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I think it was 1992 when I first spotted Renwick Street. In the summer of that year I was freelancing at a type shop named ModKomp, entered from a loading dock on Greenwich near Vandam. This was still in the era when you pulled long galleys of print, cut them and pasted them on boards; there was a lot more dexterity involved in the print business then.
At lunch I would take long walks in the neighborhood. Real estate barons hadn't yet dubbed the area Hudson Square, so this was a part of western Soho or even the West Village and it was wholly industrial, with the exception of a couple of bars here and there like the Ear Inn on Spring.
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Renwick Street, looking south, July 2008
And, there it was, emanating north from the honking cacaphony of Canal and a couple blocks from the earsplitting madness of West... tiny Renwick Street. It's one of an odd trio of one-or two-block streets that run north-south parallelling Hudson and Greenwich. Renwick runs between Canal and Spring, while Staple runs from Duane north to Harrison and Collister runs from Beach north to Laight. Staple boasts an ancient pedestrian bridge that once connected to New York Hospital while Collister borders on an old American Express stable, but Renwick seems the most nondescript of the three. As we'll see, it's about to shed that description.
LEFT: 1840s NYC fireman's map showing Renwick (circled)
Renwick Street was named for author/engineer/scientist James Renwick (1792-1863), a Professor of Natural and Experimental Philosophy at Columbia College, which was located downtown a few blocks from Renwick's namesake street at the time (see College Place sign on FNY's West Broadway page). Since Renwick Stret begins showing up on NYC maps in the late 1830s or early 1840s, the street was named for Renwick when he was still alive -- quite a tribute. Renwick's son James Jr. became an architect; he was the mastermind behind St. Patrick's Cathedral, Smithsonian Institution, as well as the magnificent ruin of Roosevelt Island, the Smallpox Hospital.
Above: a pair of residential buildings on Renwick Street that were there when I first encountered it. The magnificent paisley-esque design on the building is still there today, though it is soon apparently be going to be covered by yet more development. Note the "ghost" of a former building on the right; this building may have been a former stable.
Faceoff: two visions of residential architecture square off on Renwick. In this corner, red bricks, storefronts, and fire escapes and in the other corner, an impassive wall of glass.
Much of Renwick's west side on the Canal Street end has been removed, temporarily making the backsides of neighboring Greenwich Street buildings visible. Soon though, the space will be filled by a massive glass-walled residential palace called "The Renwick." Curbed has posted some architectural renderings of the inside and outside.
Potential residents of The Renwick are expected to be hip young things who are going places. Local graffitists have already expressed an opinion.
Attempting to outmirror The Renwick on the other side of the street will be the almost equally-glassy 22 Renwick. The first image you see on the development's website is a martini glass. The interiors look duly impressive. You can be fairly certain, though, that even James Renwick Jr. never envisioned such manses would rise on this gritty one-block route named for his father. Prices for 2-3 bedroom apartments here range from $1.37M to $3.4M.
The north end of Renwick, at Spring Street, still bears talismans of the recent past, such as a former dive called McGovern's. The sign has stayed but it's now a club called the Sway Lounge.
The Emerald Pub still holds firm on the NW corner of Spring and Renwick, in a turn of the 20th Century building now being wedged in by glass boxes. The Man of 1000 Bars visted in 2005.
The Renwick Galley wasn't open the Sunday I happened by (regular hours are Tues-Sat.) On The Inside has several photos of exhibits. RIGHT: offices for The Renwick on Spring Street.
The venerable Ear is a block away from Renwick, on Spring between Greenwich and Washington. It's likely the intense development in the area will make it busier than ever.
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