Trisha Shetty (Editor)

The Colosseum (Manhattan)

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Type
  
Residential

Floor count
  
10

Height
  
41 m

Floors
  
10

Completed
  
1910

Developer
  
Paterno Brothers

Opened
  
1910

Architecture firm
  
Schwartz & Gross

The Colosseum (Manhattan)

Location
  
435-437 Riverside Drive, Morningside Heights, Manhattan, New York City, U.S.

Similar
  
Church of Notre Dame, General Grant National, 116th Street, Croton Aqueduct, Riverside Church

The Colosseum is an apartment building located at 116th Street and Riverside Drive in Morningside Heights, Manhattan, New York City.

The building is noted for its curved façade (which isn't a style specific to New York buildings) and impressive marble lobby. Across 116th Street, The Colosseum faces The Paterno, another building with a similar curved facade. The New York Times has said that the "opposing curves, (form) a gateway as impressive as any publicly built arch or plaza in New York." The unusual curved facades are the result of an 1897 plan to make the land between Claremont Avenue and Riverside Drive into a public park in order to give veterans' parades a large park adjacent to Grant's Tomb as a terminus. The street was redesigned to enter the proposed park in a gracious curve, but the city never appropriated funds to buy the land.

The Colosseum was designed by Schwartz & Gross and built by the Paterno Brothers, Charles and Joseph, in 1910. The luxury four-bedroom apartments with sweeping views of the Hudson River rented for $150 to $175 a month.

Harlan Fiske Stone lived in the Colosseum when it was a private building. The Colosseum was later acquired by Columbia University. Among the distinguished members of the Columbia faculty who have lived here are David Weiss Halivni and Edward Said.

References

The Colosseum (Manhattan) Wikipedia