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    Westbeth complex considered

    Designation Hearing  •  Greenwich Village,Manhattan

     

    Westbeth Artist Housing complex at 463 West Street in Manhattan. Photo: LPC.

    Building complex, dating from 19th century, formerly housed AT&T’s Bell Laboratories and was the first federally-subsidized artists’ colony. On January 12, 2010, Landmarks heard testimony on the possible designation of a building complex in the Far West Village, now known as Westbeth. Located on an entire block bounded by West, Bethune, Washington, and Bank Streets, Westbeth comprises five buildings built between 1861 and 1926. From 1899 to 1966, AT&T’s Bell Laboratories used the complex as a research facility; some of the earliest transistors, televisions, and radar equipment were built on its site. In the 1930s, the New York Central Railroad laid elevated rail tracks, now known as the High Line, through the third floor of the building at 51 Bethune Street.

    Bell Labs relocated to New Jersey in 1966, and two years later, the National Endowment for the Arts and the J.M. Kaplan Fund purchased the complex in order to convert it into the country’s first federally-subsidized artists’ colony. Architect Richard Meier renovated the complex, designing 383 studio units and an entrance courtyard. Its mission persists to the current day, housing over 300 artists in a variety of disciplines. Past residents have included dancer-choreographer Merce Cunningham, poet Muriel Rukeyser, and photographer Diane Arbus. (read more…)

    Tags : 463 West Street, 51 Bethune Street, elevated rail tracks, Far West Village, High Line, J.M. Kaplan Fund, National Endowment for the Arts, Westbeth
    Date:02/15/2010
    Category : Landmarks Preservation Commission
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    718-space garage approved adjacent to High Line

    Special Permit  •  Chelsea, Manhattan

    Garage will be part of large mixed-use project. HLP Properties LLC sought a special permit for a 718- space public parking garage on a Chelsea site spanning an entire city block between West 17th and West 18th Streets and Tenth and Eleventh Avenues. Access to the garage would be located on West 17th Street, a one-way westbound street. The 76,400- square-foot site currently contains a surface parking lot used primarily by the United States Drug Enforcement Agency for employee parking and storage of confiscated vehicles. The High Line, the abandoned elevated rail line slated to become open space, cuts through the lot.

    The garage would be only one part of HLP’s proposed development plan for the site, consisting of a two-tower, mixed-use development with 870 residential units, 23,000 sq.ft. of retail space and a second parking garage for tenants with 180 spaces. HLP anticipates that only the 718-space public parking garage will require Commission approval. (read more…)

    Tags : High Line, High Line Improvement Bonus area, High Line Towers Garage, HLP Properties LLC
    Date:12/15/2005
    Category : City Planning Commission
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