To the right of No. 712 is the former Coty Building with its wall of Lalique windows. |
In 1875 the Fifth Avenue
Presbyterian Church erected its $1 million building on northwest corner of
Fifth Avenue and 55th Street.
Organized in 1808 as the Center Street Presbyterian Church, the
congregation had moved to Duane Street in 1836 and to Fifth Avenue and 19th
Street in 1836. The new location, in the
midst of the developing mansion district, would be its final move.
Eight years earlier the church enticed Irish missionary Rev. Dr. John Hall to take the position of
pastor. He moved his family from Dublin
that year. The wealth of Fifth Avenue Presbyterian
Church was reflected in his salary. He
was initially paid $6,000 in gold (approximately $100,000 in 2016); a salary
which would eventually increase to $15,000.
On August 16, 1886 John S. Kennedy
filed plans for a $75,000 parsonage to be built next door to the church, at No.
712 Fifth Avenue. The plans described it
as “four stories high, and be built of brick and brownstone.”
Rev. Dr. John Hall was a potent
force in the high society congregation. For more than a decade the parsonage was the
scene of high-end receptions, church functions and society evens.
Hall became ill in March 1898, “suffering
from prostration,” however doctors assured the public he would recover. On March 29 The Sun reported “He passed a
very comfortable night, and his condition was noticeably improved by it.” But Hall did not recover. He died later that year, in September.
The house was never again used as
a parsonage. The Fifth Avenue
Presbyterian Church leased it to William Baylis. The millionaire and his family lived here
until 1906. By now the incursion of
commerce into Millionaires’ Row was well underway. Within the year Charles A. Gould would
abandon his mansion next door, at No. 714, and convert it to a commercial
building.
On May 9, 1906 The New York Times
reported that the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church had leased its parsonage to L.
Alavoine & Co., society art dealers and decorators. The announcement said the firm “will make few
changes in the front of the house, which will continue to have the outward
appearance of a private dwelling, but on the rear of the lot an art gallery
will be erected.”
But apparently Alavoine & Co. and the church were not done with negotiations. In
August L. Alavoine & Co. announced that planned alterations would cost
$20,000. But by spring 1907 nothing had
been done.
Then, on March 23, 1907 the Record
& Guide reported “One building will be demolished at 712 5th av
for the five-story store and office building…which the Fifth Avenue
Presbyterian Church Congregation…are to build from plans by Albert S. Gottlieb.” The announcement noted that the building was
being constructed for the use of its tenant, L. Alavoine & Co. “The front will be of limestone and brick…and
the cost is estimated at $50,000.”
Completed in 1908 Gottlieb’s handsome
neo-French Classic building mimicked the 18th century row houses of
Paris. The architect carefully carried
on the proportions, the mansard roof and cornice line of the abutting Gould
mansion. Corinthian pilasters, wrought
iron grills at the upper openings, carved swag panels and balustrade decorated with
great stone urns created a high-end residential look.
L. Alavoine & Co. had been in
business in America since 1853. The firm
not only sold valuable paintings and artwork to New York City’s wealthiest
citizens, it decorated their homes as well.
In fact, its influence was so noteworthy that when
millionaire James B. Haggin began alterations to the massive George Crocker mansion at No 1 East 64th Street in 1912, L. Alavoine & Co. was
listed as architects on the plans.
Not long after moving into No. 712
Fifth Avenue L. Alavoine & Co. welcomed a subtenant. In 1909 high-end Paris jeweler Pierre Cartier
opened his New York City branch store here.
Within seven years his business would demand a building of its own; and
in 1916 he negotiated a deal to take over Morton Plant’s superb mansion at the southeast
corner of Fifth Avenue and 52nd Street.
The French owners of L. Alavoine
& Co. were most likely instrumental in space being leased to L’Union des
Arts as war broke out in Europe. On
April 8, 1917 The New York Times explained that the charity “contributes to the
assistance and protection of artists, painters, sculptors, and literary men who
are victims of the war.” The
organization was patronized by some of Manhattan’s wealthiest socialites, among
them Mrs. Vincent Astor, Mrs. Jules Bache, Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, Mrs. O. H.
Harriman, Mrs. Frederick Havemeyer and Mrs. Frederick Vanderbilt.
