Designated: October 29, 1968
*Its architectural elements are held to a minimum; yet they are so well harmonized, the touch is so deft, that the building, a simple commercial building, may properly be called elegant. It is classically Greek Revival in style, with base and ground floor of granite with the typical, but here somewhat superior, square granite columns and large show windows. The four original upper stories are of brick with plain granite window lintels and sills. The plain brick fascia of the original roof cornice remains above the fifth floor windows, and above it is what we may assume to be a slightly later one-story addition. The latter is, fortunately, very sympathetically executed, and hardly, if at all, detracts from the nice quality of the total structure.
*Excerpt from the Landmarks Preservation Commission Designation Report
photo: © Emilio Guerra
STATUS Designated Individual Landmark
The Neighborhood
South Street Seaport
The South Street Seaport provides a pivotal connection to New York City’s early days as a center of maritime industry. Indeed, the city’s settlement and growth were inextricably linked to its success, and this history remains embodied in the area’s low-scale, early 19th century commercial...
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