550: A medium-security women's
prison. Built in 1931 as the Seamen's House
YMCA; converted to drug rehab center in 1967,
and to a prison in 1974. The south wall
features a red-and-pink abstract mural
called
Venus, painted in 1970 by
Knox Martin.
Corner: Bridging the street here is a disused elevated railroad that was used to transport
freight along the Westside waterfront, replacing the street-level
tracks at 10th and 11th avenues that earned those roads the
nickname "Death Avenue." Built in 1929 at a cost of $150 million
(more than $2 billion in today's dollars), it originally
stretched from 35th Street to St. John's Park Terminal,
now the Holland Tunnel rotary. Partially torn down in
1960 and abandoned in 1980, it now stretches from Gansevoort almost
to 34th--mostly running mid-block, so built to avoid dominating an avenue with an
elevated platform. In its abandonment, the High Line
became something of a natural wonder, overgrown with
weeds and even trees, accessible only to those who risk
tresspassing on CSX Railroad property. Plans are underway
to turn it into a park, open to the public; it will
be a tricky balancing act to add safety and amenities
without sacrificing the lost ruin quality that
makes it so cool.
W E S T
2 0 T H
S T R E E T
North:
Corner (120 11th Ave): Was The Spike,
the largest leather bar of the pre-AIDS era
535:
Feigen Contemporary is a gallery in one of the
Baker and Williams warehouses, which were used
to house tons of radioactive ore for the
Manhattan Project during World War II.
529: Kim Foster Gallery,
I-20 and
Stefan Stux Gallery are also in one of the
Baker/Williams warehouses.
513-519: The last of the Baker/Williams
warehouses
454:
Jack Kerouac wrote On the Road here in 1951--his mother's house.
446-450: Outstanding Italianate houses (1855)
406-418:Cushman Row, seven Greek Revival town houses (1839-40) built by Don Alonzo Cushman, one of
Chelsea's main developers. See plaque
on No. 412.
404: Oldest house in Chelsea historic district (1830); originally Federal, went through Greek Revival
and Italianate alterations.
402: 1897 Classical Revival apartments;
"DONAC" over doorway is a tribute to Don Alonzo Cushman (who,
despite his name, was not at all Latin). Poet LeRoi Jones,
later known as Amiri Baraka, lived here in
1958-59; Allen Ginsberg came over to play bongos.
Corner (169 9th Ave): La Bergamote, French cafe/bakery
The oldest seminary of the Episcopal
church, GTS was founded in 1817 and built here
on land donated in 1822 by local landowner
Clement Clarke Moore, who also taught Greek
and Bible studies at the seminary.
This main building, from 1960, is the entrance
to the block-long campus, as well as housing
St Marks Library, the nation's leading
evangelical library, with the world's largest
collection of Latin Bibles. On this site was
the East Building, in 1827 one of the earliest
Gothic Revival buildings.
Corner (162 9th Ave): Built 1834,
this Greek Revival house was home to James
N. Wells (1842-54), Chelsea's
main developer. The real estate company
he founded still bears his name.
358-348: Row of Anglo-Italianate
houses built by Wells for his children.
346: Built as a Greek Revival chapel
in 1832, this became the rectory of St. Peter's
Church in 1841. Based on a sketch by
Clement Clark Moore, famous for "A Visit
from St. Nicholas."
St. Peter's Church
336: Formerly St. Peter's parish hall
(1871); now houses Atlantic Theater, founded
in 1985 by David Mamet and William H. Macy.
Iron fence from 346 to 336 is from Trinity
Church (1790), installed here 1837, when Trinity
was being rebuilt for the third time.
318:Chelsea Lodge, affordable rooms
with shared bathrooms in a refurbished townhouse.
230:
10th Precinct, NYPD. Covers the area between 14th Street and 43rd, west
of 7th Avenue below 29th Street, west of 9th Avenue above. There were only
two murders reported in this precinct in 2002. This is the
precinct featured in the 1948 film Naked City--though the
murder takes place on West 83rd Street.
228: The title character lived here in the
1999-2001 TV series Norm.
243: In the 1970s, this was the Women's Liberation Center;
also provided space for Lesbian Feminist Liberation,
which split from the male-dominated Gay Activists Alliance in 1973.
