|
| |
 |
New York Architecture
Images-Soho 448
Broome St. |
|
architect
|
Frederick Clark
Withers |
|
location
|
448
Broome St. |
|
date
|
1871 |
|
style
|
High Victorian Gothic
|
|
construction
|
Cast
Iron Facade |
|
type
|
Shop
Office Warehouse |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
  |
|
|
  |
|
|
|
|

|
FREDERICK
CLARK
WITHERS BUILDING
448 Broome Street
On the north side of Broome Street stands a
five–story cast iron building of unique character. It was designed by
Frederick Clark Withers in 1871 and is certainly the only iron building in
SoHo to reflect the Gothic Revival style. This style was popular in early
19th century England and for a short time in America. Withers is most
often remembered for his 1876 Venetian Gothic Jefferson Market Court House
in Greenwich Village. Five years earlier, he had built, on Broome Street,
his one and only iron–front commercial structure. Today the building and
its fire escape, are painted a medium-beige color. Each of the
structure’s five floors has a different design, and the fifth displays
seven round headed windows with triple–rooted colonnettes between them.
The roof cornice supports an ornate center pediment. Beneath the outer
windows are panels filled with a series of rosettes of intricate design. |
|
contact
|
nyc-architecture.com
|
|
links
|
|
|