With the war over, space in the
building was leased to another high-end art dealer, Arthur H. Harlow &
Co. Harlow had established the firm in
1911 at No. 569 Fifth Avenue. Like L.
Alavoine & Co. the artworks handled by Harlow ranged from Old Masters, like
Rembrandt etchings, to more modern paintings like works by Cezanne.
Arthur Harlow opened with an exhibition of American Impressionist painter Paul Dougherty. The New York Herald, February 27, 1921 |
Edouard Ferman, president of L.
Alavoine & Co. died on May 23, 1933.
Although the firm gave up the ground floor space to A.
Schmidt Sons, another art dealer and decorator, in 1934, it continued on in the
Fifth Avenue building. In 1936 L.
Alavoine & Co. launched its most impressive exhibition to date: five complete
French rooms were temporarily installed.
On November 8 The New York Times opined “In these paneled interiors,
brought over entire from Old World palaces, a rare opportunity is offered to
see French decorative art at its best.”
By the time L. Alavoine & Co. decorated the Jesse Isidore Strauss residence on Park Avenue, the Art Deco style was all the rage. photograph from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
That same year Arthur H. Harlow
& Co. moved from No. 712 Fifth Avenue to Rockefeller Center. L. Alavoine & Co. and A. Schmidt Son
remained nearly until mid-century. In
1948 A. Schmidt Son discontinued business, selling at auction its stock of
French and English furniture, paintings, Georgian silver, porcelains,
tapestries and Oriental rugs.
In its place Louis Carr Gallery
moved in. Unlike its predecessors, the
gallery dealt in modernist paintings “of the last decade” according to its
opening announcement. The art and
antiques tradition continued in the building as Associated American Artists
Galleries moved in during June 1956 from across the avenue at No 711; and the
Albert Landry Gallery opened in January 1959.
Change would come after Harry
Winston sold the building in October 1963.
The jeweler, whose business was at the southwest corner of 56th
Street at No. 718, also owned No. 714.
The purchaser was Gotham Development Corporation for the Italian
Rizzoli-Editore Corporation.
After gentle renovations, Rizzoli opened its vast bookstore with green marble floors, polished walnut woodwork and cultured atmosphere. No run-of-the-mill bookstore, it offered Fifth Avenue shoppers one-of-a-kind Christmas gifts in 1959. Available here were the 30-copy edition of Picasso’s Cocu Magnifique, with 12 signed etchings for $36,000; or Chagall’s The Circus, priced at $6,500. For the less extravagant shopper, Salvatore Dali’s Alice in Wonderland could be purchased for $750.
In 1983 the magnificent Art Deco
Bonwit Teller building designed by E. J. Kahn diagonally across the avenue was
demolished to be replaced by the splashy Trump Tower.
Paul Goldberger, writing in The New York Times said “the overall effect
was to change the nature of the avenue, replacing the dignity of the old
masonry buildings with the glitter of the new.”
On the tail of Donald Trump’s
spectacle came the threat of another. In
1984 rumors of plans to demolish Nos. 712 and 714 to create an L-shaped 44-story
skyscraper circulated. Preservationists
scrambled to protect the buildings, noting in part that the Coty Building next
door contained three stories of irreplaceable and priceless Rene Lalique
windows.
Although both buildings were
granted landmark designation; it applied only to the facades. In 1985 the architectural firms of Kohn
Pederson Fox Associates and Schuman Lichtenstein Claman & Efron designed a 56-story
tower for Solomon Equities “to slip behind the facades of the landmark Rizzoli
and Coty Buildings.”
The new trend of “facadism” was
highly controversial. While it
maintained the historic face of the Fifth Avenue block, the two buildings were
now, as described by Paul Goldberger, “a doormat for the tower, a small stoop
cowering before a ponderous skyscraper of entirely different scale.”
The facades serve as false fronts to the soaring skyscraper behind. |
The L. Alavoine & Co.
building, as well as the Coty Building, survive in the form of stage sets in
front of the looming skyscraper. But, at
least, the early 20th century commercial personality of the block has
been preserved.
photographs by the author
photographs by the author
If only this kind of compromise could have been worked on the recent West 57th Street (East, too, for that matter) where so many buildings with similar grace and style have simply been erased.
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