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Alloys: American Sculpture and Architecture at Midcentury

Online via Zoom

The 20 years following the end of WWII marked a profound period of synergy and exchange between sculpture and architecture in the U.S. Leading modernist architects such as Gordon Bunshaft and Eero Saarinen turned to sculptors including Harry Bertoia, Alexander Calder, Richard Lippold, and Isamu Noguchi, to produce site-determined, large-scale commissions tailored for their buildings’ highly visible atriums, lobbies, plazas, and […]

River: Living on the Hudson at the 79th Street Boat Basin

Online via Zoom

Climb aboard for a history of the Hudson River and its local environs from Dr. Leslie Day, a 36-year resident of the 79th Street Boat Basin. As a young woman, she moved into the water-based community alone, eventually meeting her husband and raising their child at “the Basin.” She’ll share with us recollections and observations that are part of her soon-to-be-completed book River: Living on the Hudson – A Natural History. Leslie Day shares it all: from […]

200 Years of Parks: Celebrating Frederick Law Olmsted

Our FRIENDS on the Upper East Side have invited LANDMARK WEST! members for an evening with historian Lucie Levine and a virtual tour of many of Frederick Law Olmsted’s fabulous green spaces, both in New York and beyond. In addition to highlighting Prospect Park, Riverside Park and Fort Greene Park, she will dig deep into Olmsted’s life. She'll also […]

Boss Tweed and 19 Months that Changed Central Park

Online via Zoom

LW! is doing a little time traveling to explore the darker side of the development of Central Park. It is somewhat miraculous that the park even exists, as back in the 1850s real estate developers and politicians were just as cozy as today. Add in the nefarious reign of William Marcy "Boss" Tweed, notorious leader […]

Upper West Side Firsts

Online via Zoom

What do the credit card, Oreo, and crossword puzzle have in common? All originated in New York City. From colonial times through the present day, first-of-their-kind achievements occurred in New York in every imaginable field, from the arts to sports, from business to social welfare. Author Laurie Lewis has tracked down an incredible collection of “firsts” for her […]

The Many Lives of San Juan Hill

Online via Zoom

There is no book on San Juan Hill, the Westside neighborhood that was essentially erased in the 1950s by a sweep of urban renewal.  For the past half-century, there has been little acknowledgment of it outside of references in “West Side Story,” the film that used the area's final days as a backdrop.  The eastern and northern boundaries shift.  The demographics are generalized.  Various accounts describe this neighborhood of tenements, factories, shops, clubs and churches as “Hells Kitchen North” or “The Tenderloin.” It was also called a “Red Light District” or, most commonly, a “slum.” Regardless of the reality, the last epithet is the one that stuck, because after designating it a slum, the City of New York was allowed to take possession and "clear" San Juan Hill under the 1949 Housing Act.  This maneuver displaced thousands of families in exchange for several internationally-renowned institutions. LANDMARK WEST! is proud to rebuild, block by block, the buildings and stories of the San Juan Hill community. The online San Juan Hill project has been launched with the support of a growing list of stakeholders.  LW! especially thanks New York State Senator Brad Hoylman, former New York City Council Member Ben Kallos and the City Council’s Cultural Immigrant Initiative, who generously stepped in to support this body of research.  We hope this project will serve as the foundation for a fuller history of San Juan Hill in the coming years, and we eagerly welcome community participation to more fully tell this story.  We further hope that this effort will daylight the rich immigrant past of this once vibrant neighborhood and inform discussions about community, transparency, process, eminent domain and urban renewal across our resilient city. As preservationists, we recognize that once something is gone, it is gone for good. Hopefully, with this project, San Juan Hill will at least not be lost. Please be our guest as architectural historian Sarah Bean Apmann guides us through San Juan Hill, a neighborhood that there is only one way to visit...via history.  LANDMARK WEST! will be joined for this special project launch by officials: New York State Senator Brad Hoylman City Council Member Gale Brewer This project for the Cultural Immigrant Initiative is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. Special thanks, as well, to the NYC Municipal Archives. TICKETS - FREE

Zabar’s: A Family Story

Online via Zoom

Zabar's: A Family Story Thursday, Sept. 8, 2022 4:00-5:00pm via Zoom  In partnership with the Preservation League of New York State, Landmark West! invites you to participate in a book talk of author Lori Zabar's homage to her family's beloved Upper West Side market, Zabar's: A Family Story, With Recipes. When you think of New […]

Free

From Martin to Moses: A History of Riverside Park

Online via Zoom

Riverside Park and Riverside Drive have lived many lives. Originally Native American hunting grounds, over time they were also the site of vast farms, elegant country estates and stunning millionaire's villas—a few of which remain intact today. Later came Art Deco treasures. But such development doesn’t just happen. The Park and Drive together marked the […]

Mr. Green and the Making of Central Park

Online via Zoom

Incredibly, much of what we all think of as quintessential New York City–Central Park, the NY Public Library, the Zoo, the American Museum of Natural History–is due to the Herculean efforts of one practically unknown man: Andrew Haswell Green. A. H. Green is best known (if he is recognized at all today) as the “Father […]

Home Sweet Mansion: A Peek into the Domestic Lives of Gilded Age New Yorkers

Online via Zoom

It was good to be a prosperous New Yorker in the late 19th century: beautiful clothing, expensive furnishings, well-kept parlors, and endless entertaining. But someone had to do the hard work of actually cooking and cleaning, and it certainly wasn’t the prosperous New Yorker. At the Schwab Mansion, for instance, a 75-room home on Riverside […]