrock appears to have had, at
best, a modest effect on the distribution of skyscrapers.
Some evidence of bedrock effect within downtown.
Jump was driven by: Transportation hubs. Avoidance of dense residential and
manufacturing districts. Readjustment to be near white collar workers.
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Manhattan Geology
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Manhattan Skyscrapers and Non-skyscrapers (1915)
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Skyscraper Technology Here skyscraper: 80 meters or taller (about
20 stories). First NYC skyscraper 1889: 11 stories. Pulitzer World Building (1890), 20 stories,
94 meters.
Steel skeleton. Elevator with safety break. Caissons to anchor building to bedrock.
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Skyscrapers and Bedrock After a certain height, a building had
to be anchored to bedrock so as to prevent (possible uneven) settling.
If two buildings have the same total area, but one had three stories and the second had 20 stories, only the second building would need to be anchored.
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Skyscrapers Statistics, 1890-1915
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Depth to Bedrock (1915)
100 feet
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-100%
-70%
-40%
-10%
20%
50%
80%
40.706 40.708 40.711 40.715 40.719 40.725 40.732 40.739 40.744 40.752 40.755 40.763
Avg. Relative Building Height Avg. Relative Bedrock Depth
Latitude (Degrees)
=>=>=North=>=>
Building Heights and Bedrock Depths Relative to Street Level
“100 feet”
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The “Great Leap”: Location of Skyscrapers over Time
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Population Movement: Manhattan Residents above 40th Street
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Demographic Locations, 1890
-55
-35
-15
5
25
45
65
40.7 40.71 40.72 40.73 40.74 40.75 40.76 40.77
% White with two native parents % Foreign Bedrock depth
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The El’s (1890): # El’s w/in ½ mile radius of each lot
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Model Description Office-based firms have a demand for height, where
height (space) is input into production. Demand is function of agglomeration benefits and office
rent. Developers supply height based on office rents and cost
of construction Equilibrium height is function of agglomeration effects
and cost of anchoring to bedrock. jcjAhh ,*
xβx Ghh )|Pr( *
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Example: Agglom. Benefits Large, Bedrock Costs Larger
Bedrock not relevant, as agglom. benefits fade away
hbar
Distance from Center
hbar
Building height Building
height
Distance from Center
Bedrock a barrier
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Construction Cost Data
Fuller Construction Company 53 large commercial projects in
Manhattan, 1899-1915 Data Collected:
Total Construction Costs Depth to Bedrock Building Height Building Volume Index of Brick Costs
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Construction Costs Descriptive Stats.
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Regression Results
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Cost Effects
Bedrock costs not relevant (even negative) for smaller projects. For larger projects, only a small fraction of total building costs.
Differences in land prices between the financial district and the bedrock valley were several hundred thousand dollars.
A skyscraper could have been built more cheaply in the bedrock valley than in the financial district when you consider the net effect of additional bedrock costs and land acquisition costs.
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Cost Effects
For median skyscraper (21 stories), additional meter down increases costs by about $650 per meter.
A 1 st. dev. change in depth to bedrock from the average adds about ½%.
Largest skyscraper (32 stories) increases construction costs by about $9,000 for each 1 meter increase in the bedrock depth (7%).
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Spatial Distribution: Data Skyscrapers: skyscraperpage.com & emporis.com Non-skyscrapers: randomly chosen lots. Heights checked against 1921 Land Book for
Manhattan. Bedrock: (1) Boring maps, (2) USGS contour maps. Population and Worker Density: Federal and State
Censuses. Land Values and Assessed Values: Reports from
the Tax Commissioners of NYC. Elevated Trains: El Maps from 1890. Demographics: 1890 Census.
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Sanitation Districts,1890
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Spatial Distribution: Data &Descriptive Statistics
1 hectare = 2.5 acres
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Probit Results: Marginal effects on prob. of skyscraper on given plot of land
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Predicted Probability of Skyscraper holding bedrock constant
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Difference in Predicted Probabilities with and without Bedrock Variable vs. Latitude (Pred P with BR - Pred P w/o BR)
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Trow’s NYC Directory, 1892 Collected data on job and home
address for 5000 workers. 4878 were living in Manhattan. Created job categories (in part
based on 1890 census).
