116 Sullivan Street Explained

116 Sullivan Street
Coordinates:40.7261°N -74.0029°W
Location:Manhattan, New York
Built:1832, heightened two stories in 1872
Architecture:Federal
Designation1:New York City Landmark
Designation1 Date:May 15, 1973
Designation1 Number:LP-0645

116 Sullivan Street is on Sullivan Street in SoHo, Manhattan, New York. The red four-story brick Federal townhouse was built in 1832 as an investment by Charles Starr (bookbinder) and includes some Greek Revival details. It was heightened two stories in 1872.[1] The structure is noteworthy for its elaborated round-arched brownstone doorcase, or "enframement of the front door," which has an exceptional treatment of painted timber Ionic half-column sidelights, unique and highly significant in New York City architecture. Due to the sidelights, "instead of leaded glass, typical of the time, each sidelight is divided into three superimposed oval sections. The ovals are formed by a richly carved wood enframement that simulates a cloth sash curtain drawn through a series of rings."[2] The house stands on land previously belonging to the farm of Nicholas Bayard, Peter Stuyvesant's brother-in-law, and is one of seven houses that was built as an investment by Charles Starr, a bookbinder, whose business was on Nassau Street. Starr's own house at 110 Sullivan Street was 32 feet wide, unusually large for the time.[2] It has been restored.

See also

Notes and References

  1. [Norval White]
  2. Web site: Landmarks Preservation Commission LP-0645 . 2010-03-12 . 2016-03-03 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303204509/http://www.neighborhoodpreservationcenter.org/db/bb_files/116-SULLIVAN-STREET.pdf . dead .