Vol. 13 No. 1 Winter 2022 |
|
|
|
|
Save the Lower East Side: A National Treasure Under Siege |
|
|
|
|
There’s nothing ordinary about the Lower East Side.
The LES has long been a cauldron of cultures, people, and ideas, and
once the densest place on earth—more densely populated than what was
then Calcutta. From the mid-19th century to the early
20th century, as we document here, the LES was simultaneously a
confounding challenge of immense poverty and human need and a hotbed of
social ferment and vaulting idealism.
That unprecedented tumult re-defined the meaning of “American” and gave
birth to pioneering initiatives that shaped the city and the
nation, substantially rewriting the social contract between government
and the governed. Without the LES, our contemporary world would be far
different. Preservationists must spotlight and preserve the built
environment that speaks to this history.
The LES may not be known for mansions and grand homes, but the fact
that it was built for the people and not the rich only adds to its
singularity. The neighborhoods, streetscapes and buildings tell great
stories—stories of mass immigration and urban development, stories of
game-changing civic and government innovation.
The buildings themselves have their own distinction, evoking the people
who built New York City and the modern United States—and offering up a
veritable cornucopia of architectural detail. |
|
|
|
|
|
As we enter the first months of a new mayoral administration, we want
to communicate to the Landmarks Preservation Commission in the strongest
possible terms why it is urgent to landmark the LES, before real estate
developers bulldoze what remains.
For years now, we have submitted landmarking proposals to the LPC, only
to be rebuffed. Our applications have merit, we are told, but further
study will be undertaken only within the Commission’s priorities
within the five boroughs.
Much of Manhattan may be rich in landmarks and historic districts
compared to the outer boroughs—and we welcome new attention beyond
Manhattan. But we are sounding the alarm. There is in fact a
glaring lack of historic district designations in the Lower East Side. We declare to you, our supporters, and also to the LPC:
The Lower East Side is not your ordinary Manhattan. It is a
world-renowned, historic neighborhood in danger of disappearing. Neglect
LES landmarking, and what will be lost is irreplaceable. |
|
|
|
|
This special section of LESPI’s Newsletter—conceived and written by
Board Members Deborah Wye and Phyllis Eckhaus—defends and supports
LESPI’s preservation mission. Several short pieces link to longer,
illustrated blog posts, with more to follow in the months to come.
The Lower East Side is much more than just another neighborhood—it has
an emotional resonance for the generations who trace their family roots
back to this unique place, and also for the country as a whole. It
has helped to shape America’s identity. And much of it is still
defined by wonderful streetscapes filled with beautifully ornate
historic architecture, which is very much under threat of demolition and
redevelopment. We hope you read, enjoy, ponder our blog posts—and are
moved to join us in mobilizing to support the urgent cause of LES
preservation. |
|
|
|
Immigration and Transformation |
|
|
|
|
The Lower East Side’s iconic status as an immigrant neighborhood derives from the mid-19th to early 20th
century when massive waves of Europeans arrived here. This was a
pivotal moment, as industrialization continued to develop and
urbanization intensified. Certainly, well before that, the area had a
rich and complex history extending back to the indigenous Lenape, the
Dutch and British colonies, and the early Republic. But the population
changes during this classic period of mass immigration were on such a
scale that it became a singular historic juncture.
A look back at the struggles and triumphs of the early immigrant period
can offer a new understanding of the present. That era tells a
quintessential American story of cultural reckoning that still resonates
today. The extraordinary influx of new arrivals, particularly to this
neighborhood, began what would be a fundamental shift in our sense of
national identity, as America’s Anglo-Saxon roots receded in dominance.
The Lower East Side was the epicenter of this transformation and a place
of ethnic pride within a common citizenry.
