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Continued from West Broadway Part 2


Prior to about 1840 the stretch of West Broadway between Canal Street and Washington Square Park was called Laurens Street.

Canal Street is now a pedal to the metal connector between the Manhattan Bridge and the Holland Tunnel, and along with Mott, Chinatown's main shopping street; but it was once an actual canal. These used to be a freshwater pond called the Collect where Foley Square and all its state and city courthouses are today, and it remained fresh for hundreds of years in the pre-colonial period when the Lenape Indians were running the show. As soon as the Dutch and then the British arrived, the Collect filled with waste until the stench was unbearable. A canal was dug across the island to completely drain the Collect in the early 1810s, and the situation was solved for a time until the canal itself was befouled; it was then placed underground, and Canal Street was built on top.
Above we see an 1820s or 1830s-era building, still with roof crenellation, at the NE corner of Canal and West Broadway. Some very old buildings can be found under the Canal Street signage. The Soho Grand (see below) looms in the background.








This stretch of West Broadway is filled on weekends with sidewalk art dealers, and since your webmaster is furnishing an apartment, there was plenty to interest me, actually: old NYC prints, ads from the mid-18th century, and abstract art (yes I have a soft spot for it). I'll certainly be returning, though on the day I shot these photos, I wasn't feeling sufficiently flush...





Though the mandate was widely opposed, you can still see several signs around town fitting that description.




At the northwest corner of Broome and West Broadway stands a building created by CITE Design several years ago. Three stories high, it mimics the round-shouldered window openings typical of early 1870s cast-iron buildings. But to Stephen Gottlieb, an architect and a board member of the Victorian Society, it is "clunky and dull," and looks like a "Star Wars armor-plated walking gun." Christopher Gray, New York Times




LEFT: I had never paid attention before to the great line drawing on the exterior at Metropolitan Hardware at 173 Spring. Even the presence of a lumberyard in Soho seems unusual, but I believe some dwellings in the area have wood burning fireplaces.





Any ForgottenFans know the artist?
Ernest Aebi, the owner of 460 West Broadway, would probably not have gotten landmark approval for his three-story-high mural of black wolf heads devouring fleeing pigs in pink, black and blue, painted by the artist Friedrich Gross around 2001. Christopher Gray, New York Times



LaGuardia Place long had a wide, barren stretch on its east side. This was going to be a connection to 5th Avenue of the thankfully cancelled LoMex (Lower Manhattan Expressway). The space has since been filled by community gardens...






But what was founded in 1858 that was housed in this 1891 building?





I thought so.
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erpietri@earthlink.net
Photographed April 26, 2008; page completed May 5
©2008