About | Contact | RSS

Fund. A.D. MMIV (a.u.c. MMDCCLVII)

Top Sites

Top Blogs

Friendly Blogs

Reviews

Periodicals

Church

Art & Design

Cape of Good Hope

France

Netherlands

Mitteleuropa

Scandinavia

Livonia

Muscovy

India

Argentina

The Levant

Knickerbockers

Academica

Miscellaneous

They don’t all hate us

THE JEWISH MUSEUM sits at the corner of 91st Street and Fifth Avenue in the old Warburg mansion. It was expanded in 1993, nearly doubling its frontage on the avenue. See the modern addition? No? That’s the point.

In the photograph above, the section to the right of the red line is the original Warburg house, built in 1909 and designed by C.P.H. Gilbert. The section to the left of the red line is the 1993 addition. If only the directors of the Morgan Library and the Brooklyn Museum had been similarly inspired.

Friday, September 21st, 2007 8:42 pm | Categories: Architecture New York
5 Comments so far
  1. 21 September 2007
    11:50 pm

    Bravo! And kudos to the craftsmen who seem to have pulled it off.

    Always the skeptic, I wonder: is the recent addition authentic in all the details?

    kd
  2. 22 September 2007
    12:48 am

    I don’t think that it’s important that the addition be authentic in its details, only that it be harmonious with the original building. Now if one were to attempt to restore or renovate the original, then authenticity would be more important.

    Robert Thornton
  3. 22 September 2007
    11:47 am

    In many cases, I would agree. But here, where the addition is actually an extension of the original, authenticity of details is important.

    kd
  4. 23 September 2007
    12:58 pm

    I’m curious, are the original architects who designed the Warburg Mansion, the same architects who designed the now Polish Consulate on 33rd and Madison Ave ; I believe that building was originally a home built for Vanderbilt family.

    PLK
  5. 30 September 2007
    7:04 pm

    The architects did a fantastic job of adding to – I think enhancing is a better word for it – the original mansion. The vertical thrust of the mansion was tamed by the horizontalness the addition brought to it.

    In answer to the last post’s question – C.P.H. Gilbert designed both The Warburg Mansion and the Polish Consulate. Richard Morris Hunt may have brought the chateau style to Fifth Avenue with the W.K. Vanderbilt, Astor, Gerry, Lawrence and Schmidt mansions, but Gilbert seems to kept up with him in using this style for some of his Fifth Avenue commissions. Aside from the Warburg residence, he designed chateaus for F.W.Woolworth and Isaac Fletcher.

    Ed Hachey
Post a comment

Name (required)

Email (required)

Website

Comment

Please support andrewcusack.com. Click here to make a financial contribution.









All text © Andrew Cusack 2004-present, unless otherwise stated.