United Nations
Building Enclosure Investigations and Roof Rehabilitations
From a dilapidated area of slaughterhouses and factories along Manhattan’s East River arose the svelte, iconic form of the United Nations Headquarters. In 1947, a team of ten design consultants from around the world, led by Wallace K. Harrison, was selected to design a permanent home for the United Nations. Since its completion three years later, the 39-story, 550-foot tall Secretariat Building has become a symbol of world politics, peacekeeping, and international cooperation. At the main public entrance to the headquarters, the concave, sloping General Assembly Building hosts representatives of member states in its Assembly Hall. The complex also includes the Conference Building and Visitors Centre, as well as the Dag Hammarskjöld Library, a 1961 addition to the facility.