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Samuel Sweet Canal Store

1847 establishments in New York (state)Buildings and structures in Montgomery County, New YorkCentral New York Registered Historic Place stubsCommercial buildings completed in 1847Commercial buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state)
National Register of Historic Places in Montgomery County, New York
Samuel Sweet Canal Store, Amsterdam
Samuel Sweet Canal Store, Amsterdam

Samuel Sweet Canal Store is a historic commercial building located at 65 Bridge Street in Amsterdam, Montgomery County, New York. It was built c.1847 to service barges on the Erie Canal, as both a store and a forwarding warehouse for goods shipped across the Mohawk River.It is a three-story, rectangular building measuring approximately 30 feet by 70 feet built of rough cut, pale grey limestone and has a shallow pitched gable roof.It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Samuel Sweet Canal Store (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Samuel Sweet Canal Store
Erie Street,

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Wikipedia: Samuel Sweet Canal StoreContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.934444444444 ° E -74.198333333333 °
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Address

Erie Street 5
12010
New York, United States
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Samuel Sweet Canal Store, Amsterdam
Samuel Sweet Canal Store, Amsterdam
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Nearby Places

Mohawk Valley Gateway Overlook
Mohawk Valley Gateway Overlook

The Mohawk Valley Gateway Overlook is a public pedestrian bridge in the City of Amsterdam, New York, connecting Riverlink Park on the north shore of the Mohawk River to Bridge Street on the south shore. The bridge is 30 feet wide and spans 511 feet (156 m) over the river.Construction on the bridge began in June 2014 and it was opened to the public in August 2016. It features numerous trees and flower plantings, as well as local historical and cultural information engraved into the decking and on plaques along the railings. It is the first bridge spanning over water to include live trees planted on its surface.The primary source of funding for the project was $16.5 million allocated in the Rebuild and Renew New York Transportation Bond Act of 2005. An additional $1.65 million for artistic elements and other amenities was provided by grants from New York State.The opening of the bridge was marked by a ribbon-cutting ceremony on August 31, 2016. New York Lieutenant Governor Kathy Hochul, Congressman Paul Tonko, State Assemblyman Angelo Santabarbara, Montgomery County Executive Matthew Ossenfort, Amsterdam Mayor Michael Villa, and New York State Canal Corporation directors William Finch and Brian Stratton, were speakers at the ceremony.The bridge, which won the 2016 Engineering Project of the Year from the Capital District Chapter of the New York State Society of Professional Engineers, a 2016 Merit Award from the American Society of Landscape Architects, a Great Places in Upstate NY: Public Spaces Award from The American Planning Association and recognized in September 2019 as one of 13 "Great Places" awarded by the American Planning Federation (APA). is maintained by the City of Amsterdam and the New York State Canal Corporation.