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Parke Apartments

Apartment buildings in New York (state)Buffalo, New York Registered Historic Place stubsBuffalo, New York building and structure stubsBuildings and structures in Buffalo, New YorkHistoric district contributing properties in Erie County, New York
NRHP infobox with nocatNational Register of Historic Places in Buffalo, New YorkRenaissance Revival architecture in New York (state)Residential buildings completed in 1924Residential buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state)
Parke Apartments Dec 09
Parke Apartments Dec 09

Parke Apartments, also known as Park Lane Condominium, is a historic apartment building located at Buffalo in Erie County, New York. It was designed and built in 1924-1925 by the H.L. Stevens & Company and is an early 20th-century high class apartment building modestly styled in the Second Renaissance Revival mode. It is a ten-story, concrete framed masonry building built of cream colored brick with light stone detail in a "T" shaped layout. Also on the property is a two-story former carriage house. It was converted from apartments to condominiums in 1977.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007. It is located in the Elmwood Historic District–East.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Parke Apartments (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Parke Apartments
Lafayette Avenue, Buffalo

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.920555555556 ° E -78.868888888889 °
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Address

Lafayette Avenue 790
14222 Buffalo
New York, United States
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Parke Apartments Dec 09
Parke Apartments Dec 09
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Elmwood Historic District–East

Elmwood Historic District–East is a national historic district located at Buffalo, Erie County, New York. The district encompasses 2,405 contributing buildings, 31 contributing structures, and 14 contributing objects in the Elmwood Village neighborhood of Buffalo. It is bounded on the north by Delaware Park, Forest Lawn Cemetery, and the former Buffalo State Asylum, on the south by the Allentown Historic District, and on the west by the Elmwood Historic District–West. This predominantly residential district developed between about 1867 and 1965, and includes notable examples of Queen Anne, Shingle Style, Colonial Revival, Tudor Revival, and American Craftsman style architecture. The district contains one of the most intact collections of built resources from turn of the 20th century in the city of Buffalo and western New York State. Located in the district are 17 previously listed contributing resources including the Buffalo Seminary, Garret Club, James and Fanny How House, Edgar W. Howell House, Edwin M. and Emily S. Johnston House, Col. William Kelly House, Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church, Parke Apartments, and the Unitarian Universalist Church of Buffalo. Other notable building include the Frank Lloyd Wright designed William R. Heath House (1904-1905), Herbert H. Hewitt House (c. 1898), School 56 (1910-1911), the Harlow House (c. 1892), A. Conger Goodyear house (c. 1908), Alexander Main Curtiss House (now the Ronald McDonald House, 1895), Nardin Academy campus (c. 1914), and Coatsworth House (1897).It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2016.