Statue of Liberty
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Identification
Name
Statue of Liberty
Emporis Building Number
113832
Location
Map and Surrounding Area
Technical Data
Height (tip)
*
Height (architectural)
92.99 m
Construction end
*
Renovation end
1986
Structure in General
Construction type
monument
Current status
Architectural style
neo-classicism
Official website
Usages
Features and Amenities
One of the city's famous buildings
UNESCO landmark
Facts
The torch’s flame was originally fashioned from gilded solid copper until being pierced and internally illuminated. |
The external skin is sculpted from around three hundred 0.2 centimetre (0.09 inch) thick hand-hammered copper plates which are fixed to an internal diagonally braced iron frame. The copper skin weighs around 91 tonnes. |
The statue was closed to the public after the terrorist attack on New York on September 11, 2001 and opened again in August 2004. |
Lady Liberty's "tablet" is 23 feet, 7 inches long, 13 feet, 7 inches wide, and 2 feet thick. |
After it was constructed in Paris, the statue was disassembled into 350 pieces and shipped to New York, where it took another four months to reässemble. |
Due to security concerns, visitors are no longer able to climb to the crown or the torch. |
Officially titled "Liberty Lighting the World", the statue was a gift from France commemorating liberty and friendship with the United States of America. |
The statue is supported inside by an innovative metal framework designed by Gustave Eiffel, the designer of the |
The statue welcomes visitors and immigrants arriving in New York by boat, many of them crossing the Atlantic and seeing America for the first time. |
The seven spikes on the crown represent the seven continents and seven seas of the world. |
The climb from the ground to the tower's crown is 354 steps. |
The base is 65 feet tall, the pedestal is 89 feet tall, and the statue itself is 151 feet and one inch to the tip of the torch. |
Some of the statue's proportions: her right arm is 42 feet long; the nose measures 4.5 feet to the tip; the mouth is 3 feet wide; and her index finger is 3 feet long. |
The star-shaped base was originally built as the ramparts of Fort Wood in the War of 1812. |
The statue inspired the sonnet "New Colossus" by Emma Lazarus in 1883, in which the statue is ascribed the famous words, "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free...". |
There are 25 windows in the crown. |
Companies involved in this building
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Architect: Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi, Richard Morris Hunt, Swanke Hayden Connell Architects Other companies: Gustave Eiffel, Brandston Partnership Inc., TRACO |




