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287 Broadway

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Address
  
287 Broadway

Architectural style
  
Italianate architecture

Designated
  
August 29, 1989

Architecture firm
  
John B. Snook

287 Broadway httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
Manhattan, New York City

Similar
  
Baudouine Building, Marbridge Building, Grand Hotel, Central Theatre, Capitol Theatre

287 Broadway is a historical building on the corner of Broadway at Reade Street in the Tribeca neighborhood of Lower Manhattan, New York City. Designed by John B. Snook in 1871 using cast-iron in mixed Italianate and French Second Empire style, it was completed in 1872 for the Stephen Storm estate. The landmark, which “graphically illustrates the transformation of lower Broadway in the 19th century from a residential boulevard into the city’s commercial center”, was leaning approximately 0.66 feet (0.20 m) by 2008.

Contents

Priced at 699 000 287 broadway massapequa park ny 11762


History

Attorney William Alexander owned the site as early as 1794, when it contained a dwelling and carriage house. The house was purchased by Elbert Anderson in 1816 who demolished it two years later, and built a commercial building in 1819. In 1821, Storm purchased the property. With others, he built the Irving House Hotel in 1848–49. In 1871, Storm's estate hired Snook to design a commercial building to be used for banking and office space. The Union Pacific Railroad Company was an early tenant, as was Henry Bischoff & Company. The Gindi family purchased the property in 1969. Already tilted 0.33 feet (0.10 m), it began to lead an additional 0.33 feet (0.10 m) in 2007 during excavation work at 57 Reade Street, forcing the city government to vacate it. In 2013, 287 Broadway was purchased for US$8 million by the Laboz family's United American Land company which affirmed the structural stability of the building and began a renovation for ground-floor retail space and residential rental lofts on the higher floors.

287 Broadway was designated on August 29, 1989, with mention that it was one of the few surviving examples in New York City of a cast-iron building designed in mixed Italianate and French Second Empire architecture styles.

Architecture and fittings

The six-story building is of mixed Italianate and French Second Empire architectural style. The façade is of cast-iron and the slat shingles are original to the building, which also features a mansard roof, dormers, segmented pediments, round-arched windows, Otis elevator, as well as Ionic and Corinthian columns. Steel shoring was added in 2008 against the south facade, replacing timber bracing added in 2007 following excavation work at 57 Reade Street.

References

287 Broadway Wikipedia


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