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August 8, 2008
The Empire State Building Shines Red White & Green to Celebrate Hungary in
2008 Summer Olympics World-Famous Skyscraper Lights Up for Countries Competing in the Summer Games The Empire State Building (ESB) will
celebrate the countries competing in this year’s Olympics by lighting each
of the four sides of its famed tower—north, south, east and west—the colors
of participating countries’ flags each night throughout the summer games.
This marks the first time ESB has split the tower’s sides with four separate
country’s lights in its history. In 1932, a searchlight beacon alerting
people for 50 miles that Franklin D. Roosevelt had been elected president of
the United States was the first light to shine on top of the Empire State
Building, and in 1976, colored lighting was first introduced as the tower
was lit in red, white and blue to celebrate the American Bicentennial. The
Empire State Building’s tower lights are internationally recognized and are
illuminated to commemorate holidays, events and causes that are of
importance to New Yorkers, Americans and citizens of the world. An ESB
lighting celebrates remarkable events, iconic traditions or significant
anniversaries, such as E.U. Day, Lunar New Year, Earth Day, Veteran’s Day
and many more. Soaring 1,454 feet above Midtown Manhattan, the Empire State Building is the "World’s Most Famous Office Building." With new investments in infrastructure, public areas and amenities, the Empire State Building has attracted first-rate tenants in a diverse array of industries from around the world. The skyscraper’s robust broadcasting technology supports all major television and FM radio stations in the New York metropolitan market. The Empire State Building was recently named America’s favorite building in a poll conducted by the American Institute of Architects. For more information on the Empire State Building, please visit www.esbnyc.com.
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