The landmarks committee of Community Board 1 voted last night unanimously to support an application for a certificate of appropriateness from the Landmarks Preservation Commission for a handsome, new, 8-story, residential condominium building at 50 Laight Street in TriBeCa.
The mid-block building, which is about 100 feet west of Hudson Street, has been designed by German G. Longoria for Kengo Watanabe, the developer.
The red-brick building will contain five full-floor apartments of about 2,100 square feet each and a duplex penthouse.
The top floor of the building will be setback with a terrace behind a row of arches on the seventh floor.
The building will replace a one-story garage building designed by George W. Swiller in 1940 and a one-story freight terminal building designed by Augustus N. Allen built in 1919.
It will have a one-story limestone base and employ light-colored fiberglass spandrels.
The committee concluded that the design was ?richly detailed? and ?well executed,? and avoided being ?slavishly historic.?
The planned building falls within the existing zoning regulation for floor area.
The Landmarks Preservation Commission has scheduled a hearing on the project for January 24.
The mid-block building, which is about 100 feet west of Hudson Street, has been designed by German G. Longoria for Kengo Watanabe, the developer.
The red-brick building will contain five full-floor apartments of about 2,100 square feet each and a duplex penthouse.
The top floor of the building will be setback with a terrace behind a row of arches on the seventh floor.
The building will replace a one-story garage building designed by George W. Swiller in 1940 and a one-story freight terminal building designed by Augustus N. Allen built in 1919.
It will have a one-story limestone base and employ light-colored fiberglass spandrels.
The committee concluded that the design was ?richly detailed? and ?well executed,? and avoided being ?slavishly historic.?
The planned building falls within the existing zoning regulation for floor area.
The Landmarks Preservation Commission has scheduled a hearing on the project for January 24.
Architecture Critic
Carter Horsley
Since 1997, Carter B. Horsley has been the editorial director of CityRealty. He began his journalistic career at The New York Times in 1961 where he spent 26 years as a reporter specializing in real estate & architectural news. In 1987, he became the architecture critic and real estate editor of The New York Post.