Now Non-Traditional Employment for Women, training and placing
women in male-dominated trades.
134: Was Ceramica Arnon, glass tiles--
now on 27th Street
120: Tony Color, one of many businesses in the Photo District serving photographers and graphic designers
Simpson Crawford Building
Corner (641 6th Ave): Motherhood Maternity is in this 1900 department store building (the business was on
this site 1879-1915). Simpson-Crawford was the ritziest store on 6th Avenue when this was New York's main shopping
district. No price tags here; if you
had to ask, you couldn’t afford it.
W E S T
2 0 T H
S T
North:
Corner: Advisory TV & Radio Labs, repair shop
155-165: Fantasy moderne co-op designed by noted architect Horace Ginsbern.
121: Village Nursing Home; Chelsea Adult & Day Health Center
Hugh O'Neill
Corner (655 6th Ave): Men's Wearhouse is on ground floor of the former Hugh
O’Neill building (1887); O'Neill was known as "The
Fighting Irishman of 6th Avenue." More working-class than retail neighbors. Name still visible from across street.
36: Set Shop, store for setting
photographic shoots. Formerly David's
Outfitters, which sold everything from
tuxedos to police uniforms. The 8th floor
is
Fusebox/Twelve Point Rule, a graphic design
and new media firm; formerly Weiss Belt Co. The 11th Floor
used to be Edward Vondrak, furniture restorer;
before that a button factory.
28: Eden, lounge/restaurant
26: Spasun
20:VIP Club, a strip club that added
more floor space to get around the Giuliani rules.
Underneath is the Westside Rifle and Pistol Range,
home to the Women's Shooting Sports League.
12: Sam Flax, frames and stuff
Methodist Book Concern
Corner (150 5th Ave): Manhattan Color Labs, Lenscrafters are in this 1890 building; part of the collection of
religious
publishers and other offices along Fifth Avenue known as Paternoster Row. See "M.B.C." on cornice.
W E S T
2 0 T H
S T R E E T
North:
The Limelight
Corner (660 6th Ave): A dance club since 1990; has been
closed down at times over accusations of drug
sales,
as well as general opposition to nightlife. Now operating
under the name Club Avalon.
Was Church of the Holy Communion (1846), designed by
Richard Upjohn, who
designed the new Trinity Church about the same time. First pastor was
William Augustus Muhlenberg, whose donated books became the core of the Muhlenberg branch of the NY Public Library
on 23rd Street.
37: Photo District Gallery; Baboo Color Lab. Check out metalwork on doors.
35: Periyali; Greek
27: Upstairs from U.S. Color Lab and Paper Cuts is
The West Side Club, New York's premier gay
bathhouse. On the 9th floor is
Chocolat Moderne, hand-crafting decadent dark
chocolates.
17:Spoon Catering was C'est Bon Deli Restaurant; Dennis Laminating, "Portfolio Perfectionist"
131 5th Ave: Clearly this building is not on Fifth Avenue.
Corner (901 Broadway): This Bohemian renaissance building housed the Lord & Taylor
department store from 1869-1914; Now Villeroy & Boch, a glassware
store that's been around this neighborhood for more than a century.
In the 1990s, the building housed an upscale strip club.
E A S T
2 0 T H
S T
North:
Corner: The Body Shop; now that they're disowning their founder's politics, they're more annoying than ever.
5: Fleur-de-Sel, Breton restaurant
named for a kind of sea salt
7: Dale Electronics is in the Holtz Building.
Address of Billy the Oysterman; mentioned in 1939 WPA Guide as being
"well-known for seafood."
11: T Salon/T Emporium; fancy tea
Warren Building
Corner (903 Broadway): Portico Furniture is in a 1887
Stanford White building designed in a
Renaissance Revival style.
900: This Stanford White design was built in 1886, replacing the old Goelet family mansion.
Top 5 floors are an ill-conceived addition. Now Metropolitan Carpet Gallery.
26: Originally identical to No. 28 next door; was used as a guide to reconstruction, then torn down to make
a Teddy Roosevelt museum. Designed by Theodate
Pope Riddle, one of first female architects.
