The present-day Bloomingdale's flagship store originated as the third relocation of the Bloomingdale's Great East Side Bazaar founded by Joseph B. and Lyman Bloomingdale.[3]
Architecture
Buchman & Deisler designed the 1893 expansion in the Renaissance style, and included an annex and a wing that extended to 59th Street. Starrett & Van Vleck expanded the store to occupy the entire city block with the 1930 expansion, which also added the signature Art Deco facade along Lexington Avenue. The original construction and subsequent additions were described as "a complete mess architecturally" by architect William J. Conklin in the 1980s, however Federated Department Stores did not move forward with his exterior restoration plans at that time.
Notes
^Macy's, Inc. was named Federated Department Stores from 1929 until 2007.