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expanding historic district boundaries
Introduction
Why Historic District Boundaries Are Often Limited
HDC’s Survey of the Existing Historic Districts
Effects of Designation
Effects of Non-Designation
Boundaries That Are Too Limited
Conclusion
Introduction
Historic Districts in New York City range from brownstone neighborhoods
like Brooklyn Heights, to industrial areas like the newly designated
Gansevoort Market, to commercial centers like Ladies’ Mile.
While the city’s 83 historic districts are diverse and rich
in architectural and cultural history, it is an acknowledged fact
that there are still many neighborhoods deserving historic district
status that have not yet been considered. It is also true that the
majority of the districts designated do not adequately represent
the reality of New York City’s intact historic neighborhoods.
This report will examine why this discrepancy between designated
districts and coherent historic neighborhoods exists and how it
may be alleviated.
The Landmarks Law defines a Historic District as an area that has
a “special character or special historic or aesthetic interest,”
represents “one or more periods of styles of architecture
typical of one or more eras in the history of the city” and
constitutes “a distinct section of the city.” The boundaries
of historic districts should not be arbitrary or based on political
decisions, and a historic district should not be a fraction of a
neighborhood. Rather, historic districts should constitute a cohesive
and distinct area of New York City that merits preservation for
future generations, as defined by the law.
As the Landmarks Preservation Commission prepares to enter its fifth
decade of protecting the city’s historic neighborhoods, the
time has come to think more broadly about our historic districts
and to expand many of the incomplete boundaries. The worthy buildings
and sometimes entire blocks that were, for one reason or another,
omitted from the originally designated district must be re-evaluate
and reconsidered. These are the properties that are at the greatest
risk of insensitive change or demolition. Equally important, the
historic district boundaries must be revisited to protect the designated
districts from the development of sharp, jarring distinctions between
historically similar areas inside and outside the district.
Why Historic District Boundaries Are Often
Limited
When the Landmarks Preservation Commission was formed in 1965, the
idea of designating and regulating areas of the city recognized
for their aesthetic, historic and cultural significance was new
and untried. How the effort to preserve and protect historic buildings
would be received by property owners, residents, realtors, developers
and the courts was unknown. New York City’s traditional obsession
with real estate meant that there would be serious questions relating
to the bottom line: Would designation be detrimental to the neighborhood’s
vitality? Would it cause property values to decline? Would it cause
a neighborhood to stagnate?
For many years, the Landmarks Preservation Commission worked on
shaky legal ground. Until the U.S. Supreme Court’s Penn Central
decision in 1978, a degree of uncertainty hung over the agency’s
actions. The LPC was therefore careful in its early years to select
small, defensible districts. With some exceptions, the LPC’s
early criteria for district designation were rigid and based on
a narrow perception of what constitutes an “urban” neighborhood.
Thus the boundaries of many early historic districts are “exclusive”
rather than “inclusive,” inasmuch as they exclude properties
that did not meet the LPC’s strict standards. As a result,
much was omitted from these historic districts that, in retrospect,
should have been included. However, during the more than 35 years
the Landmarks Law has been in effect, both the benefits of designating
and the negative consequences of not designating have become obvious.
The fears and uncertainties voiced earlier have proven unfounded,
and the need for expanded boundaries is now apparent.
Even as landmarking has become an acceptable and often sought after
part of New York City’s regulation of the built environment,
the LPC has continued to designate districts with limited boundaries.
Failure to embrace the traditional neighborhood lines more inclusively
has caused problems on the edges of the districts, where new construction
or incongruous additions often conflict with the original patterns
of development, marring even the protected district itself.
HDC’s
Survey of the Existing Historic Districts
In 2001 and 2002, HDC surveyed the city’s existing historic
districts, reviewing the materials collected over many years relating
to the establishment of the designated areas. The results of the
survey confirmed the pattern of under-designation. In most cases
when there was a community pressing for designation, the boundaries
it proposed tended to follow the lines of the traditional neighborhood.
The boundaries that the Landmarks Preservation Commission subsequently
designated almost invariably encompassed a smaller area. Similarly,
when the initiative for a district came from the Landmarks Preservation
Commission itself, it also tended to be quite small. In both cases,
the result was the same: a district that does not adequately reflect
the neighborhood’s traditional boundaries and as a result
affords inadequate preservation and protection of the area’s
“sense of place.” One particular egregious example is
the Park Slope Historic District, designated in 1978 (see map).
The Park Slope Civic Council requested a number of more blocks for
inclusion than were eventually calendared and designated.
One common problem with historic district boundaries that became
evident through HDC’s survey is the omission of commercial
strips in residential neighborhoods. In general, the Landmarks Preservation
Commission has focused on residential areas and has been hesitant
to designate the commercial strips associated with them. The major
reduction in the boundaries proposed for the Park Slope Historic
District was largely due to the explicit omission of the commercial
strip along Seventh Avenue in the heart of the community. Likewise,
Fort Greene and Brooklyn Academy of Music Historic Districts were
designated separately by cutting out the commercial strip on Fulton
Street that they were proposed to share. This was due as much to
a reluctance to regulate commercial properties as to the perceived
lesser significance of Fulton Street.
It should be noted that not all district boundaries are inadequate.
HDC’s survey showed that there are some small districts that
do encompass their traditional boundaries. Such districts as Tudor
City, Turtle Bay Gardens, Bertine Block and Sniffen Court are appropriately
drawn, coinciding with the neighborhood they were planned to identify,
recognize, preserve and protect. However, these districts are the
exception rather than the norm. More common are districts like Tribeca,
Fort Greene, the Upper West Side, Mount Morris Park and Jackson
Heights, whose boundaries are far too arbitrary and inadequate.
What has been omitted is not clearly different from what was included.
