Via Planetizen

Perhaps no development is more associated with the presumptive Republican presidential nominee than Trump Towers, which established his reputation as a developer with little regard for historic preservation and revealed his character in business.

With developer Donald Trump all but certain to be the Republican presidential candidate in November, Planetizen looks at his role as a developer, beginning in 1979, when he acquired the land to build his iconic Trump Towers.

The upscale Bonwit Teller women's department store on Manhattan's Fifth Ave. at 56th Streets opened in 1929. "American Architect magazine called it 'a sparkling jewel in keeping with the character of the store,'" wrote Christopher Gray in the New York Times Streetscapes column on Oct. 3, 2014.

At the very top of the facade were limestone relief panels of two nearly naked women brandishing large scarves, as if dancing. The architects were Whitney Warren and Charles Wetmore, super-traditional Beaux-Arts designers of mansions and clubs — a puzzling choice for a such an outré building. In time the reliefs would become a Bonwit Teller signature.

The relief panels are also referred to as Art Deco friezes or bas-relief sculptures. Gray goes on to describe the company and the store in more detail. "Bonwit Teller closed its store at Fifth and 56th in 1979."

That was good news for Donald Trump, who acquired the old Bonwit’s building and began demolition in 1980. He had promised the limestone reliefs of the dancing women to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which wanted them for its sculpture collection, although the offer was conditional on his being able to remove them. But suddenly workmen jackhammered them to bits.

"It was a sin deemed unforgivable by landmark preservationists," wrote Marilyn Bender for The New York Times on August 7, 1983.

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