The Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) today approved the designation of the city's newest Historic District. Fiske Terrace-Midwood Park, in Flatbush, becomes the city's 91st Historic District.
Map of the boundaries of Midwood Park and Fiske Terrace, as presented to LPC on October 16, 2007 (PDF)
776 East 17th Street, Fiske Terrace, Flatbush, Brooklyn
Here's the description from the LPC's press release:
Bound on the north and south by Foster Avenue and Avenue H, and on the west and east by the Brighton subway line and Ocean Avenue, this district comprises 250 eclectic houses that were largely completed and occupied by 1914, and were built by two prominent local builders and developers.
The primary developer of Fiske Terrace, which lies south of Glenwood Road and is named for George B. Fiske, an oil merchant, was the T.B. Ackerson Company, whose owner once boasted of transforming the area “from woods into city in 18 months.” Approximately 75 percent of the houses in the Midwood Park part of the district, which lies north of Glenwood Road, were constructed by the John R. Corbin Company.
Most of the houses in the district adhere primarily to the popular early 20th-century architectural styles, especially the Arts and Crafts, Colonial Revival and Dutch Colonial Revival styles. The houses were typically constructed in one of three forms: the box-like foursquare, crowned by a hipped or pyramidal roof; the temple-house, featuring a prominent front-facing gable; and the bungalow, with its low profile, deep porch with thick tapered columns, and broadly overhanging eaves.
Related Posts
Times admits past errors: We are not all Ditmas Park, March 15, 2008Other posts on Victorian Flatbush
Links
Map of the Fiske Terrace - Midwood Park Historic District (PDF)New Landmarks Include Webster Hall, New York Times, March 18, 2008
Press Release (PDF) from LPC, March 18, 2008
Coda: Fiske Terrace/Midwood Park Designated as Landmark by LPC, Deep in the Heart of Brooklyn, March 20, 2008
Fiske Terrace-Midwood Park in Flatbush Gains Landmark Status, Brooklyn Eagle, March 20, 2008
700 East 17th street no longer looks like that, take a walk by, they have installed vinyl siding in a beige color, oh well, better than Pink I guess.
ReplyDeleteMole
Glenwood Road and the Q Cut
That is really unfortunate. That was such a beautiful shingle-style house. I took that photo just last year in June.
ReplyDeleteI guess they wanted to get it done before it got landmarked. I hope they left the original shingles in place underneath so future owners can undo the damage.
Moley
ReplyDeleteYou must be blind as well as color blind.
The cedar shingles that are now up are the same as the original material and they are grey not beige!!