neighborhood tour: the greenwich village halloween …€¦ · ed village halloween parade since...

3
EASTERN CONSOLIDATED IN THE PRESS Logo Here WWW.EASTERNCONSOLIDATED.COM I 212.499.7700 NEIGHBORHOOD TOUR: THE GREENWICH VILLAGE HALLOWEEN PARADE ROUTE AS APPEARED IN BISNOW ON OCTOBER 27, 2016 “I still remember their blood-curdling screams on my way to piano lessons when I was a little girl,” says Eastern Consolidated principal Ade- laide Polsinelli, recalling the in- mates who used to howl from the windows of the Women’s House of Detention at Sixth Avenue and West 9th Street. Although the House of Deten- tion was gone by the late ‘70s and replaced with the bucol- ic Jefferson Market Garden, Adelaide’s vivid memory was a fitting addition to Bisnow’s recent tour of the Village Hal- loween Parade route, which runs along Sixth Avenue from Spring Street to Union Square. Next door, at 425 Sixth Ave, is the Jefferson Market Library, formerly the Jefferson Mar- ket Courthouse, which has its own mysterious past, says New York Historical Tours di- rector Kevin Draper. Kevin led us down a narrow winding staircase to the library’s brick- arched basement, which was used as a holding cell for pris- oners preparing to meet their fate, either in jail or at trial. Designed by Frederick Clark Withers and Calvert Vaux, the Victorian Gothic style Jef- ferson Market building was completed in 1877 and used as a courthouse until 1945, after which several city agen- cies inhabited it until the ‘50s, when it was abandoned. The historic structure was slated for the wrecking ball until local residents, including poet E.E. Cummings, saved the building. It was renovated and reopened as a library in 1967. The Village Halloween Parade is such a treasured neighborhood insti- tution, Adelaide says, that even the library gets into the spirit by hanging spooky decorations from its clock tower, including a puppet spider that crawls along the side of the building. Kevin says a puppeteer and mask-maker named Ralph Lee is responsible for the Village Halloween Parade’s humble beginnings. In 1974, he led his kids and some family and friends around the neighborhood, donning elaborate masks and trick-or- treating and playing with his puppet creations. In 1975, Theater for New York got in- volved and helped to attract interest. The third year, Ralph made it a nonprofit. Adelaide,

Upload: others

Post on 05-Jul-2020

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: NEIGHBORHOOD TOUR: THE GREENWICH VILLAGE HALLOWEEN …€¦ · ed Village Halloween Parade since childhood and passed the tradition to her children. Over the years, she’s watched

EASTERN CONSOLIDATED IN THE PRESS

Logo Here

WWW.EASTERNCONSOLIDATED.COM I 212.499.7700

NEIGHBORHOOD TOUR: THE GREENWICH VILLAGE HALLOWEEN PARADE ROUTE

AS APPEARED IN BISNOW ON OCTOBER 27, 2016

“I still remember their blood-curdling screams on my way to piano lessons when I was a little girl,” says Eastern Consolidated principal Ade-laide Polsinelli, recalling the in-mates who used to howl from the windows of the Women’s House of Detention at Sixth Avenue and West 9th Street.

Although the House of Deten-tion was gone by the late ‘70s and replaced with the bucol-ic Jefferson Market Garden, Adelaide’s vivid memory was a fitting addition to Bisnow’s recent tour of the Village Hal-loween Parade route, which runs along Sixth Avenue from Spring Street to Union Square.

Next door, at 425 Sixth Ave, is the Jefferson Market Library, formerly the Jefferson Mar-ket Courthouse, which has its own mysterious past, says New York Historical Tours di-rector Kevin Draper. Kevin led us down a narrow winding staircase to the library’s brick-arched basement, which was used as a holding cell for pris-oners preparing to meet their fate, either in jail or at trial.

Designed by Frederick Clark Withers and Calvert Vaux, the Victorian Gothic style Jef-ferson Market building was completed in 1877 and used as a courthouse until 1945, after which several city agen-cies inhabited it until the ‘50s, when it was abandoned. The historic structure was slated for the wrecking ball until local residents, including poet E.E. Cummings, saved the building.

