Turtle Bay Gardens Historic District Explained

Turtle Bay Gardens Historic District
Nrhp Type:hd
Added:July 21, 1983
Designated Other2 Number:0279
Designated Other2 Link:New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission
Designated Other2 Abbr:NYCL
Designated Other2 Date:June 21, 1966
Designated Other2 Name:New York City Landmark
Refnum:83001750
Architecture:Italianate
Architect:Clarence Dean
Coordinates:40.7542°N -73.9703°W
Location:226-246 E. 49th St. and 227-245 E. 48th St., New York, New York
Designated Other2 Color:
  1. ffe978

The Turtle Bay Gardens Historic District is a collection of twenty rowhouses in the Turtle Bay neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. They consist of eleven houses on the south side of 49th Street and nine on the north side of 48th Street, between Second and Third Avenues.[1] The rowhouses, dating from the 1860s, were renovated between 1918 and 1920 by Charlotte Hunnewell Sorchan to plans by Clarence Dean.[2] [3]

The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the Turtle Bay Gardens Historic District in 1966, and it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.

Design

Dean refaced the brownstone street-fronts with pale stucco. None of the houses are exactly alike, but the street facades are generally four stories high, and some houses have rear attics. The stoops in front of each house were removed; the basements were converted into English basements, slightly below ground level, with rusticated facades. On the street facades, Dean used decorative elements such as balconies made of cast iron, cartouches, parapets, pilasters, quoins, roundels, and stucco detailing. Inside each house, Dean rearranged the interiors so that service room, such as dining rooms faced the noisy street and living areas faced inward. The rear facades are more plainly decorated, and many of the structures contain roof terraces. The rowhouses' secluded character was emphasized by the presence of tall apartments to the east, along Second Avenue, and office buildings to the west, along Third Avenue.

The individual backyards are arranged so that each opens into a common garden of trees and shrubs down the center. Strips of land measuring wide were taken from the rear boundary of each backyard to create the common garden. The shared space is separated from each individual backyard by short walls made of masonry. Running through the center of the garden is a walkway paved in flagstone, There is also a fountain, designed in the style of another at the Villa Medici, which is surrounded by iron benches and shaded by a willow tree.

Residents

Sorchan, who was married to Walton Martin, sold the houses to friends at cost, with property restrictions that kept the commons secure. Among the first purchasers was Maria Bowen Chapin, founder of the Chapin School. Celebrity residents since have included actors Katharine Hepburn, Ruth Gordon, June Havoc, Ricardo Montalbán, and Tyrone Power; writer-director Garson Kanin; jurist Learned Hand; conductor Leopold Stokowski; editor Maxwell Perkins; publisher Henry Luce; journalist Dorothy Thompson; and writer/journalist E. B. White, who wrote Charlotte's Web when living on 48th Street.[4] Later occupants also included composer Stephen Sondheim and actress Mary-Kate Olsen.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: July 21, 1983. Turtle Bay Gardens Historic District. January 1, 2021. National Register of Historic Places, National Park Service.
  2. News: Gray. Christoper. November 27, 1988. Streetscapes: Turtle Bay Gardens; The Fate of a Beautiful Whole Hangs on Talks on Restrictions. en-US. The New York Times. April 25, 2021. 0362-4331.
  3. Web site: Turtle Bay Gardens Historic District, 1966. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20121019024242/http://www.nyc.gov/html/lpc/downloads/pdf/reports/TURTLE_BAY_GARDENS_HISTORIC_DISTRICT.pdf. October 19, 2012. October 26, 2011.
  4. http://www.nyc-architecture.com/MID/MID018.htm New York Architectural Images: Turtle Bay
  5. News: Lasky. Julie. January 10, 2018. Turtle Bay, Manhattan: The Convenience of Midtown, at a Relatively Affordable Price. en-US. The New York Times. April 25, 2021. 0362-4331.