Oct 09, 2019
Carter's Review
This handsome, 7-story, mid-block building at 114 Spring Street in SoHo was erected in the 1920s and converted to 6 co-operative apartments by Herbert A. Wells.
It has commercial ground floor space.
It was designed for Charles Harrell by Louis Corn in 1896 who designed a very similar but thinner building at 454 Broome Street the previous year.
This building has rustication at its sides on the first two floors and there are arched windows on the fifth and top floors.
Bottom Line
A handsome, mid-block, building on Spring Street in SoHo with a bird-cage elevator and 12-foot-high ceilings.
Description
The light-grey brick building has attractive and large decorative spandrels and a cornice.
Its window bays had handsome light-blue columns.
The ground-floor has two one-step-up entrances with wooden doors.
Amenities
The building has an elevator and permits cats and dogs.
Apartments
The 5th floor unit is a two-bedroom apartment with a 30-foot-long living/dining room with an enclosed 9-foot-long kitchen and a 9-foot-long office.
The 6th floor unit has a 33-foot-long living/dining room with an 18-foot-wide open kitchen with an island, a 10-foot-wide guest room and an 18-foot-wide master bedroom.
- Co-op built in 1886
- Located in SoHo
- 6 total apartments 6 total apartments
- 10 recent sales ($1.4M to $3.5M)