Some blocks of the Lower East Side became the most densely populated
places on earth. And while many different national groups arrived at
that time, it was the Irish, Germans, Italians and Eastern European Jews
who represented the greatest numbers, by far. Over the years, the
neighborhood would continue to evolve, most particularly with
contributions of the growing Chinese, Hispanic and African American
communities. Indeed, much has now changed in terms of ethnic
make-up and density, but the streetscapes of the neighborhood still
recall their vivid, historic past. Read more HERE. |
|
|
|
Lower East Side: Progressive Pioneer |
|
|
|
|
Paris had its Belle Epoque. Harlem had its Renaissance. At the turn of the 20th century, the Lower East Side helped birth a paradigm shift of equal moment—the progressive reworking of the social contract. Today we take government and civic services almost for granted, but 19th
century America was a place where individuals and families were
typically expected to fend for themselves. Ralph Waldo Emerson,
famed advocate of “Self-Reliance,” commented after one of the nation’s
numerous currency crises that “the land stinks of suicide.”
American individualism blamed the poor for their poverty.
Missionary organizations typically offered salvation for souls but no
material support.
But on the Lower East Side poverty and squalor catalyzed social change,
thanks to the singularity of New York City. Indeed, the LES
repeatedly jump-started extraordinary reforms and movements encompassing
housing regulation; workers’ rights; settlement houses; safely
sterilized milk; public parks, playgrounds, and libraries; adult
education; public health nursing—and more. Read more HERE. |
|
|
|
Tenements: Save, Don’t Scorn |
|
|
|
“A shanty is better than a cheap tenement any day.” ̶ Jacob Riis, quoted in The Decorated Tenement |
|
|
|
Jacob
Riis—author of How the Other Half Lives, the powerful 1890
anti-tenement tract—was such an effective propagandist that even today
his work obscures the vitality, significance, and beauty of many
historic Lower East Side streetscapes and buildings.
Look up “tenement”—which we define here as a multi-family dwelling
built for working-class families—and one of the synonyms you will
encounter is “slum.” No wonder preserving tenements is such an
uphill battle!
Yet this longstanding contempt for tenements is, in general, misguided
since it dates to a different time, when these buildings were little
regulated, and those few regulations were ineffectual. That contempt can
also be malevolent, with roots in anti-immigrant sentiment and class
antagonism. A
clear-eyed look at many LES tenements that remain today—those built
during a time of housing reform and great competition for
tenants—reveals an important and positive story: immigrants transcended
the efforts to contain and control them, and transformed a neighborhood
to reflect their own culture and upward mobility.
Such tenements have been wrongly condemned, literally and figuratively.
As Zachary J. Violette documents in The Decorated Tenement, his
ground-breaking study of the ornamented late 19th and early
20th century dwellings on the Lower East Side (his book also
examines Boston), these tenements remain special and wonderful,
signifiers of immigrant progress and pride. Read more HERE. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
After having fought Mayor de Blasio on his many upzoning proposals,
preservationists are now confronted with a new upzoning proposal via
Governor Hochul’s proposed state budget. This time, the proposed
upzoning calls to remove the State’s FAR - Floor Area Ratio - cap of 12
on residential buildings throughout New York State. Note that the West
57th Street 100 story-plus supertalls were built under an FAR of 10 due
to local zoning restrictions, and imagine the impact of development with
no limits.
Currently different areas of the City have different FAR limits. So,
for (a simplified) example, in an R8 residential district, as found in
parts of the Lower East Side, a developer is typically allowed to build a
building that’s up to 8 times the floor area of the lot the building
will sit on. This translates (roughly) into an 8 story building if the
building covers the entire lot, or a 16 story building if the
building covers only half the lot.
Removing the State’s current FAR cap - something de Blasio had tried to
do twice - will allow the City to rezone to increase FAR beyond 12.
This will encourage wild west development in residential neighborhoods
not protected by local zoning restrictions or where such restrictions
have been removed. It will allow new, ever-taller mega luxury towers to
be plopped down incongruously into our communities. It will provide
new incentives to upzone neighborhoods, and demolish historic buildings
and replace them with colossal glass structures.
