Starting From Scratch…The Earliest CBS Grand Central Studios Images
In the fall of 1939, CBS began work on the area they had chosen to become their premier television studio facilities. When it was all said and done, Studio 41 and 42 were created in this space you see below, in this one gigantic hall. Studio 41 was 44 x 60, and 42 was 44 x 76, and they were divided by a removable wall. The control rooms were built at the outer-wall ends of each of these production spaces.
Not to confuse you, but CBS also referred to these control rooms as studios, mostly because of their ability to operate independently of the attached production space in that they could take feeds from any source and could send out images from film and telecine units located there. Studio 43 (a control room) was at the end of Studio 41 and (control room) Studio 44 was at the end of Studio 42. Later, like in the early 50s, the space above the control rooms was pressed into service as a second story with telop, telecine and film chains upstairs and expanded control panels in the downstairs area.
As you look, keep in mind the larger set of windows are on the outside wall, and the smaller arched windows on the opposite side are above an internal hallway. When the larger windows are on the right, you are looking in the direction of Studio 41 and when they are on the left, your view is tword Studio 42. When the sound paneling on the walls goes up, the windows are no longer visible.
There will be more detail on the photos, but before CBS took over, this had been the offices of the Grand Central Terminal’s Federal Credit Union, that served the workers of the New York Central Railroad. A lot of television history was made here, and here is the starting point. -Bobby Ellerbee
The photo at the top of the page shows where the Studio 41 control room will be built. All of the railing and stairs will come down and the CR will be built in the lower opening. The small office with the many windows will remain intact as the film projection room and film will be projected directly into an Iconoscope camera suspended on a rolling track in the control room. You can see the open space above the control rooms that will be the second story rooms in the early 1950s. Â
Above is the Studio 42 end with another set of small offices that will be torn out to construct the control room for 42. Notice that camera lights are already here, even before construction has started on this end. As you will see soon, camera work was being done in the studio, and I think Studio 41’s control room was the first to be built and operative.
Above, we are looking from where the Studio 42 control room will be, toward the future Studio 41 control room area. Notice the outside wall is on the right, and the hallway that that access this space with doors is on the left.
Above, we are looking toward the future Studio 42 control room, from the Studio 41 control room area, with the internal hallway on the right.
Above, Studio 41 control room with light grid hangers going in.
This is the first ever sighting of electronic cameras in use at CBS. Photo is dated September 1, 1939. This is an RCA Iconoscope camera is broadcasting test images of live subjects over the newly operational transmitter at The Chrysler Building. Notice these are the same lights that we saw here a month or so before while construction on the Studio 41 CR was going on. The walls are all covered with sound proofing now too.
In the next 2 photos below, we can see a door to the hallway on the left wall, which makes this shot in Studio 41 with the CR behind the large set in the back.
Great stuff
Outstanding photos. And Thank You for calling the building Grand Central TERMINAL!
Great stuff Bobby. Thanks. Besides Murrow ripping apart McCarthy, what other things were done here?
Thanks for your continuing efforts Bob
Fascinating history, Bobby. Thanks!
Between CBS and current MetroNorth employees lounge, the third floor facility was home to a tennis club.
This photos are a great record of TV’s earliest days. Thanks for posting these!
Thank you for sharing these wonderful photos!
Any idea what’s up in that space now?
Great “stuff.” BTW… being a rail buff and visiting GCT every now and again… were exactly were the studios…