Learn about the 10 most recent NYC landmarks approved for preservation by the Landmark Preservation Committee.
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183-195 Broadway
183-195 Broadway was part of the post-Civil War redevelopment along Broadway, which led to the creation of monumental banks and stores, changing Broadway into Williamsburg. This building’s original use was commercial, but changed to “manufacturing” for metal ware businesses after the Williamsburg Bridge was built (construction took place from 1896 – 1903). Today, 183-195 Broadway is home to administrative and executive offices for the popular Peter Luger Steakhouse.
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St. Barbara's Roman Catholic Church
St. Barbara’s Roman Catholic Church at 138 Bleecker Street in Bushwick, Brooklyn, began construction in 1907. The building was constructed
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Bowne Street Community Church
Bowne Street Community Church in Queens (originally the Protestant Reformed Dutch Church of Flushing) was built by Edward Richardson in 1892. The church was designed with a prominent corner tower, decorative brickwork, and opalescent stained-glass windows. Richardson mimicked the Roman Revival style with an adaptation of medieval aesthetic. One of the most popular features of this structure was the large bell tower with low squat arcade along the front elevation. The Protestant Reformed Dutch Church of Flushing later became the Browne Street Community Church after joining forces with the First Congregational Church. Today, different congregations meet and maintain the building: Reformed Church in America, the United Church of Christ, Taiwanese Zion Christian Church, the New York
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Lakeman House
1930sLakeman House at 2286 Richmond Road, built in 1714, was one of Staten Island’s oldest one-story Dutch colonial-style house. Aaron Cortelyou, a
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Brougham Cottage
Brougham Cottage at 4746 Amboy Road was built in the early 18th century. The H-framed structural style boasted a firestone chimney wall built to prevent the
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The Excelsior Power Company Building
The Excelsior Power Company Building was located at 33-43 Gold Street in New York City’s Financial District. This property was known as the oldest commercial power generating station from Manhattan’s pioneering era for electric
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Bergdorf Goodman
Bergdorf Goodman’s at 754 Fifth Avenue was originally designed by one of New York’s most essential architects Ely Jacques Kahn, to be seven separate buildings. Completed in 1928 in the Modern Classicist style, each building was designed with one façade facing Fifth Avenue. In 1923, Edwin Goodman, a partner for Bergdorf Goodman, made the retail company the first American couturier to offer ready-to-wear clothing, as opposed to women spending hours being personally fitted for the latest styles. Goodman continues to provide excellent customer service and a degree of exclusivity.
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412 East 85th Street
412 East 85th Street in Yorkville was home to the Italian-style
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The Harlem YMCA Building
The Harlem YMCA Building at 181 West 135th Street was first completed in November 1919. YMCA (Young Men’s Christian Association) was one of the first African American YMCA buildings in New York City that became the center of intellectual and social life for African Americans. Designed by John Jackson in the Italian Renaissance Revival Style, this building boasted six stories, arched second-story windows, and an arcade on the sixth floor. African American YMCAs were created from the national organization’s policy of racial separation in the United States from 1851 to 1946. This establishment soon became home to
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The former Loew’s 175th Street Theater at 4140 Broadway in Washington Heights, opened first for business in 1930, was a movie palace that stood sixty feet tall. The theater was one of the five Wonders Theaters, and its massive size took up an entire block. Thomas W. Lamb, an architect who designed more than 300 theaters nationally, constructed the theater with Indian architectural elements in mind. The theater premiered classic films and hosted movie stars including Judy Garland, Roy Rogers, and Joan Crawford.
In 1969, due to financial issues, the Loew’s 175th Street Theater was sold to the United Christian Evangelistic