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June 30, 2009

Walkabout with Montrose: The City Beautiful Movement

At the turn of the 20th century, reformers in American cities were aware that the great advances of industry and technology had both made tremendous wealth and advancement possible for many, along with the intensification of horrific poverty, and abominable living conditions for many more, as documented in NYC by Jacob Riis. Civil unrest, strikes and riots persisted, and city fathers were getting worried, because the rich were leaving the central cities. The City Beautiful Movement was rather grandiosely designed to combat these problems through architecture and city planning. The widely held social belief was that the poor were poor because they were morally and socially deficient, an attitude that lingers to this day. It was thought that building a beautiful city would inspire all of its inhabitants to moral and civic virtue, and social ills would dissolve into pride and loyalty to this beautiful new city, thereby inspiring the poor to better themselves. The City Beautiful would have parkland, where everyone could escape the streets to enjoy nature, this feature was especially important to one of the earliest proponents – Frederick Law Olmsted. The new classically inspired Beaux Arts architecture was also designed to show Europe that America had arrived, and was no longer a cultural backwash. And most importantly, the rich would then stop moving to the suburbs and stay in the central cities, and spend their money there. The Movement had its largest success in the civic areas of newer cities like Denver, but its most impressive and lasting success was the transformation of Washington DC, spearheaded by Daniel Burnham, the architect in chief of the Columbian Exposition. What we see today in central Washington, the Capitol area, the Mall, the lake and the monuments, is the White City, the City Beautiful, most fully realized. Tragically, the same social ills, supposedly banished, surround it, as well.

What about New York?

Manhattan was too busy, and in too much of a hurry, even at the turn of the century, for a full blown redesign to ever be done here. No reflecting pools for us. The White City public ideal in NYC was best realized in McKim, Mead and White’s Municipal Building at 1 Centre Street, and the courthouses and civic buildings around it. While every white or light colored limestone or brick building in New York was not specifically designed with the White City in mind, the Columbian Exhibition issued in a period where limestone and stucco replaced brownstone as the preferred building material. Beaux Arts buildings, with their classical details became the style of choice for grand monumental civic and commercial buildings and the mansions of the rich. There are many, many examples in Manhattan, from the Woolworth Building to the mostly vanished mansions of 5th Ave, to many of the fine office and manufacturing buildings in the Madison Square area. We have to turn to Brooklyn for the further realization of the City Beautiful, especially in the growing communities at the turn of the 20th century, neighborhoods like Lefferts Manor, Crown Heights, and Park Slope, home to New York's great monument to the ideals of the City Beautiful: Grand Army Plaza and Prospect Park.

The underlying philosophy of providing beautiful and free parkland for the people, as articulated by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvin Vaux, predates the City Beautiful movement, and Olmsted is credited as one of its originators, although he grew disillusioned as the movement progressed. After the success of Central Park, the pair created their masterpiece in Prospect Park. The public plaza, including the Arch, predates the Columbian Exhibition by a couple of years, but they set the stage for the grander City Beautiful ideals of McKim, Mead and White, who were hired to crown the entrances to the Park with Classical aplomb. In 1892 they proposed the grand statuary on and surrounding the Arch, as well as classical columns topped with eagles, as seen at the Plaza entrance, and they designed the other major entrances to the park. Surrounding the Park were block of new homes designed with the White City ideals in mind. The single most prolific Brooklyn architect working with these ideals was Axel Hedman. His row houses in Park Slope, on and around the park, in Lefferts Manor, and Crown Heights, are beautiful rows of Renaissance Revival homes, faced in Indiana limestone. Classical Greek and Roman details abound, along with Renaissance and Beaux Arts ornament such as cartouches, shields, foliate swags and scrollwork. He is also responsible for an ornate series of tenement apartments facing each other on St. James Place in Clinton Hill, and similar buildings in Crown Heights North. Other buildings, such as the Neo-Byzantine Church of Christ Scientist, in CHN, built by Henry Ives Cobb, in 1909, were specifically cited at the time as inspired by the White City Movement, and many more architects and builders went with the popular flow, and built in limestone and light brick. The influences of the White City movement, the final true Victorian style, have added another layer to the rich mixture of architecture in our historic neighborhoods. See more photos on the Flickr link.




