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Neighborhood at risk: Grand
concourse
Designated!
The Grand Boulevard and Concourse
in the Bronx has a history as one of New York’s most dazzling,
stylish thoroughfares. Opened to traffic on November 25, 1909, the
Grand Concourse was at the center of the economic and population
boom that transformed the borough in the following half-century.
The Grand Concourse was the concept
of Alsace-Lorraine immigrant and civil engineer Louis Risse. Inspired
by the celebrated boulevards of Paris, Risse designed the Grand
Concourse as a four-mile long thoroughfare divided into three roadways
by tree-lined dividers. Its broad sidewalks allowed for a lively
street scene. In the beginning of the twentieth century, the Grand
Concourse soon became the main parade route for the borough, the
site of its government and the axis of an important shopping and
entertainment district.
Subway service first came to the
neighborhood in 1914, sparking a housing boom that continued for
forty years. Initial enthusiasm was quickly dampened by World War
I but the neighborhood emerged in the 1920s and 30s as a flourishing
residential community. In the mid-1930s, almost three hundred elegant
six-story elevator apartment buildings in the fashionable Art Deco
style were built. These luxurious apartments attracted the borough’s
wealthiest residents with their large rooms, cross-ventilation and
uniformed doormen. The lobbies of many of the buildings feature
elaborate decoration including mosaic walls and painted murals,
terrazzo floors, incised elevator doors and gleaming metal accents.
In its heyday, a Grand Concourse address was one of the most desirable
in the city. The neighborhood was set apart architecturally by sleek
lines, graceful curves, and geometric shapes inspired by the beauty
and efficiency of modern machinery. The buildings show the development
of the Art Deco style, from its more conservative decorative beginnings
to the dramatic, streamlined design of later years. The neighborhood’s
architectural quality embodies the exuberance and prosperity of
the dawning modern industrial age that characterized the years following
World War I.
Today, the Grand Concourse is lined
with an incomparable concentration of Art Deco and Art Moderne apartment
buildings. Much of their elegance has begun to fade, but the neighborhood’s
proud history is evident. The majority of the structures in the
proposed district were built between 1916 and 1941 in styles ranging
from neo-Renaissance to the neighborhood’s renowned Art Deco.
While the buildings represent a variety of styles, the apartment
houses are closely related in materials, scale and use of ornamentation.
The
neighborhood’s significance has already been recognized by
its listing on the National Register of Historic Places. However,
the protection afforded by a New York City landmarks designation
is needed to prevent further insensitive changes to the buildings
and encourage careful restorations. The Concourse’s architecture
has been compromised in recent years with the replacement of the
original steel casement windows with aluminum windows. In addition,
the incursion of commercial establishments, which are not permitted
under the area’s zoning, has had a detrimental effect on the
streetscape. The oversight of the Landmarks Preservation Commission
would go a long way in protecting the remaining historic features
of the Concourse. The Bronx Landmarks Task Force and the Borough
President’s Office have expressed their desire to see this
important piece of New York’s heritage protected under landmarks
law. HDC strongly supports the designation of this grand thoroughfare
in the Bronx.
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