The governor’s budget needs to be negotiated with the state legislature
by April 1. LESPI has written to our local state elected officials
expressing our strong opposition to this proposal - you can read our
letter HERE. We hope you will send a letter to your state elected officials at the green button below.
We want to thank State Senator Brad Hoylman and Assemblymember Harvey
Epstein for expressing their opposition to the FAR cap removals, and
call on ALL our downstate elected officials to work to remove this item
from the NYS budget. We’ll keep you posted. |
|
|
|
|
|
LESPI Fights a Monster Rooftop Addition on Second Avenue |
|
|
|
|
LESPI along with our allied preservation organizations have been
speaking out against a developer’s proposal to build a large rooftop
addition at the pair of 1867 Italianate style, historic tenement
buildings at 45-47 Second Avenue, in the East Village / Lower East Side
Historic District. The developer’s architectural renderings and on-site
wood mock-up of the proposed structure - part of their application to
the NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission for a permit for the work -
showed that the structure would loom like a large battleship plopped on
top of these beautifully preserved 4 story buildings, and that it would
be visible from multiple locations on the surrounding streets.
Based in part on LESPI’s testimony at Community Board 3 and then later
at the NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission Public Hearing, the
developer agreed to significantly reduce the addition’s size to make it
less visible from the street, as well as modify the addition’s cladding
materials to be more sympathetic with the historic facades’ masonry.
Read LESPI's testimony HERE. We’re still waiting to see the final design and what LPC will end up approving here. |
|
|
A Conversation with Michael Henry Adams |
|
|
|
|
|
|
LESPI was very fortunate to have Michael Henry Adams as our special
guest for our January General Meeting, held on Zoom. Michael is a
longtime NYC preservation activist, whose focus has been on saving
historic Harlem. During the meeting he discussed what he believes to be
the most effective ways to achieve NYC landmark designations for
historic buildings and districts, the efficacy of different advocacy
strategies from letter writing to civil disobedience (such as getting
arrested), how to best get press coverage for preservation issues, and
more. You can watch a video of this informative meeting on LESPI’s YouTube Channel. In February we were thrilled to welcome Michael as LESPI’s newest member of our Board of Advisers. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Join Our Webinar: "The East Village's Christodora Settlement House: Community, Relationships, and Social Change" on Thursday March 24
Recently rediscovered letters shed light on the overlooked story of a
transformative social settlement house founded by two extraordinary
young women in 1897. The Christodora House at 143 Avenue B, dedicated in
1928, has long been a contradiction: a symbol of both enduring hope and
social turmoil, of both urban decay and gentrification. The landmark
now stands as witness in the 21st century to ongoing social change and
new forms of community building in the East Village. Christodora as an
organization still lives on in a location uptown with a repurposed
educational mission.
Joyce Milambiling is our guest lecturer. She is a writer and researcher
who lived in New York City for over a decade and now resides in Iowa.
Recently she has been drawn into the story of Christodora House, first
by reading a series of letters by an immigrant woman to her English
teacher at Christodora, and then by examining the settlement house
movement and the place of Christodora House in the complex histories of
New York City and the Lower East Side. Thursday March 24 at 6:30PM via Zoom. Register for this free event HERE. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar. |
|
|
|
|
LESPI’s Event “Behind the Curtain, A History of 19th Century Theaters in the Lower East Side” on YouTube
LESPI’s Zoom webinar event, “Behind the Curtain, A History of 19th
Century Theaters in the Lower East Side,” held last November in honor
of the recent reopening of NYC Broadway and off-Broadway theaters,
provided a unique look at New York City’s earliest theaters.