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Comments

I loved that term "Classical aplomb". Another great, fascinating post, MM. The whole concept of the City Beautiful just invokes some Camelotian (? can I say that?) vision shining like a beacon. I guess they didn't realize the Industrial Revolution and air pollution would render those glorious white buildings a dingy gray in time. Still- they remain and remind. Love your column!

Posted by: bxgrl at June 30, 2009 10:47 AM

Montrose:

Enjoyed this piece, especially because the photographs capture some of the flavor of our walk through Crown Heights this Sunday.

Amazing! Looking at them, you'd think Brooklyn was the "White City" -- not the familiar brownstone ensemble.

Frankly, as much as I like brownstones, these limestone and pale-brick numbers are my favorites. They're as unified but more varied than brownstones and, because they were generally built later, more "modern" in the way their materials reflect light.

And here Crown Heights has it over other row house neighborhoods. Yes, Prospect Lefferts Gardens is handsome, but the houses in Crown Heights are bigger, sections of New York Avenue among the most impressive perspectives in the city (and certainly giving Eighth Avenue and Prospect Park West a run for their money).

Very effective is the way buildings like synagogues, churches, and schools, all covered in neo-Classical and Italian Renaissance Revival ornament, emerge from the Crown Heights skyline. (Don't forget St. Gregory's on Brooklyn Avenue that enjoys some of the best architectural massing anywhere and whose campanile strikes just the right note above the trees. And I really enjoyed the way its set back and steps form a little piazza for parishioners. Do these folks from the Caribbean know they're interchangeable with Italians in their public squares?)

I'm torn between seeing Crown Heights retain its well-worn and lived-in quality and wishing it were buffed to perfection.

Thanks for the weekend tour. And regards to BxGrl and Amzi Hill.

Nostalgic on Park Avenue

Posted by: NOP at June 30, 2009 10:59 AM

It was wonderful meeting you too, NOP! I just wish everyone was able to have the walking tour that we had with you- not just the architecture, but the personal memories, and the history- it was just wonderful.

It's too bad we didn't also get to see COGIC- the synagogue is amazing inside and mostly preserved. Still has the track on the extension roof too. Maybe next time.

Posted by: bxgrl at June 30, 2009 11:14 AM

When's the next one? I hope to go.

Posted by: Joe from Brooklyn at June 30, 2009 12:05 PM

Talk to MM and Amzi, joe. They're making plans.

Posted by: bxgrl at June 30, 2009 12:40 PM

Thanks.
Montrose and Amzi I'd love to go next time if you can please let me know. If either of you catch me in a thread, please let me know... Thanks.

Posted by: Joe from Brooklyn at June 30, 2009 1:37 PM

Will do, Joe. We're making tentative plans for after July 4th weekend. We'll post on the open thread and on the Forum.

Posted by: Montrose Morris at June 30, 2009 1:43 PM


A truly wonderful legacy.

Posted by: East New York at June 30, 2009 2:05 PM

NOP,

Parkside Ave. in PLG comes close to New York Ave. in Crown Heights:

http://tinyurl.com/hurmq

But overall, you're right--the "white-city" inspired houses in Crown Heights ARE bigger than similar PLG houses and were built for higher income buyers.

Posted by: Bob Marvin at June 30, 2009 2:16 PM

Bob Marvin:

Thanks for the link. Your photographs show you have a great architectural eye.

They remind me I had a boyhood pal in one of the houses on Maple Street. Sweet spot.

NOP

Posted by: NOP at June 30, 2009 3:10 PM

NOP your right you never think of Brooklyn when it comes to the city beautiful movement. I just wish that some plans from this period would have continued. I was reading about how Eastern Pkwy was going to have this grand ending at the cemetery but that never came about. I wish Brooklyn a 2009 version of city Beautiful but unfortunately we have Fedders Beautiful movement.

Posted by: Amzi Hill at June 30, 2009 4:26 PM

Yes, Amzi, more White City would be good.

But then, we wouldn't want Brooklyn to turn into Washington DC, would we?

Posted by: NOP at June 30, 2009 5:04 PM

Nice work, Montrose. Thank you for the Flickr link also.

NOP - liked you post at 10:59 AM

Montrose, I wrote this on another thread a few days ago, but I once went into the GAP Arch, to the top and outside. Have you ever done that? It may be closed to the public now, due to leaks and just aging of the structure. I phoned Prospect Park Assoc, and they said it had been closed for those reasons.


Posted by: BklynSoFar at June 30, 2009 11:51 PM

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