The stories behind the buildings, statues and other points of interest that make Manhattan fascinating.
Friday, August 13, 2010
The Flamboyant 1902 Dorilton - 171 West 71st Street
The Boulevard, as Broadway was called in the early days of the 20th century, promised great things to come. William Stoke’s elaborate Beaux Arts Ansonia apartment building was under construction at 73rd Street on the wide, spacious boulevard that evoked, at least in Stokes’ mind, the Champs Elysees of Paris.
Developer Hamilton M. Weed jumped on the French-inspired bandwagon, commissioning architects Elisha Harris Janes and Richard Leopold Leo to design a Beaux Arts concoction two blocks to the south at 71st Street. When completed in 1902, the Dorilton was an explosion of ornamentation.
It immediately drew the wrath of architectural critics for its overblown decoration.
Foremost among the building’s critics was Montgomery Schuyler of the Architectural Record. Never one to mince his words, Schuyler wrote “It not merely solicits but demands attention. It yells ‘Come and look at me' so loud that the preoccupied or even the color blind cannot choose but hear.”
He added “Everything shrieks to drown out everything else,” and “Motley elements set the sensitive spectator’s teeth on edge.”
Well-to-do apartment hunters were not swayed. Weed’s lavish building, which cost him $750,000, was quickly filled with socially-recognized names.
A year after opening, The New York Times reported that “Mrs. Hector H. Havemeyer of 171 West Seventy-first Street has cards out for Jan. 8 and 9.” Mrs. Havemeyer was, obviously, ready to receive callers. The society column later reported on Mrs. John Frank Dunham’s dinner party for Miss Marion Peckham of Pulaski, New York, listing the dinner guests and mentioning Mrs. Dunham’s “diamond ornaments.”
Millionaire Emil Wolff lived here until his death in 1918, leaving over $2 million to Jewish religious and educational charities.
The Dorilton had separate elevators for tenants and servants, French paneled rooms, filtered water and a facility to recharge tenants’ electric motorcars. But most of all, it had exterior flamboyance.
Huge statues of The Seasons stand above the fourth floor balustrade, sculptures of groaning, muscular titans support limestone and cast iron balconies, dripping brackets and vaguely Art Nouveau-inspired elements ooze from the façade. According to critic Carter B. Horsley “Although the Dorilton has not always been one of the city’s most prestigious residential addresses, it is one of the most spectacular architecturally.”
Most distinctive is the 71st Street entrance, a wide courtyard spanned by a connecting arch at the ninth floor. What Horsley calls “the most attractive entrance gate in the city” features sculpted cherubs, grand iron gates and colossal limestone columns surmounted by enormous globes. Schuyler disapproved of these, as well, saying they were “left there for titans to roll at ten pins.”
In time the matronly building suffered neglect. In the 1950s exterior elements were falling off. Entire dormers, wide sections of cornices, and other decorative components were either crumbling or gone entirely. By 1979 Paul Goldberger lamented “the sorry state of decay it has descended to.”
In 1984 the Dorilton was converted to a co-op. A year later residents began restoration efforts. More than a decade later the renovations continued: the mansard roof was re-slated, missing dormers and cresting were reproduced and a $1.5 million restoration of the roof was undertaken, headed by engineer, Robert Feuer. Interestingly, the missing 11th floor cornice was reproduced in trompe l’oeil – the empty wall painted by John Williams and John Wright Stephens to imitate the original.
As the flamboyant elegance of the building has re-emerged, modern critical appraisal is less harsh. In The AIA Guide To New York City Architecture, Elliot Willensky and Norval White call it a “cornice-copia.” And the 1983 book New York, 1900, Metropolitan Architecture and Urbanism 1890-1915 by Stern, Gilmartin and Massengale says “It was precisely the intricacy and the burly swagger of the Dorilton which was the source of its drama and expressed the optimism of the new century.”
In the sleek glass and steel environment of New York today, a little over-the-top, sugary ornamentation is a welcomed break.
historic photographs from the NYPL Collection
"It immediately drew the wrath of architectural critics for its overblown decoration." Anyone could just imagine. But still, the Dolimar in 1902 was a sight to behold, up until now that it's restored. The marvels that are the elaborate ornamentation, the steel gates, and the metal art around it never fail to evoke feelings from passers-by.
ReplyDeleteIt is interesting how many times this happens; contemporary critics pan the design then decades later we appreciate what the architect was striving for. You're absolutely right.
ReplyDeleteHow very nice to read about this crazy building. Emil Wolff was an emigrated member of my family, I can imagine that the style of the Dolimar attracted him as he was a merchant of lace and embroidery!
ReplyDeleteFascinating. He must have been a remarkable man.
DeleteI will probably feel pretty dumb when you answer this but I can live with that! Was The Dorilton called The Dolimar at one time? You use both in the blog.
ReplyDeleteEarly photographs are tagged "the Dolimar;" however the name Dorilton is the name that quickly was used. Those were possibly early typos and I can find no official documentation.
DeleteIt is interesting, we have stared at this incredible building for several years, dreaming of living there. And, while we didn't get an apartment in The Dorilton, we lucked out and found one in another of Hamilton Weed's incredible Beaux-Arts buildings (though we didn't realize the connection at the time).
ReplyDeleteInteresting question for The Dorilton entry.
ReplyDeleteQ Why is the huge north face of the building towering over 72nd Street a relative flat sheer brick designed blank facade from steet level up to the roof it is virtually devoid of fenestration as though it faced a competing structure? Yet in 1902 there was no building obstruction of views north? What is the explanation for this design?
The possibility that a significant structure would replace the lower-height existing buildings routinely resulted in similar treatments. There was no need to spend extravagantly on an elevation that might (and probably would) be blocked from view. In this case it has not happened yet.
DeleteVery interesting insight, thank you. The old main floorplan layout has kitchens, 'chambers', library, and the like so guess they were not relegated to lower eschelon quarters ie., servants studios etc. Wonderful old building.
ReplyDeleteWas the Dorilton built on the site of the Harsen homestead? Was there another structure on the property prior to the Dorilton?
ReplyDeleteThe Harsen house was approximately at the corner of what today is Amsterdam Avenue and 70th Street. I do not believe there were any structures on the site before the Dorilton was erected.
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