Designated July 12, 1977
677 Lafayette Avenue House is a fine example of the late Romanesque Revival style. It combines rock-faced brownstone at the lower stories with brick and terra-cotta trim at the upper stories. It faces Tompkins Park, which was planned by Olmsted and Vaux, and has helped to protect the Magnolia Grandiflora tree, a designated New York City Landmark–a unique example of the relationship between the built and the natural environments .
STATUS Designated Individual Landmark
The Neighborhood
Bedford-Stuyvesant
The Bedford-Stuyvesant community in northwest Brooklyn is a residential area, home to ornate rows of brownstones, early middle-class apartment buildings and several institutional structures. Bedford-Stuyvesant is characterized by its wide, tree-covered avenues and low-scale residences; generally only church spires and school towers rise taller than...
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