This building is an exceptional example of late-nineteenth-century polychromatic brick design. Its facade, which exemplifies changes in taste during the 1870s that favored brick buildings, presents a striking blend of European-inspired brick design. Among the notable features of the facade are the contrasting stonework which highlights areas of structural stress and creates patterned effects, the unusual corbelled archivolts employing multiple dentil courses, and the extraordinary stepped and bracketed corbelled brick cornice that is without parallel in New York architecture.
STATUS Designated Individual Landmarks
The Neighborhood
Tribeca
The area now known as Tribeca was originally developed in the early 19th century as a residential neighborhood close to the city’s center in Lower Manhattan. Its street grid was laid out at right angles off of Greenwich Street and on a diagonal off of...
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