NoHo Renderings Reveal 9Story Neighbor Next To Merchant's House
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NoHo Renderings Reveal 9Story Neighbor Next To Merchant's House
"New renderings are making the rounds this week for a proposed nine-story, 105-foot mixed-use building at 27 East 4th Street in NoHo, a project that would sit directly beside the Merchant's House Museum. Plans call for ground-floor retail, a community facility stacked above and a modest rear courtyard. Preservation groups and nearby residents say the site's fraught history turns an otherwise standard infill proposal into a neighborhood flashpoint."
"The project's images, credited to DXA Studio, show an earth-toned facade of glass-fiber-reinforced concrete and brick, large arched windows on the main southern elevation and a grid of smaller arched openings along the eastern lot line. The renderings also depict four cornice lines, a short corrugated-aluminum bulkhead and a rear courtyard dotted with picnic tables, as reported by New York YIMBY."
"The Merchant's House Museum, the 1832 rowhouse directly adjacent to the development site, has repeatedly warned that demolition, excavation and heavy construction could cause "irreversible damage" to its original plasterwork and collections. The museum's own timeline lays out a decade of fights over development at the parcel, including a 2018 City Council rezoning denial and subsequent litigation. Village Preservation also flags the Landmarks Preservation Commission application and hosts the community board presentation materials."
Renderings show a proposed nine-story, 105-foot mixed-use building at 27 East 4th Street in NoHo adjacent to the Merchant's House Museum. The design, credited to DXA Studio, features an earth-toned facade of glass-fiber-reinforced concrete and brick, large arched windows on the main southern elevation, a grid of smaller arched openings along the eastern lot line, four cornice lines, a corrugated-aluminum bulkhead and a rear courtyard with picnic tables. Plans call for ground-floor retail and a community facility above. A building permit was filed in early February and Manhattan Community Board 2 passed a nonbinding resolution urging the Landmarks Preservation Commission to oppose the proposal. Preservation groups and the museum warn that demolition and heavy construction could cause irreversible damage to original plasterwork and collections and note a decade of prior disputes, including a 2018 rezoning denial and litigation.
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