Pomander Walk | |
Nrhp Type: | hd |
Location: |
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Built: | 1921 |
Architect: | King and Campbell |
Added: | September 14, 1982 |
Refnum: | 83001739 |
Designated Other1: | New York State Register of Historic Places |
Designated Other1 Date: | August 10, 1983[2] |
Designated Other1 Number: | 06101.004559 |
Designated Other1 Abbr: | NYSRHP |
Designated Other1 Num Position: | bottom |
Designated Other2 Name: | New York City Landmark |
Designated Other2 Date: | September 11, 1979 |
Designated Other2 Abbr: | NYCL |
Designated Other2 Link: | New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission |
Designated Other2 Number: | 1279 |
Designated Other2 Color: |
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Pomander Walk is a cooperative apartment complex in Manhattan, New York City, located on the Upper West Side between Broadway and West End Avenue. The complex consists of 27 buildings. Four buildings face West 94th Street, and another seven face West 95th Street, including one with a return facade on West End Avenue. The "Walk" itself, consisting of two rows of eight buildings facing each other across a narrow courtyard, runs through the middle of the block between 94th and 95th, with a locked gate at each end. Each building originally had one apartment on each floor. In recent years, some buildings have been reconfigured to serve as single-family homes.
Pomander Walk is different in style and out of scale with the tall buildings that surround it. Author and former resident Darryl Pinckney called it "an insertion of incredible whimsy" into the Upper West Side.[3] It is not open to the public and visit is by invitation only.
The complex is named for Pomander Walk, a romantic comedy by Louis N. Parker that opened in New York in 1910.[4] [5] The play is set on an imaginary byway near London. The place as built bears a tenuous resemblance to the setting described in the play as "a retired crescent of five very small, old-fashioned houses near Chiswick, on the river-bank. ... They are exactly alike: miniature copies of Queen Anne mansions".[6]
New York City's Pomander Walk is Tudoresque, a style that enjoyed a vogue in America in the years following World War I.The Walk is not a mews, though often so-called, having no history as a stables. The buildings may fairly be described as Storybook Houses, an architectural trend of the 1920s in England and the United States.
Pomander Walk was built in 1921 by nightclub impresario Thomas J. Healy who planned to build a major hotel on the site. According to city historian Christopher Gray, when Healy was unable to get financing for a hotel, he built the houses that stand on the site today, apparently to provide a temporary cash-flow while he waited to raze them and build the hotel.[7] It was designed by the New York architecture firm King and Campbell.[8] Healy died in 1927, however, so Pomander Walk remained.[9]
By the 1970s, the complex was rundown and at risk of being demolished. However, it was saved with a City, State, and National Historic Landmark designation in 1982 [10] after tenants banded together to block redevelopment.[11] An earlier application for City Landmark status had been rejected in 1966.[12]
In 2009 the owners completed a four-year facade renovation, restoring architectural details that had been lost for decades. In 2008 Landmark West! bestowed their Building Rehabilitation Award on Pomander Walk.[13]
Past residents of Pomander Walk include Nancy Carroll, Ward Morehouse, Herbert Stothart, Paulette Goddard, Michael Sorkin and Rosalind Russell.
The protagonist of This Time Tomorrow, a 2022 novel by Emma Straub, grew up living on Pomander Walk.[14]