Madison Square North

Manhattan , NY

Today’s Madison Square North neighborhood reflects successive waves of development, the earliest dating to the year Madison Square Park was created—1847. Until very recently, the neighborhood comprised almost exclusively buildings that pre-date 1930. From the park’s opening through the 1920s, Madison Square North evolved from being a fashionable residential enclave to an entertainment district of hotels, clubs, restaurants and theaters, to a commercial hub of offices and mercantile loft buildings.

The 19th century saw a northward development trend, as new residential neighborhoods were established in response to growing commerce to the south. This pattern repeated itself numerous times up the length of Manhattan. From roughly 1850 to 1865, Madison Square North was fashionable with the city’s elite. Such boldface families as the Stokes, Livingstons, Vanderbilts, and Stewarts (of A.T. Stewart department store fame) were residents. Rowhouse construction, largely built in the popular Italianate style, began first along Broadway and spread to the side streets. Extant rowhouses from this period include two on West 24th Street and four on West 29th Street .

After the Civil War, the neighborhood became host to a number of theaters, restaurants, men’s clubs and hotels. The trailblazer in the latter category was the Fifth Avenue Hotel, completed in 1858 on the northwest corner of 23rd Street and Fifth Avenue. The hotel was a social, cultural and political hub until its closure in 1908, at which point it was replaced by the commercial structure at 200 Fifth Avenue. Many hotels also functioned as “bachelor flats” or “apartment hotels” for extended stays. One of the city’s first apartment houses, constructed in 1872 after designs by the noted New York architect George B. Post, still stands at 251 Fifth Avenue. The prevalence of entertainment and commercial ventures on Broadway made it a bustling night-life district. Thus, beginning in the 1890s, Broadway from about 13thto 45th Street became one of the first thoroughfares to be illuminated by electric street lamps and billboards, leading to its lasting moniker “The Great White Way.”

By the 1890s and early 1900s, industries including photography, architecture, construction and banking planted roots in the area, constructing commercial high-rises designed in styles such as Gothic Revival, Beaux-Arts and Art Deco. Many of these buildings were also constructed for the wholesale garment industry to initially support the Ladies’ Mile shopping district to the south, which, until they moved to Herald Square in the early 1900s, was home to the R. H. Macy & Co. and B. Altman & Co. department stores. The neighborhood’s growth was spurred on by nationwide industrial trends for ready-to-wear clothing, and later, wholesale household décor. This period of prolific development left a lasting impact, as mercantile loft buildings remain the area’s architectural hallmark.

In 2001, the Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the Madison Square North Historic District, 96 buildings from roughly 25th to 29th Streets between Sixth and Madison Avenues. Community members and preservationists are advocating for an extension to the district, to encompass roughly 374 buildings from 23rd to 34th Streets and Sixth to Park Avenues. This area includes the surviving buildings of Tin Pan Alley on West 28thStreet , where the American popular music publishing industry was headquartered from roughly 1890 to 1910.

Madison Square North was named a Six to Celebrate neighborhood in 2014.

Take Action

Add the next LPC meeting to your calendar.

Let your local representative know you care.
nyc.gov

Share your photos of this neighborhood

Help preserve New York’s architectural history with a contribution to HDC

$10 $25 $50
Other >
Preservation Activity

Aug 16, 2018

Madison Square North Historic District

Review the Building
Tin Pan Alley
West 28th Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, nyc

STATUS: Designated Individual Landmark

Aaron Dexter, Aaron Douglas, Abolitionist, Academic ... VIEW ALL

Designated: December 10, 2019 Tin Pan Alley (West 28th Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues) was where music publishers, composers LEARN MORE
Designated: December 10, 2019 Tin Pan Alley (West 28th Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues) was where music publishers, composers LEARN MORE
Empire State Building

STATUS: Designated Exterior and Interior Landmark

Aaron Dexter, Aaron Douglas, Abolitionist, Academic ... VIEW ALL

Designated May 19, 1981 The Empire State Building is a symbol of New York City and the building boom of LEARN MORE
Designated May 19, 1981 The Empire State Building is a symbol of New York City and the building boom of LEARN MORE
Martha Washington Hotel
27 East 29th Street, New York, NY, USA

STATUS: Designated Individual Landmark

Aaron Dexter, Aaron Douglas, Abolitionist, Academic ... VIEW ALL

Martha Washington Hotel was developed by the Women’s Hotel Company for the purpose of providing comfortable, independent living arrangements for LEARN MORE
Martha Washington Hotel was developed by the Women’s Hotel Company for the purpose of providing comfortable, independent living arrangements for LEARN MORE
Madison Square North Historic District
Madison Square North, Manhattan, New York, NY, USA

STATUS: Designated Historic District

Aaron Dexter, Aaron Douglas, Abolitionist, Academic ... VIEW ALL

Designated June 26, 2001 This district consists of approximately ninety-six buildings representing the city’s commercial history from the 1870s into LEARN MORE
Designated June 26, 2001 This district consists of approximately ninety-six buildings representing the city’s commercial history from the 1870s into LEARN MORE