Havemeyer-Market-0409.jpg
Remember the fugly new building at 165 Havemeyer Street in Williamsburg that was featured as a Development Watch on Thursday? Well, the Waterfront Preservation Alliance went back and found a photo of what used to be there in ye olde days. The photo about, taken sometime in the 1940s, shows the Havemeyer Sanitary Market, which was built to replace the pushcarts that were a dominant form of vending between the wars. “Mind you the old market was no architectural gem, but at least it served a public purpose,” writes the WPA. “This apartment building is an instant eyesore with no redeeming social value.”
Then & Now: Havemeyer Sanitary Market [WPA]
Development Watch: 165 Havemeyer Street [Brownstoner]


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  1. Wine lover, ten years ago that was a fruit and veg stand. Ten years ago that strip of Havemeyer was vital, interesting, and had ties to its community. Now it is a row of boarded-up stores and vacant lots… and yet there are still some amazing businesses there. You can’t beat Bolan’s for kids clothing. Jack’s Cancellation Shoes is interesting, and Rachel’s Corset Shop is fine. Besides which, they all look like something out of a movie set. The drugstore across the street has been a vital part of the community for years and years, as has Melo Grocery. The irony is, this is one of the main shopping districts IN south Williamsburg.

    Havemeyer street makes me totally verklempty. I’m really afraid what it will turn into.

  2. this is a nutso point. havemeyer is gentrifying mostly north to south which is a good thing because it’s replacing empty/boarded up buildings and some ghettoish like apts and retail. the fact that in the ’40’s there was a market, is great and all, but in recent times, this new building replaces blight. this particular straight forward new construction is correct for this area. no one is dropping big bucks on this location anyway.

  3. I’m going to shock the hell out of benson and totally agree with him on this one. I love old buildings and I love the picture but as ugly as the new building might be, it’s still a step up from the Havemeyer Market. Calling it “no architectural gem” was an understatement.