New Law Tenement
New Law Tenements were built in New York City following the New York State Tenement House Act of 1901, so-called the "New Law" to distinguish it from the previous two Tenement House Acts of 1867 and 1879. New Law tenements are distinct from "Old Law" and "pre-law" tenements both in structural design and exterior ornament.
Design
Required under the New Law to include a large courtyard which consumed more space than the 1879 Old Law's air shafts, New Law tenements tend to be built on multiple land lots or on corner lots to conserve space for dwelling units, the renting of which is the money-making purpose of the structure. In the early 21st century, a typical Lower East Side or East Village street will still be lined with five-story, austerely unornamented pre-law (pre-1879) tenements and six-story, bizarrely decorated Old Law (1879-1901) tenements, with the much bulkier, grand-style New Law tenements on the corners, always at least six stories tall.
Aesthetically, the New Law coincided with the fashion for Beaux-Arts architecture. The fanciful sandstone faces, gargoyles and filigreed terracotta of the previous twenty years of tenement design gave way to the more abstractly classical, but extremely florid ornamentation of this historically informed and integrated, urbane, international and more grandiose Parisian style.[1] Unlike the flat street wall of previous tenements, which maximized the space available to tenants, the street wall façade of the New Law tenement often features recessed indentations, sometimes curved, sometimes rectilinear, giving the impression that stylish appearance mattered to the designer and owner more than optimizing space. They also feature oval and arched windows—more expensive to produce and replace—heavy terracotta ornaments around the windows and often thin brick, again, more expensive to manufacture and to lay. They give an impression of opulence which belies their purpose, location and their inhabitants; many were built in the ghetto to make money on the housing of largely impoverished immigrants by packing several families into small apartments.[2]
New Law tenements can be seen throughout Manhattan and especially in the Lower East Side and Washington Heights.
See also
- New York State Tenement House Act
- Tenement
- Old Law Tenement
- The Tenement Museum
References
Further reading
- Lawrence Veiller, "New York's New Building Code" Charities Review 9 (1899-1900), 388-391.[1]
- Lawrence Veiller, "The Tenement-House Exhibition of 1899" Charities Review 10 (1900-1901): 19-25. [2] [3]
- Robert W. DeForest and Lawrence Veiller, eds. The Tenement House Problem: Including the Report of the New York State Tenement House Commission, in two volumes (New York:MacMillan 1903) Volume I [4] [5] Volume II [6]
External links
- The Tenement Museum
- The Architecture and Development of New York City: Tenements
- v
- t
- e
agencies
New York State | |
---|---|
New York City |
|
governmental
organizations
- Ali Forney Center
- Asian Americans for Equality
- Association for a Better New York
- Breaking Ground
- The Bowery Mission
- Citizens Housing and Planning Council
- Crown Heights Tenant Union
- Homes for the Homeless
- Housing Works
- Metropolitan Council on Housing
- Movement for Justice in el Barrio
- Open New York
- Palladia (social services organization)
- Picture the Homeless
- Real Estate Board of New York
- Rent Is Too Damn High Party
- Sanctuary for Families
- Urban Homesteading Assistance Board
homesteading
activists
- City Limits
- Dark Days (film)
- How the Other Half Lives
- Kill City: Lower East Side Squatters 1992–2000
- One-Third of a Nation
- Project Lives
- Rent (musical)
- The City We Became