A log about land use and transportation that is updated . . . from time to time
A stately brick and terra-cotta supertenement, crowned with a magnificent dentiled cornice. The neo-Baroque broken pediments at the 5th floor are luscious.
—Norval White & Elliot Willensky, AIA Guide to New York City, Fourth Edition, 2000

This building has 120 apartments, a tenant's lounge, a laundromat, and not a single parking space. Built in 1900 and 1901, it has stood through World War I, the Roaring Twenties, the Great Depression, World War II, and the years following, when a postwar exodus of capital and people left its neighborhood struggling against abandonment, arson and decay.