The Courthouse interior is one of New York’s grandest and most important 19th-century interior spaces. It was built over a period of twenty years, and was the product of two very different but equally significant architectural trends: the mid-century Italianate and the later Victorian Romanesque. It is one of the few and one of the best remaining grand Italianate interior spaces in the city, and an excellent example of the Victorian Romanesque type, and is the sole known surviving cast-iron interior space in the city. The two architects had antithetical approaches, but they combined in the courthouse to form an overwhelmingly grand and rich public space.
STATUS Designated Interior Landmark
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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