Midtown
Added: March 1, 2009
Added: March 1, 2009
Although it has great features, the curb appeal of this building is only so-so; it is big, red, and imposing from street level. But when you stand back, it’s actually not such a menace. I didn’t notice so many details on it when I originally went past it, however looking at the pictures now I can see quite a few.
Look also at this condo redevelopment page for the “history” and some other “images”.
These are a great example of buildings with more to offer well above street level; the ground floors are devoted to storefronts with little detail. However the left one, #9, has lovely pillar decorations and a mansard with quatrefoil and peaked window caps.
The right building is suggestive of a factory, with its large window framing on the top three floors; however, I doubt it was a factory, given its location and size. I also included the statues midway up, which are called Atlas’s (as in, Atlas is holding up the building).
The horizontal surrounding the leaves on the middle floor on the bottom picture look like they are shaded in a comic book. Note the great ornaments in the center and corbels on the sides.
Added: February 25, 2009
Added: February 25, 2009
I think the baluster is flowers flexing their muscles to hold up the railing; I imagine it as something straight out of a Disney movie. I also like the inset brick columns on the first picture, to the right.
Added: February 25, 2009
This building is just too much; I don’t know what to say that despite its funny color scheme it has some interesting details. I am putting it down as “classical”, which I feel is given away by columns and the horizontal blocking (which is usually done on the bottom floor).
This building is a wonderful complement to 40 West 23rd, and also happens to be occupied by The Home Depot.
Added: February 25, 2009

Was the building expanded on one side only? (Note: the curving facade is an artifact of the panorama stitching)

I like how The Home Depot fits with the building style. Look at the seal! The "S" is for "Stern" -- see below.
Some buildings I see details I like a lot, and some I am blown away by. This was the latter. It just had such great detail and scale. The facade was finished the entire height, and it even had a mystery: why is there a modern extension on the eastern side that does not match that on the western? Was there a patio there? Was it destroyed in an accident and rebuilt in a time without style?
EDIT: New York Architecture has a page about this building (with a slightly different address?). As the author says on that site about the extension,
W.M. Schickel’s typically 19th century addition tripled the dimensions of the original structure on the eastern portion of the site. The tall central section of this addition animates the long and delicately detailed facade. The company’s monogram is located above a central arch.
I do think Home Depot does a great job here with respecting the building (although they could have done with less orange). See also 28 West 23rd.
Added: February 25, 2009























