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  1. William Lamb. William Lamb, II vizconde de Melbourne, miembro del Consejo Privado del Reino Unido, y de la Royal Society (15 de marzo de 1779-24 de noviembre de 1848), normalmente conocido como Lord Melbourne, fue un hombre de estado británico del partido Whig que sirvió como ministro del Interior o Home Secretary entre 1830-1834 y como ...

  2. William Frederick Lamb, né en 1883 à Brooklyn, mort en 1952 à New York, est un célèbre architecte américain. Il est l'un des architectes de l'Empire State Building pour la société General Motors (G.M.C) dirigée par John Jakob Raskob en rivalité avec Chrysler dirigée par Walter Chrysler.

  3. Biography - William F. Lamb. William Frederick Lamb was one of the designers of the Empire State Building he joined the New York architecture firm Carre & Hastings in 1911. He became a partner in 1920. lambs most notable project was the empire state building.

  4. William F. Lamb. CFA Service: 1937–1945; Vice Chairman 1941–1945. William Frederick Lamb, FAIA, joined the New York architecture firm Carrère & Hastings, in 1911, shortly after returning from Paris where he earned a diploma at the École des Beaux-Arts. Lamb became a partner in 1920; the firm would be known as Shreve & Lamb from 1924 to ...

  5. William Lamb was born on 15th March 1779 in London, England to Elisabeth Milbank who married the first Viscount of Melbourne. However, it is believed that the first Viscount of Melbourne – Peniston Lamb was not the real father of William Lamb. A portrait of William Lamb. He happened to be the second son and therefore, not a direct heir.

  6. William F. Lamb was one of the architects who designed and built the Empire State Building. Born in Brooklyn in 1883, he was educated in both America and Paris before joining the architectural firm Carrere and Hastings. Some of Lamb's other famous buildings were the Standard Oil Building in New York and the Reynolds Building in North Carolina.

  7. The Empire State Building was designed by William F. Lamb from the architectural firm Shreve, Lamb and Harmon, which produced the building drawings in just two weeks, using its earlier designs for the Reynolds Building in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and the Carew Tower in Cincinnati, Ohio (designed by the architectural firm W. W. Ahlschlager & Associates) as a basis.