
Rendering of the proposed building at 841 St. Nicholas Avenue. Image credit: LPC
Seven-story building would have dance studio space at the ground floor. On June 27, 2017, Landmarks considered and approved a proposal for a new development on a vacant lot at 841 St. Nicholas Avenue, at the corner of 152nd Street, in the Hamilton Heights/Sugar Hill Northwest Historic District. The site was acquired by BRP Development Company from the Dance Theater of Harlem in 2016. A deed restriction on the property, limiting its use to non-profit cultural organizations, was controversially lifted in the same year. (more…)

St. Joseph of the Holy Family Roman Catholic Church in Manhattan. Image Credit: LPC
Two Catholic churches designated over archdiocese opposition. On June 28, 2016, the Landmarks Preservation Commission voted to designate four Manhattan properties as individual City landmarks. Three of the items had been added to Landmarks calendar before 2010 and were addressed as part of the Commission’s backlog initiative. (more…)

Landmarks Preservation Commission. Credit: LPC.
The proposed designation of the former Yuengling Brewery Site in East Harlem proved contentious, dividing preservationists and those who wished to see site developed. On November 12, 2015 the Landmarks Preservation Commission held the final of four special hearings organized to address the backlog of items added to the Commission’s calendar before 2001, but never brought to a vote on designation. The final hearing consisted of items in Manhattan, occupying Community Boards six through twelve. Landmarks is expected to make determinations on the items in early 2016.
(more…)

Revised rooftop addition proposal at 721 St. Nicholas Avenue. Credit: Franklin Associates
Revised design shifted bulk of proposed one-story addition on St. Nicholas Avenue building toward front facade, but commissioners still found it excessive. On October 2, 2012, the Landmarks Preservation Commission considered 719/721 SNA Realty LLC’s revised proposal for a one-story rooftop addition to a five-story building at 721 St. Nicholas Avenue on the corner of St. Nicholas Avenue and West 146th Street in the Hamilton Heights/Sugar Hill Historic District. The Romanesque Revival building features a curved front facade with an arcading attic story along St. Nicholas Avenue, and a mansard roof and brick parapet along the building’s West 146th Street roofline.
In July 2012, Landmarks considered SNA Realty’s first proposal, designed by architect Richard Franklin. The proposal called for a brown-metal clad addition that would reach nine-feet two-inches in height and be set back 11 feet from St. Nicholas Avenue. The commissioners found the design unsympathetic to the historic structure, and recommended that the architect use different materials and consider concentrating the addition’s bulk toward the avenue rather than along West 146th Street. Commissioner Margery Perlmutter suggested extending the height of the rounded tower to create a turret. (See CityLand’s past coverage here.)
(more…)

Corn Exchange Building proposal (does not reflect LPC modifications). Credit: Danois Architects
Artimus Construction plans to restore the deteriorated remains of the original six-story Harlem landmark. On September 11, 2012, Landmarks approved Artimus Construction’s redevelopment proposal for the severely dilapidated Mount Morris Bank, also known as the Corn Exchange building, at 81 East 125th Street in Harlem. Landmarks designated the 1884 six-story building as an individual City landmark in 1993. The red-brick building once featured a combination of Queen Anne and Romanesque Revival-style architecture and terra cotta and iron ornament, but has rapidly deteriorated since its designation.
The building was abandoned in the 1970s, and lost its mansard roof to a fire in the late 1990s. In 2000, the City’s Economic Development Corporation selected Ethel Bates to rehabilitate the building and turn it into a culinary school. Bates failed to maintain the property, and EDC sued to reclaim title. Landmarks later filed a demolition-by-neglect lawsuit against Bates, citing the building’s missing windows and collapsed floors. In 2009, Buildings partially demolished the building’s remaining top two floors citing dangerous conditions above the second floor. Two years later, EDC issued an RFEI seeking a developer to rehabilitate the building.
On April 24, 2012, Artimus Construction presented its initial plan to Landmarks. Artimus’ Barry Gurvitch described the proposal as an attempt to “recreate the grandeur and ambiance” of the original Corn Exchange, while also creating (more…)