Greenwich Savings Bank

The bank was originally headquartered at 10-12 Carmine Street near Sixth Avenue in Greenwich Village, Manhattan.

[6] In 1922-24, the bank constructed its new headquarters at the intersection of Broadway and West 36th Street in Midtown Manhattan.

The steel-reinforced limestone and sandstone building was designed by noted bank architects York and Sawyer in a Classical Revival style with monumental Corinthian columns on three sides of the building, rusticated walls and a Roman-style dome.

[7] The interior was embellished with ten-foot-tall brass foyer doors, a board room and executive office with rubbed-oak paneling and soapstone fireplaces, and an elliptical banking room with limestone Corinthian columns, granite walls, a marble floor, a bronze tellers' screen with sculptures of Minerva (symbolizing wisdom) and Mercury (representing commerce), and a coffered, domed ceiling with a 3,000-square-foot (280 m2) stained-glass skylight.

The film Going in Style starring George Burns and Art Carney also used this location in the scene where they robbed a bank.

Sixth Avenue facade of the Greenwich Savings Bank Building at 1352-1362 Broadway, Manhattan, New York City
1892 headquarters
Gotham Hall