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NYC / Manhattan / Wilbraham

One of the city’s few remaining “bachelor flats” buildings, built at a time when unmarried men were considered less-desirable as tenants. Like other apartment hotels, the individual units had no kitchens. Residents were expected to take their meals in the eighth floor dining room. The building’s stonework is unusual in that each spandrel is unique.

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NYC / Manhattan / 1 Gracie Square

One Gracie Square is a Rosario Candela-designed apartment building on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. Name:  1 Gracie Square Location:  1 Gracie Square Year Completed:  1929 Architect:  Rosario Candela, William Lawrence Bottomley The New York Times Streetscapes:  It’s One Building, but It Looks Like Six City Realty: Carter Horsley review Google Map All images

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NYC / Manhattan / 1 Fifth Avenue

One Fifth Avenue is a landmark apartment building overlooking Washington Square in Greenwich Village. The four-story base is clad in limestone, while the tower rises in brick. The architects used light and dark bricks to create vertical false shadows, accentuating the building’s height. Name:  1 Fifth Avenue Location:  1 Fifth Avenue Year Completed:  1927 Architect: 

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NYC / Manhattan / Central Synagogue

Central Synagogue, 652 Lexington Avenue, is a landmark house of worship in Midtown Manhattan. It was built in 1872, designed by Henry Fernbach in Moorish Revival style. Name:  Central Synagogue Location:  652 Lexington Avenue Year Completed:  1872 Architect:  Henry Fernbach Style:  Moorish Revival NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission: Designation Report Wikipedia:  Central Synagogue (Manhattan) Google Map

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NYC / Manhattan / Ritz Tower

Ritz Tower was conceived as an “apartment hotel” to circumvent the city’s height restriction for apartment buildings. Apartment buildings’ heights were limited to 150% of the width of the adjacent street. When it opened, 465 Park Avenue was the tallest residential building in New York City, and had the same cachet as one of the

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Armchair Explorer’s Landmark Guide

The NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission’s “Discover NYC Landmarks” website may be the perfect tool for researching the city’s historic buildings. This interactive map is certainly the fastest way to find and explore the city’s architectural heritage. If you’re not familiar with the LPC, since its creation in 1965, the Commission has granted landmark status to

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