The consistency and the architectural and historic integrity of
the districts have been compromised.
Effects of Designation
After nearly four decades, the benefits of designation are clear.
Former LPC Chair Jennifer Raab notes in the 1998 edition of Guide
to New York City Landmarks that “…historic districts
have become prime locations—or better, destinations, places
where New Yorkers want to live and work, and tourists want to visit,
because of their architectural and historical character. They have
become, and remain, stable, desirable places that attract people,
renovation, and economic development.... The value of landmarks
protection today is widely understood, and New York’s landmarks
are greatly coveted.” Economically as well as psychologically,
these benefits are important to New York City.
In the late 1990’s, City Councilmember Kenneth Fisher asked
the Independent Budget Office to study the economic effects of historic
designation on brownstone neighborhoods in Brooklyn. Rather than
showing a decline in property values, the study confirmed preservationists’
long-held contention that property values followed the economic
curve for similar undesignated neighborhoods during prosperous times
and held their value better during periods of economic decline.
In other words, properties in historic districts are good investments.
This is no secret to real estate brokers, whose listings routinely
tout historic district inclusion. Owners of commercial or income-producing
properties in historic districts, some of whom may have been reluctant
to embrace designation, have long since learned that the economic
advantages far outweigh the purported difficulties. Prospective
buyers or renters are willing to pay a premium for the cachet of
a designated building.
Far from having a “chilling” effect on development,
historic districts have been dramatically successful for community
re-investment and economic growth. As the number of applications
for new buildings and the renovation and adaptive re-use of older
ones clearly indicates, historic districts have become magnets for
development and investment. Indeed, designation as a historic district
typically leads to the upgrading, stabilization and physical improvement
of a neighborhood. One of the most dramatic examples of this phenomenon
in a residential area is the Fort Greene Historic District.
Years of observation of the effects of designation on, for example,
Madison Avenue, which traverses three historic districts–the
Upper East Side Historic District, the Metropolitan Museum Historic
District and the Carnegie Hill Historic District–have shown
that no less than residential blocks, commercial thoroughfares in
historic districts thrive. To omit them from a historic district’s
boundaries warps its sense of place, which is not merely a figure
of speech, but a phrase called out in the New York City Landmarks
Law. In dominantly commercial areas, Ladies’ Mile and SoHo
are perhaps the clearest examples of the financial success of designation.
Designation as historic districts helped assure their economic revival.
Who can imagine New York City today without them?
Effects of Non-Designation
What happens on the blocks adjacent to an historic district? Ironically,
far from freezing a neighborhood, designation actually spurs development
outside as well as inside the district. Building owners try to increase
the square footage of their properties with rooftop and rear-yard
additions, and because of the appeal of the historic districts,
developers want to build new buildings just over the protected boundaries,
often at a scale that hems in and overpowers the district proper.
The Landmarks Preservation Commission regulates new construction
and alterations within the district, but does not regulate the adjacent
blocks and streets no less worthy of protection, resulting in loss
of character of the larger neighborhood. By their scale and style,
many (not all, to be sure) new structures rising immediately adjacent
to a district compromise the very characteristics and sense of place
that merited the area’s protection. While this is partially
a problem with inadequate zoning, the new development nonetheless
destroys buildings that are often worthy of designation but not
within the historic district. Since the boundaries of most of the
existing historic districts represent only a portion of what could
have been designated, the incentives to develop properties in a
neighborhood made more prestigious by historic district designation
can lead to such excesses as the 5-story rooftop additions on Warren
Street just outside the Tribeca South Historic District. The contrast
between the stretch of the east side of West Broadway located in
the SoHo-Cast Iron Historic District and the undesignated and originally
very similar area on the west side tells a similar story. By extending
the boundaries in time to make a more coherent historic district,
a neighborhood’s character can be protected from out-of-place
development.
Boundaries That Are Too Limited
The New York City Landmark Law encourages the “protection,
enhancement, perpetuation, and use of improvements and landscape
features of special character or special historical or aesthetic
interest or value.” It follows that one of the major goals
of the Landmarks Law is the identification of what is important
with regard to the city’s historical, architectural and cultural
heritage. Therefore, the seemingly arbitrary standards used to designate
one section of a neighborhood and not an identical adjacent area
obscure the purpose of the law. Capricious boundaries result in
confusion for the general public; how is an observer to know why
one side of a street is included in an historic district and the
other side, essentially identical in terms of scale, style, period
and character, is not? This was the case when only the east side
of West Broadway was designated in the SoHo-Cast Iron Historic District
and again when only the north side of Chambers Street was designated
in the Tribeca South Historic District. Development since designation
of these districts has shown the difficulty of preserving and protecting
a real sense of place under such illogical conditions. Designations
based on criteria unrelated to the quality and character of the
built environment suggest an arbitrary decision-making process and
have unacceptable consequences.
The quality of the built environment immediately outside an historic
district has a profound effect on that district’s character.
Boundaries that are ill-drawn and influenced by politics rather
than architectural integrity and historical patterns of development
encourage inappropriate development in the adjacent areas. Thus
in too many instances, the designated district’s boundaries
do not really protect the historic neighborhoods they are meant
to preserve. Our understanding of what constitutes a historic district
has evolved and expanded, and our historic district boundaries should
reflect this change. It is apparent that a re-evaluation is merited
and long overdue.
Conclusion
As the prestige of being in or near an historic district grows,
we are losing more historic fabric immediately around the edges.
With a fuller understanding of the benefits of designation we can
counter threats to the integrity of the city’s existing historic
districts. There is no time to lose. The preservation and protection
of New York City’s historic neighborhoods must be expanded
to encompass adjacent areas excluded in the original designations
in order to truly reflect the city’s cultural, social, economic,
political and architectural history.
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