How Steinway Pianos Are Still Made in New York City

Arthurious
4 min readMar 24, 2017

A private photo tour documenting the production process at Steinway & Sons piano factory as part of the series exploring the manufacturing culture in and around New York City

It’s very likely that the stark polished piano you’ve seen at the concert hall was made by Steinway & Sons — in fact, 80 percent of all pianos playing in halls today are made by Steinway. Since the company was founded in 1853 by a German immigrant Heinrich Steinweg, the brand has continuously scored the most innovative, with some 126 patents that shook the industry and gave the piano the shape, sound and touch we’ve come to enjoy today. I’ve been long been stunned by the impeccable sound of Steinway pianos and was thrilled to discover that most of the instruments are still being made right here in New York City in the area of Queens once called Steinway Village.

Back in the day, Steinway Village had a foundry and sawmill, houses for all employees, kindergarten, lending library, post office, fire department, and many parks. Today, the same factory (along with its Hamburg location) produces more than 3,000 pianos a year but has hardly changed the core processes and, hence, production time — in the world of nanotechnology it still takes 12 months and many human hands to build one piano.

The facade of the original Queens factory opened in 1870
Steinway & Sons produces 6 models of grand pianos that are named with letters. From smallest to largest, they are S, M, O, A, B, D
Selecting the soundboard wood is one of the most critical parts of the process — any defect would affect the sound
There are 12,116 individual parts in every Steinway grand piano. At the assembly floor, each part is named, numbered and stored in its place
The method for bending the body of the piano was invented by the Steinway family in 1878 and has slightly evolved through the years

The rim (the side) is the most visible structural element of a grand piano and it’s made of 25 foot long and layers upon layers of long-fiber hard rock maple sheets. It takes five men to move the layered rim and apply it around the metal form — the wood is hard to bend and it has to stay in the rim press overnight, followed by a stay of many weeks in the rim conditioning room to fully dry into shape.

The models are marked on the rim with chalk, “eb” means “ebony”, the most common finish color

If you live in a place with high humidity the pianos you would find at your local Steinway dealer would have been specially treated at the factory (note “HOT” written with chalk on the photo above). The difference is how dry the wood of your piano would be. A regularly dry wood may work well in a Northern climate. Moving to South America, however, with humidity reaching 80%, will soak the fibers of your dry piano and completely change the sound. Pianos made for hot and humid climates use wood with more moisture retained in its fibers.

The finishing line, where pianos are polished and ready for tuning
Some of the energy used in the factory is produced with renewable sources
The action for just 1 key is made up of 57 individual parts
Hammers are tested and tuned to hit each string with the correct amount of force
In the factory selection room, a piano technician fine tunes Steinway pianos, bringing them to concert level

Steinway & Sons Factory
Steinway Pl, Queens, NYC (Map it)
Inquire about available tours via email

Steinway Hall Showroom
1133 6 Ave., Manhattan (Map it)
Open 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. except Sunday
steinway.com

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Arthurious

Designer, photographer, qualified pattern constructor and flâneur. Editor at http://arthurious.com