28: Teddy Roosevelt born here October 27, 1858; Roosevelts lived here 1854-72. TR's brother Elliot,
Eleanor's father, also born here. Originally built 1848;
demolished 1916; after TR's death in 1919, a wave of
nostalgia led to its reconstruction in 1923 as a memorial.
32: No Idea; smart-alecky bar
34: Hamachi
36-38: Remedy; restaurant/lounge
40:Flute; champagne bar.
42: The acclaimed (and expensive) Gramercy Tavern is in the 1890s N.S. Meyer Building--makers of armed forces equipment.
Now known as the
Bullmoose Condominium, named for Teddy Roosevelt's independent party.
52 (corner): Fancy Latin restaurant Patria is on the site of the
home of poet Alice Cary
E A S T
2 0 T H
S T R E E T
North:
23: Uno Mundo; quirky gifts
25: Iron Copy Shop; has a display of antique irons in the window.
27: Bangkok Cafe
29: Mizu Sushi
31: La Pizza Fresca; the only New York members of
La Vera Pizza Napoletana, the Naples-based association of
serious pizza-makers.
39: Nuturo-Medical Health Care
41:Silver Swan; old-school German
43:Veritas;
noted for its wine list, though the food is supposed to be good too.
45: Composer
Arthur Sullivan stayed at this address in 1879 during a production of HMS Pinafore. He finished the
music for The Pirates of Penzance here.
10: Studio and home of painter Robert Henri (1909-29).
12: Note gaslight.
National Arts Club
15: Founded 1906; members have included presidents Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson,
architect Stanford White, painters Robert Henri and George Bellows, sculptors Augustus Saint-Gaudens and Frederick
Remington, and millionaires J.P. Morgan, Henry Clay Frick and B. Altman. House built 1845, remodeled 1881-84 by
Calvert Vaux for Samuel Tilden, NY governor robbed of the 1876 presidential election. Tilden's library became part of NY
Public Library core. Note heads of writers and philosophers. Building was featured in film version of The Age of
Innocence, Woody Allen's Manhattan Murder Mystery and the remake of The Thomas Crown Affair.
In 2002, the club launched a lawsuit against the park committee for not allowing (mostly black and Latino)
schoolchildren to be the club's guests on tours of the park.
The Players Club
16: Actors’ club founded by Edwin Booth, Shakespearean actor (and John Wilkes' brother); members
included Mark Twain, Thomas Nash, Booth Tarkington, Winston Churchill, General Sherman, Lawrence Olivier,
Tony Randall, Christopher Reeve and James Earl Jones. Stanford White, member, remodeled 1888. Women not admitted
until 1989; actresses Helen Hayes, Lauren Bacall, Lillian Gish and opera singer Leontyne Price were soon inducted.
17: School of Visual Arts housing--lucky students.
In 1909, this was the home of the
Technology Club, MIT's
alumni association.
18: Salvation Army’s Parkside Evangeline Residence Hall; women only.
19: This 1845 rowhouse was remodeled in 1887 by Stanford White for Fish, a railroad magnate
and descendant of Peter Stuyvesant. His wife Mamie made this house the center of New York society in the late 1800s.
Their son, the first in a line of Hamilton Fishes, grew up here. Bought by PR
legend Benjamin Sonnenberg, 1931. Considered the gem of the neighborhood.
20: Philosopher
Randolph Bourne, who said ''war is the health of the
state,'' died here in the flu epidemic of 1918,
at the home of his friend Paul Rosenfeld,
music critic for The Dial.
Norman Thomas, six-time Socialist
Party candidate for president, lived here 1941-45.
21: Site of home of New York Post co-owner (1848-1861)
John
Bigelow; as ambassador to France during Civil War, he was credited with blocking French support for Confederacy.
Bigelow helped found and was first president of the New York Public Library.
23: Edwin Gould Foundation for Children
24: Site of Thomas Edison home (1881-83). Demolished 1908.
26:Irving House was home to Booth Tarkington,
author of The Magnificent Ambersons. Later a hotel; now a co-op. Madeline creator Ludwig Bemelmans is also said to have lived
here, though sources differ.
