The Forgotten Secrets of the New Yorker Hotel, Nikola Tesla's rooms 3327 and purported lab 3328. The tunnel, vault and power plant underneath that could have powered a small city!

artistiquejewels -

The New Yorker where Nikola Tesla lived
His room was 3327 and it was said he had another 3328 for his laboratory.
The basement was equipped with it's own power plant verified to have produced enough power for a small city!

Interesting considering the Tesla Towers and what Tesla was capable of?
You decide!

The hotel opened on January 2, 1930. Much like its contemporaries, the Empire State Building (1931) and the Chrysler Building (1930), the New Yorker was designed in the Art Deco style which was popular in the 1920s and 1930s.

In his book New York 1930 Robert A. M. Stern said the "New Yorker's virtually unornamented facades consisted of alternating vertical bands of warm gray brick and windows, yielding an impression of boldly modeled masses.

This was furthered by the deep-cut light courts, which produced a powerful play of light and shade that was enhanced by dramatic lighting at night". In addition to the ballrooms there were

Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, the hotel was among New York's most fashionable. The New York Observer noted that in the building's heyday, "actors, celebrities, athletes, politicians, mobsters, the shady and the luminous—the entire Brooklyn Dodgers roster during the glory seasons—would stalk the bars and ballrooms.

According to AtlasObscura,

The New Yorker was the hotel of the traveling salesmen, pilots and aircrew on short layovers, tourists and GIs being shipped to the European Front. In other words, if the Waldorf-Astoria were a well-dressed woman in an elegantly feathered hat, the New Yorker would be a salesman in a crumpled suit, drinking a whiskey and soda.

Despite its slightly more humble nature, the New Yorker hotel is filled with untold secrets and forgotten stories—a beautiful Art Deco tunnel that ran from the lobby to Penn Station, still hidden underneath 34th Street; a vast private power plant that could have powered a small city; a gleaming forgotten bank vault underneath the lobby; an old dining room that came complete with a retractable ice floor, where diners could sip cocktails while watching a twirling glamorous dance show; and one of the world’s greatest inventors, Nikola Tesla, who died a virtual recluse after living alone in the hotel for over a decade.

Once New York’s largest hotel, its fortunes dipped with the neighborhood’s decline in the 1970s. It has been abandoned, was nearly used as a hospital and a homeless shelter, and actually used as a church. We will be looking at the fascinating, untold story of the New Yorker hotel, through the efforts of one of its longest serving employees, a man who has steadily collected an astonishing archive of some 4,000 artifacts. These old cocktail lists, dinner menus, hotel blueprints, photographs from the hotel’s own in-house magazine and printing press, and recordings from its private radio station all tell of the golden age of one of New York’s most photographed and iconic buildings.

When it was built, the New Yorker Hotel had coal-fired steam boilers and generators sufficient to produce more than 2,200 kilowatts of direct current electric power. At the time, this was the largest private power plant in the United States. The hotel's own direct current generators were still in use during the Northeast Blackout of 1965, but by the late 1960s the hotel's power system had been modernized to alternating current.

Which is interesting considering all the patents Tesla had!

https://nikolateslamuseum.org/en/patents/

Here are just a few of the hundreds of patents he had

My contact at the New Yorker is Joseph Kinney, who for decades has worked as the hotel’s Senior Project Engineer, although his unpaid job as unofficial historian has been just as consuming.

When we met in the lobby of the hotel, he explained how the character of the establishment was always going to be defined by its location. Situated on a city block of Eighth Avenue between 34th and 35th Streets, adjacent to Penn Station, it was designed as a hotel for the travelers and workers coming into Manhattan from the station, from the Port Authority bus terminal a few blocks north, and from the west side docks.

When the New Yorker opened on January 2, 1930, it was designed as one of the largest, most sophisticated and technically advanced hotels in the world. Kinney showed me in the archives the original 1930s brochure, describing the new hotel as a “Vertical Village”, laying out why this was the queen of modern hotel living.

