Sunday, January 31, 2016

THE EASTMAN KODAK SHOP 356 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK CITY

EASTMAN KODAK SHOP
NEW YORK CITY, N. Y.
WALTER D. TEAGUE. Designer; R. B. SHERBOURNE, Associate

COLOR: The entire design was conceived as providing a neutral setting for the display of the photographic enlargements and the various colorful objects of Eastman Kodak manufacture. It was executed, therefore, in varying tones of silver, gray, and black. The finish of the various materials was chosen with the same object in view. The display space draws the eye because it is of a light, dull finish in contrast to the dark, polished enframement.

MATERIALS: The facia and window bases are of emerald-pearl granite, but appear almost black in comparison with the other materials. The lettering, the muntins in the window soffits, and the pattern over the entrance are of polished chrome plate. The window frames and settings, the doors, and the grilles in the window bases are of benedict nickel. The walls of the show windows are of wood, flush panelled and inlaid with vertical strips of polished chrome plate. They were lacquered white and then sprayed with a silver mist, giving a light, neutral gray background to the objects on display. The lighting is entirely from above, the soffits being units of frosted glass.

DESIGN: The display counters have been kept low, better to attract attention, and the objects are displayed on plain standards of a finish similar to that of the walls. The grilles in the window bases serve as air intakes for a system of conditioned ventilation, which furnishes cleaned, heated and humidified air to all parts of the store. Clips are used at the window corners as an aid to complete visibility instead of the usual frame, and ornament is confined to the entrance where it does not attract attention from the windows.


EASTMAN KODAK SHOP
NEW YORK CITY, N. Y.
WALTER D. TEAGUE. Designer; R. B. SHERBOURNE, Associate

A DISPLAY WINDOW

SECTION THROUGH ENTRANCE

The walls of the store have been furred out far beyond the faces of the building columns to permit a symmetrical design as well as to provide space for ventilating ducts and the show cases. The wall cases are integral parts of the design, are flush with the wall and are lighted from behind.

EASTMAN KODAK SHOP
NEW YORK CITY, N. Y.
WALTER D. TEAGUE. Designer; R. B. SHERBOURNE, Associate

EASTMAN KODAK SHOP
NEW YORK CITY, N. Y.
WALTER D. TEAGUE. Designer; R. B. SHERBOURNE, Associate

Looking from the entrance toward the rear of the store. A neutral setting for the display of merchandise has been developed here as well as on the exterior, the general color scheme being silver, silver gray, and black. The floor is composed of three tone gray and black terrazzo, laid in blocks to form an irregular pattern which is outlined by wide strips of benedict nickel. The walls are panelled in English hardwood of a light, silver gray tone. The wood is laid in flush panels to take advantage of the variation in the grain. Black formica is used as a baseboard and as an outline of the wall cases. The pilaster caps, the cornice, and the moldings are of unpolished chrome plate.


Looking from the Cine-Kodak Room toward the entrance. The rug is rose—the only note of color in the shop—and the furniture is silver. The steps are black marble and the railing is chrome plate. The lighting throughout the store is indirect; the fixtures are executed in polished chrome, those in the ceiling being simple rectangular boxes with sides and bottoms of opal glass, and those on the walls being prisms of the same materials. At the rear of the shop, under the mezzanine, are two small projection rooms where amateur photographers can view their own moving pictures in privacy. Both rooms are treated in rose and silver, with silver furniture and lighting fixtures of chrome plate.

CINE-KODAK ROOM

DETAIL OF WALL CASE

 Walter Dorwin Teague (1883 - 1960) is considered one of the founding fathers of industrial design as well as one of the most prolific American industrial designers in history.  He established his design office in the late 1920s, which continues today as one of the important design institutions in the world.  His most notable design work includes Kodak cameras from 1927 to 1957, Texaco’s art deco gas stations in the 1940s, the Boeing Stratocruiser, and the 707 aircraft.

The Eastman Kodak Shop at Madison Avenue and Forty-fifth street is no longer in operation.


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