Brotherhood Synagogue
144 E. 20th St.: was Friends’ Meeting House, which merged with the meeting on Stuyvesant Square;
the synagogue moved here from the building it shared with the Village Presbyterian Church on West 13th after a falling-out
over the 1973 Arab-Israeli War.
Columbia University's James Stewart Polshek designed the adjacent Garden of Remembrance.
101 E. 20th St.: Was the American Numismatic and Archaeological Society.
7: Actress Julia Roberts has lived in this apartment building.
GRAMERCY PARK WEST
Gramercy Park
NYC's only private park. Named for Crommessie Brook, "Crooked Little Knife" in Dutch. Purchased by Peter
Stuyvesant from Dutch West
India Co., 1651; deeded to freed slave Frans Bastiansen, 1674. In 1761, it was acquired by James Duane, later
NYC's first post-independence mayor; he named it Gramercy Farm. Bought in 1831 by lawyer Samuel Ruggles, who laid out Gramercy Park.
Each owner of the lots surrounding Gramercy Park has a share in the park--and a key
to get through the gate. Disputes between key-holders over how best to maintain the park have caused bitter
splits in the neighborhood.
Compared to similar parks that
are open to the public like Tompkins, Washington and
Union squares, Gramercy suffers from a marked lack of energy
and life. The neighborhood would benefit greatly from
a less restrictive access policy, but it's hard
to imagine the residents who own the place giving up the thrill
of exclusion.
In the center of the park is a statue of Edwin Booth as Hamlet (Edmond Quinn, 1918).
The sculpture of a smiling Sun and Moon with dancing giraffes is Gregg Wyatt's Fantasy Fountain
(1983).
GRAMERCY PARK EAST
The Gramercy
34 (corner): This 1883 highrise, perhaps the city's first co-op, has been home to film stars James Cagney,
John Carradine and Margeret Hamilton. Its original elevators were replaced in 1994 after 111 years of service.
Corner (244 3rd Ave): Barfly is a 1987 tavern in an 1837 building that was for many years the
Homeopathic Medical College.
226: Site of the New York Post-Graduate Hospital and Medical Center.
Earlier home of the Association for the Relief of Respectable Aged
Indigent Females.
230: Cabrini Medical Center
Corner (343 2nd Ave): Was Academy Cafe, serving aspiring cops
E
2 0 T H
North:
Corner (245 3rd Ave): Gramercy Corner
235:Police Academy. After September 11,
this block was sealed to traffic for several months--
though the likelihood of Al Qaeda targeting the local
police training facility seemed slim.
Corner (345 2nd Ave): McCarthy's Bar & Grill;
a cop bar
Corner: Named for the
sculptor of Farragut Memorial, Madison Square; Peter Cooper
statue, Cooper Union; Sherman statue, Central Park. New York Skin & Cancer Unit,
one of the leading cancer institutions in its day,
was on this site.
Petersfield was what Peter Stuyvesant's estate was
called by his descendants. Art on 1st Avenue side of
this playground suggests various other Peters it
could be named for, including Cooper, Pan,
Parker, Piper, Pumpkin-Eater and Rabbit--not to
mention "and the Wolf." On site of the New
York Post-Graduate Medical School and Hospital.
325: At this defunct address gangster Arnold Rothstein was born on January
17, 1882 (though his birthplace is often misreported
as East 47th Street). Rothstein, said to be the
model for The Great Gatsby's Meyer Wolfsheim
and Damon Runyon's Nathan Detroit, is best
remembered for allegedly fixing the 1919 World Series.
(330 E 21st):Simon Baruch Middle School
--named for a doctor, the father of financier
Bernard Baruch, who was an advocate of public baths.
Built in the late 1940s by Met Life
Insurance Co. as affordable housing for
World War II vets; now
being converted by Met Life to high-priced apartments.
Built on the site of the notorious
Gashouse District, where fumes from chemical plants
kept out all but the poorest immigrants.
The district produced the fearsome Gashouse Gang; since
there was little to steal on their own turf, they would travel
to other neighborhoods and rob the criminals there.
E
2 0 T H
S T
North:
Peter Cooper Village
Like Stuyvesant Town, built in late 1940s by Met Life,
and also being converted to (inflated) market prices; slightly more pricey
to begin with.