Children's Porch, Pratt Institute, 1

Brooklyn, one building at a time.

Name: Children’s Portico at Pratt Instutute
Address: NW Corner of Activity Center, Pratt Campus
Neighborhood: Clinton Hill
Year Built: 1912
Architectural Style: Norman Revival
Architect: Unknown
Landmarked: No

The story: This ancient looking portico used to be attached to William Tubby’s Pratt Library, and was called the Children’s Porch. The Pratt Free Library, the first public library in Brooklyn, used to have an extensive library for children, and this entrance was built especially for them. The library went totally private in the 1940s, and the children’s library was no more. In 1982, the library was expanded and this entrance was dismantled and reassembled on the other side of the campus.

It’s a wonderful Norman style ruin, said to be a copy of part of the King’s School, Canterbury Cathedral, and was built in 1912, not 1012. It’s a tribute to Pratt’s tradition of architectural preservation that they reconstructed what many may consider to be a useless pile of stone, an entryway leading nowhere. I’m very glad they kept it, as it still delights the eye, and is a place of mystery and enchantment.

(Technical difficulties abound today, and my new post will appear tomorrow. Please enjoy this piece from the archives.) Many photos below the jump. GMAP

Porch under construction in 1912. Photo: Brooklyn Public Library
Porch under construction in 1912. Photo: Brooklyn Public Library

Children's Porch, Pratt Institute, BPL 1

Post 1912 postcard
1912 postcard

Children's Porch, Pratt Institute, 2

Children's Porch, Pratt Institute, 3

Children's Porch, Pratt Institute, 4


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