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Trow’s NYC Directory, 1892
Job Category Freq. PercentManufacturing 1,724 35.3Domestic service 667 13.7Transportation 582 11.9Clerk 577 11.8Sales 503 10.3Professional service 354 7.3Protection 154 3.2FIRE 98 2.0Agents and Collectors 87 1.8Peddlers 80 1.6Managers and Foreman 52 1.1Total 4,878 100
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Trow’s NYC Directory, 1892
Rank Job Freq. Percent1 Clerk 577 11.82 Laborer 361 7.43 Tailor 254 5.24 Driver 226 4.65 Carpenter 167 3.46 Painter 122 2.57 Engineer 108 2.28 Lawyer 90 1.99 Cutter 88 1.8
10 Smith 87 1.8
Top 10 Jobs
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Distribution of Sample
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Location of skyscrapers 1890-1915
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Location of workers in Finance, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE)
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Location of FIRE and Professional Workers
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Laborers (green),FIRE (yellow), Professional (blue)
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Workers in Manufacturing Jobs
![Page 41: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/41.jpg)
Conclusions Regarding Bedrock Effect H1: Insurmountable barrier after some depth.Refuted by scatter plot. H2: Economically not viable after some point Refuted by cost regressions. H3: Tipping Point EffectRefuted by predicted skyline based on
holding bedrock constant. H4: Little or No Effect.Consistent with regressions and predicted
skyline.
![Page 42: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/42.jpg)
Conclusions Readjustment to new spatial
equilibrium: “Edge City” formation. Population Movement. Factory and Slum “flight.” Transportation Hubs. Other Economic Factors.
![Page 43: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/43.jpg)
Appendix I: Pictures
![Page 44: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/44.jpg)
Tribune Building (1875)
“The brick piers of the exterior walls had to be enormously thick in the lower part of the building to bear the weight of the stories above.” (Landau and Condit)“The nine-story height insured that the tower would be taller than any existing New York office building and was thus neither an arbitrary choice of height nor one based on the functional space requirements of the newspaper. The design of the Tribune building was primarily governed by the enhanced public image that would be garnered for the newspaper and only tangentially by the potential economic benefits of building tall” (Wallace 2006)
![Page 45: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/45.jpg)
Home Insurance Building (1885), Chicago
10 stories of 138 feet (42 m)
![Page 46: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/46.jpg)
The Tower Building (1889):New York’s first “skyscraper”
11 Stories
![Page 47: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/47.jpg)
Cass Gilbert: The skyscraper “is a machine that makes the land pay” (ER, 1900).
F.W. Woolworth: “I do not want a mere building, I want something that will be an ornament to the city'' (NY Times, 1910).
Ego or Economics?
![Page 48: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/48.jpg)
Pulitzer’s World Building, 1890
20 stories, 94 meters
![Page 49: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/49.jpg)
NY Times Building (1904)25, stories, 111 metersThe Flatiron (1902), The Flatiron (1902),
22, 87 meters22, 87 meters
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Woolworth Building (1913)
57 stories, 241 meters.
![Page 51: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/51.jpg)
Equitable Building (1915)
40 Stories, 164 meters
![Page 52: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/52.jpg)
Appendix II: Geological History 500 MYA: NYC bedrock began as muds
and sands deposited in the Iapetus Ocean (off coast of what is now N. Am.).
Due to compaction they became sedimentary rocks.
440 MYA: Plate tectonics closed this ocean; massive island chain collided into N. Am.
![Page 53: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/53.jpg)
Geological History Cont. Sedimentary rocks became folded and
deformed and were buried deep within a mountain range called the Taconic Mountains (akin to Himalayas).
Mountain range weight metamorphized sedimentary rock to schist and gneiss.
Erosion has worn these mountains away leaving current bedrock.
![Page 54: Geology versus Agglomeration: Bedrock Depth and the Formation of the Manhattan Skyline, 1890-1915 Jason Barr, Rutgers U. Troy Tassier, Fordham U. Rossen](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062421/56649cf05503460f949c0321/html5/thumbnails/54.jpg)
The Last Ice Age
During the Pleistocene epoch (the Ice Age: about 1.8 million years ago to 8,000 years ago), large ice sheets bulldozed the landscape. Rocks within the glaciers scraped and scratched the bedrock of Central Park producing long linear striations and grooves. Long Island is composed of rubble that the glacier left behind as it melted.http://research.amnh.org/eps/nycgeology