Its 43 stories resembled a self-contained town with 2,500 rooms. The kitchens were staffed by 135 chefs, 23 elevators raced upwards at 800 feet per minute, its own switchboard was manned by 95 phone operators, while nearly 80 feet underground, its own power plant, the largest in the United States, was big enough to generate power for a city of approximately 35,000 people. The New Yorker had a 50-chair barber salon. It proudly boasted not only a radio in every room, but a private radio station. In addition to providing in-room entertainment, the radio station broadcast big-band music from the Terrace Room live across America.

UPDATE 7.10.2023
Happy Birthday Nikola Tesla!
Born in 1856 there is a Great Deal your spirit never missed!

Fun Facts about Nikola,
Happy Birthday Nikola Tesla!
Born in 1856 there is a Great Deal your spirit never missed!

Fun Facts about Nikola,

In spite of all of these hardships, for years Nikola gifted humanity on his birthday with new technology.

Thank you to all who like #NikolaTesla continue to #FightTheGoodFight and everything you do, you do for~
God, Family, Country and truly all of humanity in an effort to bring them out of the Darkness and into the Light!
#Godspeed!

#Tesla,
#everythingidoisforyou

The following is a great listen!
Those Serbian Epic Poems based on true history and Robin Hood characters! Very Interesting concerning the #republicreborn

Find more connections like Melania Trump's history in comments below of this post on my page!

Link found here,
https://www.facebook.com/melissa.mcgarity.14/posts/pfbid022qE31jbbZTKomZWpSdAwAMM4dXgQ84PoLzR2Q6CSA339Gn5GZpoyU3z8zDJ7yaqFl

Video on the linked video and connecting possible Mandela Effect found here,

NIKOLA TESLA AND ROBIN HOOD ROOTS? HOW ABOUT THAT MANDELA EFFECT WITH THE BRYAN ADAMS SONG?

Loading iframe

Do you remember the Power outage found in here?
WHEN EARTH RANG LIKE A BELL INITIATING OFF MAYOTTE COAST ON 11.11.2018. BRITTANY SPEARS ABUSIVE?

Loading iframe

You can skim here,
https://steemit.com/seismicwaves/@artistiquejewels/remember-when-earth-rang-like-a-bell-for-20-minutes-on-11-11-2018-as-the-seismic-wave-traveled-it-was-picked-up-11-000-miles

See replies here for some interesting possible parallels!

https://steemit.com/tunnels/@artistiquejewels/hot-springs-it-s-beauty-healing-power-and-rich-history-al-capone-tunnels-under-the-city-and-infamous-the-vapors-bombing-and

UPDATE:
6.5.2024
https://steemit.com/trump/@artistiquejewels/trump-as-a-time-traveler-what-was-the-verse-in-the-bible-speaking-about-when-it-said-the-last-trump-check-it-out

Sources
https://untappedcities.com/2016/01/26/step-inside-nikola-teslas-hotel-room-at-the-new-yorker-in-3d/

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/exploring-the-forgotten-art-deco-artifacts-of-the-new-yorker-hotel

Besides is various tunneling systems there is also a known, verified and reported cave under New York as seen inside of here about 1/3 of the way down.
https://steemit.com/pedogate/@artistiquejewels/send-in-the-rescue-covid-19-update-military-training-underground-usd36-million-from-us-attorney-to-fight-human-trafficking

Find more information here,
https://steemit.com/nikolatesla/@artistiquejewels/nikola-tesla-who-was-he-really-and-what-else-did-he-do-the-physics-of-it-all

https://steemit.com/tesla/@artistiquejewels/the-truth-about-tesla-the-trumps-thomas-edison-and-the-cabal-s-clamps-on-free-energy-a-clip-of-trump-from-1980-speaking-just-as

https://rdrdbiblestudy.com/what-or-where-is-sheol/