Update: 180 Remsen Has Been Landmarked

Today the former Brooklyn Union Gas building at 180 Remsen Street will be proposed for historical designation by the Landmarks Preservation Commission. The building was calendered back in 2009. Here’s the statement from LPC on the building’s history:
Built in 1914, the former headquarters and general office building of the Brooklyn Union Gas Company was designed by the prominent Brooklyn architect Frank Freeman. Established in 1825 as the Brooklyn Gas Light Company, it originally manufactured gas to illuminate city streets. In 1895, it merged with several rival suppliers to create the Brooklyn Union Gas Company, serving customers in both Brooklyn and Queens. The company prospered, tripling its manufacturing capacity and quadrupling storage. Such developments coincided with the growth of the borough and during the 1910s and 1920s business doubled. It was during this period, under company presidents James Jourdan and James H. Jourdan, that the new headquarters was planned and constructed, consolidating three hundred employees in a single building. A late work by Frank Freeman, the architect’s austere monumental design reflected the current taste for neo-classicism and the client’s desire to be perceived as a public institution. The Brooklyn Union Gas Company occupied the building for 47 years. Sold in 1962, the current owner is St. Francis College.
We’ll keep you updated on the vote from LPC later today. Update: We were just informed by the LPC that the building was landmarked in a move supported by St. Francis. You can see a great image of the building back in 1914 after the jump.
180 Remsen Street On Track for Landmarking [Brownstoner] GMAP

May 21, 2012 | 02:16 PM