Armory Square Historic District Contributing Properties
Landmark name | Image | Date Built | Style | Location | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1874 | 307-09 South Clinton Street | 5 stories; brick commercial building; segmental window arches; fifth story added 1885 | |||
2 | 1874 | 311-13 South Clinton Street | 4 stories; brick commercial building; recessed windows; fancy cornice | |||
3 | Donohue Building (portion) | c. 1885 | Queen Anne | 312-16 South Clinton Street | 4 stories; red brick; decorative sandstone, granite and terra cotta elements | |
4 | Butler Block | 1893 | Romanesque | 317-21 South Clinton Street | 5 stories; red brick; broad arches; cast-iron columns | |
5 | Neil & Hyde Block (portion) | c. 1887 | Queen Anne-Romanesque | 318-22 South Clinton Street | 5 stories; brick warehouse; limestone trim; architect Asa Merrick | |
6 | Clinton Building | 1876 | 400-08 South Clinton Street | 3 stories; brick; 1920's alterations | ||
7 | Onondaga Music Building | 1914 | 410-416 South Clinton Street | 4 stories; buff brick commercial building | ||
8 | 1874 | 415-17 South Clinton Street | 4 stories; patterned brick commercial building; | |||
9 | Loew Building | 1928 | 423-31 South Clinton Street | 2 stories on S. Clinton St.; 8 stories on S. Salina St.; large theater, also known as Loews State Theater or the Landmark Theatre; individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977 | ||
10 | Delaware, Lackawanna, and Western Passenger Station | 1941 | Art Moderne | 500 South Clinton Street | 2 stories; buff brick; arched windows | |
11 | c. 1874 | 306 South Franklin Street | 2 stories; brick; arched windows | |||
12 | c. 1880s | 308-10 South Franklin Street | 3 stories; brick; original storefront | |||
13 | c. 1887 | 309-15 South Franklin Street | 4 stories; brick; granite piers | |||
14 | c. 1900 | 317-21 South Franklin Street | 2 stories; brick; originally carriage makers; 1940 became garage; 1983 offices | |||
15 | Hall & McChesney Building | c. 1892/1906 | 402-10 South Franklin Street | 4 stories; brick; warehouse | ||
16 | Bentley & Settle Warehouse | c. 1894-5 | 120-24 Walton Street | 6 stories; brick; intact loading dock | ||
17 | c. 1885 | 128 Walton Street | 2 stories; yellow brick; second floor loading door | |||
18 | c. 1890s | 134 Walton Street | 2 stories; brick; plate glass windows | |||
19 | c. 1890s | 136 Walton Street | 2 stories; brick; paired windows | |||
20 | Gray Brothers Shoe Factory | 1873 | 200-02 Walton Street | 4 stories; brick walls and window hoods | ||
21 | c. 1930 | 204-10 Walton Street | 2 stories; factory; brick | |||
22 | c. 1872 | 215-19 Walton Street | 3 stories; brick; arched windows | |||
23 | c. 1870s-1880s | 216 Walton Street | 2 stories; ornamental brick | |||
24 | c. 1902 | 221-23 Walton Street | 3 stories; commercial building; brick piers | |||
25 | c. 1910 | Renaissance | 113-17 West Fayette Street | 5 stories; brick | ||
26 | Kirk Block | c. 1869 | 127-29 West Fayette Street | 4 stories; brick; commercial building | ||
27 | c. 1871 | 215-17 West Fayette Street | 4 stories; brick; commercial building; 1930s modern facade | |||
28 | Tallman Block | c. 1871 | Italianate | 219-25 West Fayette Street | 3 stories; brick; commercial building; rear entrance on Walton Street; architect Archimedes Russell | |
29 | Piper-Phillips Block | c. 1872 | Italianate | 227-37 West Fayette Street | 3 stories; brick; commercial building; original storefronts | |
30 | Seubert & Warner Building | c. 1875 | Romanesque | 239-41 West Fayette Street | 3 stories; brick; commercial building; rear entrance on Walton Street; architect Charles Colton | |
31 | c. 1895 | Italianate | 227-37 West Fayette Street | 3 stories; brick with stone trim; commercial building; prism glass in storefronts | ||
32 | Hogan Block | c. 1892 | Romanesque | 247-59 West Fayette Street | 5 stories; brick with limestone trim; factory building; prism panels in storefronts | |
33 | Crown Hotel | c. 1876 | Italianate | 301-27 West Fayette Street | 3 stories; brick; commercial building | |
34 | c. 1872 | 309-11 West Fayette Street | 3 stories; brick; commercial building | |||
35 | c. 1873 | 313-17 West Fayette Street | 2 stories; brick; commercial building; molded keystones | |||
36 | Stag Hotel | 1869 | 321 West Fayette Street | 3 stories; brick; intact storefront | ||
37 | 1875 | 329-31 West Fayette Street | 4 stories; brick; warehouse; rear entrance on Walton Street | |||
38 | Jefferson Clinton Hotel | 1927 | 227-37 West Jefferson Street | 10 stories; brick; stone facade first two floors; architect Gustavas A. Young | ||
39 | New York State Armory | 1907/1932 | West Jefferson Street | Housed Army National Guard; brick and limestone; central drill hall added in 1932 |
Read more about this topic: Armory Square
Famous quotes containing the words armory, square, historic, district, contributing and/or properties:
“To these men
The landscape is an armory of powers,
Which, one by one, they know how to draw and use.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“Houses haunt me.
That last house!
How it sat like a square box!”
—Anne Sexton (19281974)
“Never is a historic deed already completed when it is done but always only when it is handed down to posterity. What we call history by no means represents the sum total of all significant deeds.... World history ... only comprises that tiny lighted sector which chanced to be placed in the spotlight by poetic or scholarly depictions.”
—Stefan Zweig (18811942)
“Most works of art, like most wines, ought to be consumed in the district of their fabrication.”
—Rebecca West (18921983)
“But then in what way are things called good? They do not seem to be like the things that only chance to have the same name. Are goods one then by being derived from one good or by all contributing to one good, or are they rather one by analogy? Certainly as sight is in the body, so is reason in the soul, and so on in other cases.”
—Aristotle (384322 B.C.)
“The reason why men enter into society, is the preservation of their property; and the end why they choose and authorize a legislative, is, that there may be laws made, and rules set, as guards and fences to the properties of all the members of the society: to limit the power, and moderate the dominion, of every part and member of the society.”
—John Locke (16321704)