Downtown theater-maker Ralph Lewis’s beautifully illustrated
talk discussed where these theaters were built, what they looked
like, why they succeeded (or not), and what became of them - the
down-n-dirty story of how the Great White Way was born. The event,
tailor-made for lovers of American theater and its incredible NYC
history, can be seen on LESPI's YouTube channel. |
|
|
|
|
Yu and Me Books Opens in Historic Chinatown |
|
|
|
|
A wonderful bookstore - Yu and Me Books
- recently opened on Mulberry Street, in the historic core of
Chinatown. According to the proprietor, Lucy Yu, the store has “a lot of
focus on immigrant stories, a lot of focus on people that may have feel
othered and may have not always felt like they belonged.” She hopes
that “having that representation and seeing a lot of titles with stories
like that on the wall will make anyone feel welcome when they come in.”
We recommend
you stop by the store, browse, and pick up a copy of LESPI’s
“Chinatown: Lens on the Lower East Side.” LESPI’s book is also available
at Museum of Chinese in America on Centre Street, Pearl River Mart at Chelsea Market, McNally Jackson on Prince Street, Printed Matter/St Marks on St. Marks Place, and Village Works on East 3rd Street, though we recommend contacting them before going to make sure the book is in stock. |
|
|
|
|
|
LESPI’s New Donation Platform
For those of you who generously donate to LESPI (a not-for-profit
501(c)3 organization), please note that we’ve moved our primary donation
platform from PayPal to Salsa, our mass email provider. This will allow
us to much better coordinate donations with mail and email outreach.
For those of you who would prefer to donate on PayPal, you can still do
so at our PayPal site, which will remain open for the foreseeable future. Thank you! |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Giving through AmazonSmile We love small local businesses. But if you happen to shop at Amazon, you can choose AmazonSmile,
which will donate a percentage of each sale to the charity of your
choice - we hope you'll pick Lower East Side Preservation Initiave
(LESPI)! |
|
|
|
|
|
Sign LESPI's Petition for a LES Historic District! |
|
Join the approx. 3,000 people who have signed LESPI's petition for a
new Lower East Side historic district below Delancey Street, in the
blocks around the Tenement Museum. This is one of the city's and
country's most important historic communities, due to its
unique immigration, artistic, cultural and architectural history,
and the formidable role it has played in our city's and nation's
development. The only way to protect the historic Lower East Side
from complete demolition and redevelopment is city landmarking. Sign the petition HERE! |
|
|
Support
LESPI and look good doing it with a LESPI t-shirt! All proceeds
benefit LESPI's work. Only $25 (including shipping and handling).
Send a check made out to "LESPI/FCNY", and send to LESPI, 93 Third
Avenue, #1223, New York, NY 10003. Available in crew neck only;
indicate which shirt and size (contact us at info@LESPI-nyc.org or
347-827-1846 with questions). Unfortunately we cannot offer returns or exchanges. |
|
|
|
|
|
LESPI Books Make for Great Reading and Gifts! |
|
|
|
|
|
LESPI's books "East Village: Lens on the Lower East Side" and "Chinatown: Lens on the Lower East Side"
are each fascinating histories of their respective historic
communities, accompanied by the work of six boldly contemporary
professional photographers who capture the areas' special streetscapes,
people and spirit. All contributors have ties to the local
community. Both books are available at McNally Jackson on Prince Street, Yu and Me Books on Mulberry Street, Printed Matter/St Marks on St. Marks Place, and Village Works on East 3rd Street. The East Village book is available at The Source on East 9th Street; the Chinatown book is available at Museum of Chinese in America on Centre Street, and Pearl River Mart at Chelsea Market and Broadway in Tribeca. Due to COVID-19 please contact the store to check availability. |
|
|
You're contribution will help us protect our historic LES buildings and streetscapes! |
|
|
|
|
|
Lower East Side Preservation Initiative 93 Fourth Avenue #1223 | New York, New York 10003 347-827-1846 | info@LESPI-nyc.org www.LESPI-nyc.org © 2022 Lower East Side Preservation Initiative |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|