Morningside Heights & Cathedral of Saint John the Divine Designated Historic Landmark
Morningside Heights and the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine has been designated a Historic District by The Landmarks Preservation Commission on Tuesday. The Morningside Heights Historic District Committee has been fighting for the past 20 years to create this district.
The historic district consists of approximately 115 buildings in an area stretching from West 109th Street to West 119th Street, Riverside Drive to Amsterdam Avenue.
From the top of a 135-foot bluff, Morningside Heights overlooks the Hudson River on one side and Harlem on the other. It is about 15 minutes from midtown Manhattan by subway.
Morningside Heights
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Cathedral of Saint John the Divine |
The historic district consists of approximately 115 buildings in an area stretching from West 109th Street to West 119th Street, Riverside Drive to Amsterdam Avenue.
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West 116th Street |
The area that is now Morningside park was described as "inconvenient for use" by a city surveyor in 1867, meaning difficult to build property on, so it was made into a park, which was called "Morning-side park" because its east facing slope catches the morning sun.
Throughout most of the 19th century, Morningside Heights remained largely undeveloped
except for scattered estates and clusters of mid-century frame houses clustered around West
110th Street (later renamed Cathedral Parkway) and modern-day Broadway.
That
development history resulted in a
cohesive residential district that is
comprised primarily of apartment and
flats buildings, along with a smaller
number of row houses that represent
the district’s earliest development.
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Riverside Drive - Morningside Heights
Like much of the Upper West Side, the earliest residential development in the proposed district
includes private town houses such as 625-627 West 113th Street (1897-98, C. P. H. Gilbert)
and speculative rows such as 604-616 West 114th Street (1896, Frank A. Lang) that were built
in the 1890s.
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A cross between the Upper West Side and Harlem, Morningside Heights boasts some of the city’s most impressive architecture: Turn-of-the-century apartment buildings (many with marble lobbies grand enough to house a presidential reception) and row houses dominate.
The Landmarks Preservation Commission designated The Cathedral of Saint John the Divine a historic landmark. The awesome 125 year old building is one of the most famous church buildings in the world.
Within the boundaries of the district, 64% of the buildings were built
between 1900 and 1910. Wide streets such as Riverside Drive, Cathedral Parkway, West 116th
Street and Claremont Avenue are lined with impressive apartment buildings while the narrower
streets have smaller apartment and flats buildings, row houses and club buildings.
Many of the district’s apartment buildings were designed by some of New York City’s prominent
apartment house architects.
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