photo by Alice Lum |
Leonard Lispenard purchased the land in 1746, incorporating
it into the Lispenard Farm. It then
became part of Lispenard’s tremendous holdings that stretched to the Hudson
River, called Lispenard Meadows. As the
city inched northward and streets were laid out, the Lispenard name became
attached to some of them: Leonard’s
children, Leonard and Anthony both gave their names to streets; and the small
road running parallel to Canal Street to the south was given the name Lispenard
Street.
In the first quarter of the century Lispenard Street was
lined with modest brick homes, most of which would last only a few
decades. By the time of the Civil War
commercial buildings were replacing them as Canal Street and Broadway became
important business thoroughfares. As
the century drew to a close, two small houses—each two stories tall—still held
on at Nos. 60 and 62 Lispenard Street.
They had been converted to serve as John H. Ireland’s Star Hotel—a somewhat
seedy establishment with often-questionable goings on.
On June 12, 1894 the New York Building & Improvement
Company purchased the buildings and began plans for an impressive new office
and loft building. Gilbert A.
Schellenger received the commission, although his was commonly thought of as a
residential architect. In No. 60-62
Lispenard he would prove that he was up to the task of major commercial buildings
as well.
The architect produced a seven-story Italian Renaissance beauty. Rusticated stone piers at street level were
separated by decorative and utilitarian cast iron store fronts. Above the stone second story, the building rises
in buff-colored brick with elaborate carved stone panels delineating the fourth
through sixth floors. The arched openings
of the top two floors—four at the sixth balanced by eight at the seventh—complete
the design that would be more expected on an avenue than a tiny side street.
photo by Alice Lum |
The often repeated Tribeca legend is that former mayor and entrepreneur William Russell Grace ran his business from the building; but Grace had purchased the former Cotton Exchange building at 1 Hanover Square in 1885 and remained there until his death in 1904.
Classical motifs such as urns and cornucopias decorate the panels -- photo by Alice Lum |
With the millinery and apparel districts nearby on Broadway, the building naturally attracted manufacturers in these or related trades. In 1910 Schulman & Shapiro was doing business here when the company was charged with employing children under 14 years of age. The same year America’s Textile Reporter noted the consolidation of two large “balers, folders, and packers of dry goods.” Upon the death of Col. William H. Hubbel, whose loft was in the building, the Duane Street firm of Hinman & Taylor purchased the business. “They now have a plant second to none as far as equipment is concerned,” said the Reporter, “and are in a position to double and roll goods by machinery in a manner equal to the best work turned out by the mills, and at low prices.”
photo by Alice Lum |
Although the building continued to attract mainly apparel
and textile firms, there were others as well, like the Boxner Medicine
Company. In 1918 Boxner’s “medicinal
preparations” were made for both domestic and foreign trade.
Another tenant, Fisher Stevens Service, liked the building
so much that they bought it. On
September 24, 1920 The New York Tribune reported on the sale by owner Hyman
Benowitz. Two years later Leiman Brothers would be
renting in the building, making “pumps for automatic feeders, folders and
labelers.”
photo by Alice Lum |
But with the rediscovery of Tribeca at the turn of the new
century, things changed in the Canal Street neighborhood. In July 2005 No. 60-62 Lispenard Street was
converted to nine upscale condominium residences. Inexplicably called “The Wanamaker” (perhaps
as a nod to the great department store that stood several blocks north on
Broadway), its apartments retain the exposed 19th century cast iron
columns and high ceilings. The huge
spaces – running from 2,500 square feet to 3,700 square feet—were brought into
the 21st century with fireplaces, central heating and air
conditioning and recessed lighting.
But the exterior of Gilbert Schellenger’s handsome and hidden
Renaissance-inspired building remains nearly unchanged after nearly a century
and a quarter of use.
Beautiful looking building. Wonder what the current floorplans inside look like?
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