New York Pavilion 1964 World's Fair

The massive ring of steel and reinforced concrete piers, dubbed the “Tent of Tomorrow,” once held a cable suspension roof and was clad in a terrazzo floor featuring a Texaco highway map of the state. It was a platform for New York, and homegrown companies like Kodak and CorningWare, to show off to the world, and as critic Louise Huxtable said, “a sophisticated frivolity…seriously and beautifully constructed … a ‘carnival’ with class.”  Search “아리빗수수료㏜【bitmon-world.com】◁axp365리딩ポ그루㎛gsbm지점ⓧ리얼옵션지점Ω리얼옵션추천c주식손실비트몬⒀fx유튜브ㄸfx월드점☞라인업월드つ리얼옵션이벤트ⅷ비트몬거래소½코인월드리딩╈라인업리딩㎂fx리딩방Ⅸ비트몬주소” from World’s Fair Pavilion: Restoring the Tent of Tomorrow

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New York Pavilion 1964 World's Fair

The massive ring of steel and reinforced concrete piers, dubbed the “Tent of Tomorrow,” once held a cable suspension roof and was clad in a terrazzo floor featuring a Texaco highway map of the state. It was a platform for New York, and homegrown companies like Kodak and CorningWare, to show off to the world, and as critic Louise Huxtable said, “a sophisticated frivolity…seriously and beautifully constructed … a ‘carnival’ with class.”