Details, Details: Greenwich Street

April 27th, 2011 · 2 Comments · Explore New York

“Manhattan” and “quiet” are two words that many people do not associate with each other and put together in the same sentence. Yet many pockets of Manhattan offer quiet, especially when we calm the mind enough to find the inner peace that allows it.

As one of those Manhattan walkers whose mind often can be preoccupied with swirling thoughts, concerns, the next destination or deadline, and to-do reminders, I’ve found architectural and building details are one of the easiest and surest ways to clear the mind and invite the quiet. It doesn’t take hours or miles of meditative walking either. It can be as simple as looking at the details of a single block.

Greenwich Street, between West 10th and Charles streets, is one such pocket of quiet with rewarding details, which I discovered after first stopping to look closely at a single, quirky, and utterly inspiring tree that is smack in the middle of a chain-link fence (see Mindfulwalker.com’s “A Tree Grows in Chain Link”). I was taken in by the quiet of this Far West Village block as I listened to birds chirping away on an early-spring afternoon. (Don’t they sound happy?)

The tree’s uniqueness caused me to focus on what was around me. Suddenly I started spotting eye-catching and intriguing details and features on this block made up primarily of four- and five-story 19th century buildings. What a mix of colors, textures, signs, and nifty adornments here, and such strong hints of the history. Soon I was walking the block more slowly, breathing more deeply, and seeing the details of Greenwich Street unfold.

Here’s a look:

Arch Over Window - The Village Landmark

This patterned brick arch is over the windows of the Village Landmark, a residential building at 259 West 10th St., at the corner with Greenwich Street.

 Boarding Stable Sign

A remaining sign on the surface of this residential building, at 704-706 Greenwich St., tells of its former life.

1893 Sign on Former Stable Building

The sign shows the year of construction of the former livery stable at 704-706 Greenwich St. At one time in the 1970s it was converted into a disco, and later it was combined with the northern lot into a multiple dwelling, according to the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation.

Garber Hardware Sign

The bright Garber Hardware sign, at 710 Greenwich St., says “we’re your friendly neighborhood hardware” in a way that no Home Depot can.  A family-owned business that has been in the West Village for several generations, Garber’s retains the sign from its old location at 49 Eighth Ave.

 Intricate Brickwork

This brickwork looks like a braid at the southeast corner of Greenwich and Charles streets.

Street Name Inscribed On Building
 
Inscriptions of Charles Street, shown above, and Greenwich Street, are on a building at the southwest corner where the two streets meet.

Reflection In Stephan Weiss Studio Building

A reflection in the building at 711 Greenwich St. almost has the look of a Hopper painting. The building is the home of the Stephan Weiss Studio, once the workplace of artist and entrepreneur Stephan Weiss, the late husband of fashion designer Donna Karan and co-founder of Donna Karan International. Now, it’s the site of Karan’s Urban Zen Foundation activities, international exhibits, and private fund-raising events.

Previous post on Greenwich Street:  A Tree Grows in Chain Link. 

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2 Comments so far ↓

  • Nita

    After I look at these photos, I can close my close my eyes and envision the bricklayers carefully placing each brick to form intricate corners; or I see a masonry worker sculpting the numbers of a year from another century into cement; I imagine the sign painter taking his brush and painting “Boarding Stables” as horses likely clopped past him on dirty streets.

    I love making such connections. Those craftsmen lived – just as we do today…

  • Susan DeMark

    Nita,

    What a wonderful description! Wow.

    I, too, get such feelings when I walk this block and other particular ones in New York. Your time-travel experience and imaging are just what I’ve sought to make Mindful Walker about. It’s a testament to your own imagination, knowledge, sensibility, and way of writing that you so often succeed in traveling “back” to other eras.

    Thank you for sharing that with Mindful Walker’s readers and me!

    Susan

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