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Grand Central Interior

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Grand Central Interior

An interior view of Grand Central Terminal, looking east, after a 12-year restoration project was completed on Oct. 1, 1998. The vaulted sky ceiling over the main concourse was given an extensive soap-and-water scrubbing. A Times article said, "The cleansing of the star constellations and zodiac signs, which over the years have gone from glittering gold on bright blue to algae green under a thick coat of grime, is intended to restore the splendor of the Beaux-Arts terminal that opened in 1913 as "a triumphant portal to New York," in the proud but immodest characterization of its architect, Whitney Warren."

An interior view of Grand Central Terminal, looking east, after a 12-year restoration project was completed on Oct. 1, 1998. The vaulted sky ceiling over the main concourse was given an extensive soap-and-water scrubbing. A Times article said, "The cleansing of the star constellations and zodiac signs, which over the years have gone from glittering gold on bright blue to algae green under a thick coat of grime, is intended to restore the splendor of the Beaux-Arts terminal that opened in 1913 as "a triumphant portal to New York," in the proud but immodest characterization of its architect, Whitney Warren."

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Grand Central Interior

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Description

An interior view of Grand Central Terminal, looking east, after a 12-year restoration project was completed on Oct. 1, 1998. The vaulted sky ceiling over the main concourse was given an extensive soap-and-water scrubbing. A Times article said, "The cleansing of the star constellations and zodiac signs, which over the years have gone from glittering gold on bright blue to algae green under a thick coat of grime, is intended to restore the splendor of the Beaux-Arts terminal that opened in 1913 as "a triumphant portal to New York," in the proud but immodest characterization of its architect, Whitney Warren."

Grand Central Interior | The New York Times Store