It was renovated and reopened as a library in 1967. The Village Halloween Parade is such a treasured neighborhood insti-tution, Adelaide says, that even the library gets into the spirit by hanging spooky decorations from its clock tower, including a puppet spider that crawls along the side of the building.

Kevin says a puppeteer and mask-maker named Ralph

Lee is responsible for the Village Halloween Parade’s humble beginnings. In 1974, he led his kids and some family and friends around the neighborhood, donning elaborate masks and trick-or-treating and playing with his puppet creations. In 1975, Theater for New York got in-volved and helped to attract interest. The third year, Ralph made it a nonprofit. Adelaide,

Page 2: NEIGHBORHOOD TOUR: THE GREENWICH VILLAGE HALLOWEEN …€¦ · ed Village Halloween Parade since childhood and passed the tradition to her children. Over the years, she’s watched

EASTERN CONSOLIDATED IN THE PRESS

Logo Here

WWW.EASTERNCONSOLIDATED.COM I 212.499.7700

a Greenwich Village native and current resident, has attend-ed Village Halloween Parade since childhood and passed the tradition to her children. Over the years, she’s watched the parade grow to the current 60,000 participants and 2 mil-lion spectators, making it “the largest Halloween parade in the world, and one of the only major nighttime parades in the United States,” Kevin said.

Today, Sixth Avenue is a ma-jor north-south thoroughfare bathed in sunlight, but Kevin says it wasn’t always that way. The unsightly IRT Sixth Ave-nue Line elevated railway cast a shadow on Sixth Avenue until businesses and proper-ty owners successfully peti-tioned the city to shut down the El in the late 1930s.

Mayor La Guardia signed a bill in the ‘40s renaming the cor-ridor Avenue of the Americas in an effort to rebrand it. In an-ticipation of the opening of the United Nations, he wanted to encourage countries to build consulates on the avenue, Kevin said.

The plan didn’t work out ex-actly as expected. The only evidence of the mayor’s ef-fort is a few medallions rep-resenting various countries still hanging from lampposts.

However, a general commer-cial boom did take place, and the main passageway of The Village began to take shape.

Replacing the El with the underground Sixth Avenue subway line has enabled neighborhood retailers to thrive, Adelaide said. In recent years, real estate firms like Stonehenge—at 10 Down-ing St—invested in multifam-ily properties and converted ground-floor residential rent-als into retail and restaurant spaces that are adding to the vibrancy of the neighborhood. Asking retail rents along Sixth Avenue average around $220/SF, while asking rents on the popular retail strip along Bleecker Street just off Sixth average close to $500/SF.

Adelaide tells Bisnow that many of the buildings in the area are still owned by fam-ilies who came to New York decades earlier to start a new life and open small business-es. At that time, the property was worth a fraction of what it is now.

The result is a misconception that often accompanies devel-oping neighborhoods. While concern has grown for larger retailers and eateries replac-ing mom-and-pop establish-ments, Adelaide tells us that

Page 3: NEIGHBORHOOD TOUR: THE GREENWICH VILLAGE HALLOWEEN …€¦ · ed Village Halloween Parade since childhood and passed the tradition to her children. Over the years, she’s watched

EASTERN CONSOLIDATED IN THE PRESS

Logo Here

WWW.EASTERNCONSOLIDATED.COM I 212.499.7700

many small business owners own their retail spaces, and are either choosing to rent to high-paying tenants or selling their buildings at a profit.

Sixth Avenue is punctuated with parks that make the Vil-lage enticing to pedestrians, allowing them to leisurely stroll, shop and people watch, Kevin says. One coveted out-door space is Father Demo Square at Sixth Avenue and Bleecker Street, which was named after the former pas-tor of the Church of Our Lady of Pompeii. The church was rebuilt across the street from the park and has a school that Adelaide and her children attended.

Adelaide grew up around the corner from the church on Macdougal Street, a few doors down from the Mac-dougal-Sullivan Gardens His-toric District, a group of town-houses that share an interior courtyard as well as a legacy of very famous residents, in-cluding Bob Dylan, Richard Gere and Anna Wintour.