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806 Broadway
806-808 Broadway image

806-808 Broadway

806-808 Broadway
104-110 Fourth Avenue image

104-110 Fourth Avenue

806-808 Broadway image

806-808 Broadway

Norman Rockwell
806-808 Broadway image

806-808 Broadway

Hill Brothers advertisement
104-110 Fourth Avenue image

104-110 Fourth Avenue

806-808 Broadway image

806-808 Broadway

The Renwick image

The Renwick

[810 Broadway and The Renwick, 808 Broadway.]
104-110 Fourth Avenue image

104-110 Fourth Avenue

104-110 Fourth Avenue image

104-110 Fourth Avenue

104-110 Fourth Avenue image

104-110 Fourth Avenue

806-808 Broadway image

806-808 Broadway

"Saying Grace" by Norman Rockwell
The Renwick image

The Renwick
Post

The Renwick The striking loft building at 806-808 Broadway/104-106 Fourth Avenue, which runs the entire block from Broadway to Fourth Avenue behind Grace Church at 11th Street, was designed in 1887 by James Renwick (architect of the adjacent landmarked church forty years earlier) and the partners in historic successor firm –James Lawrence Aspinwall and William Hamilton Russell, Renwick’s grand-nephew. Though a utilitarian structure housing offices, storage, and manufacturing, Renwick and partners designed it with vivid Gothic detail to serve as an appropriate backdrop to Grace Church, a New York City and National Historic Landmark. Aside from some storefront signage, the building is almost completely intact to its original design, from the gothic arches and tracery to the more robust, industrial Romanesque detailing of the Fourth Avenue façade. Both sides of the building maintain beautifully intact cast-iron storefronts, while the Broadway side boasts florid Art Noveau-style ironwork over the doorway and entry. The harmony between this structure, built as a store and manufacturing building, and one of the most delicate and important Gothic Revival structures in the United States, is nothing short of remarkable. In 1981 the building was converted to residences and renamed ‘The Renwick,’ in honor of its architect. The building gained additional notoriety with the publication of Caleb Carr’s The Alienist, in which the building serves as the headquarters for the team of investigators looking into the murders at the heart of the book’s story. The Grace Church, Grace Church Rectory, Grace Church Memorial House, The Renwick, and The Lancaster, an 1887 apartment building at 39-41 East 10th Street also designed by Renwick –all within feet of one another –provide an unrivaled example of the skill of James Renwick as an architect. The sadly recently-demolished St. Denis Hotel at Broadway and 11th Street added even further to this rich ensemble of Renwick designs added over time. While the master architect constructed other ensembles elsewhere, few if any span nearly half a century as these do, and serve such varied purposes –religious worship, residences, and commercial loft space –while maintaining such compatibility and dialogue between the pieces.
The Renwick image

The Renwick

[810 Broadway and The Renwick, 808 Broadway.[
The Renwick image

The Renwick
Post

The Renwick, 808 Broadway, ca. 1978. Named for James Renwick, Jr., the celebrated architect of Grace Church, this mixed-use Gothic Revival building was designed by Renwick’s firm — Renwick, Aspinwall & Russell — in 1887. Renwick himself is unlikely to have been involved in the design, which features repeated arch motifs echoing the facade of Grace Church next door. Over the years, the Renwick’s tenants included a variety of clothiers and manufacturers of consumer goods, with a storefront available at street level (in recent years it has been occupied by a Halloween-themed costume store). In 1981, the building was converted for residential use.
806-808 Broadway image

806-808 Broadway

"The Alienist" by Caleb Carr
806-808 Broadway image

806-808 Broadway

John Cassell