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370 Riverside Drive

Art Deco architecture in ManhattanArt Deco skyscrapersCondominiums and housing cooperatives in ManhattanNew York City Designated Landmarks in ManhattanResidential buildings completed in 1922
Residential buildings in ManhattanUpper West Side
370RSD in winter from the park
370RSD in winter from the park

370 Riverside Drive is a building on Riverside Drive and the north side of West 109th Street on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, New York City. A number of notable people have lived here, including Hannah Arendt, Grace Zia Chu (culinary figure), Clarence J. Lebel (inventor of fluorescent bulb), and Evelyn John Strachey (British politician), among others.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article 370 Riverside Drive (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

370 Riverside Drive
Riverside Drive, New York Manhattan

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Wikipedia: 370 Riverside DriveContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.8043 ° E -73.9684 °
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Address

Riverside Drive 370
10025 New York, Manhattan
New York, United States
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linkWikiData (Q4635797)
linkOpenStreetMap (271206685)

370RSD in winter from the park
370RSD in winter from the park
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The Manhasset
The Manhasset

The Manhasset is a residential building on the western side of Broadway, between 108th and 109th streets, on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City, United States. Constructed between 1899 and 1905 as one of several apartment hotels along Broadway on the Upper West Side, the Manhasset was designed in the Beaux-Arts style and was split into northern and southern halves. The lowest eight stories of the 11-story building were designed by Joseph Wolf, while the top three stories were designed by the firm of Janes & Leo. The building is a New York City designated landmark. The base is two stories high and is clad with rusticated limestone blocks; it has entrances on 108th and 109th streets, as well as storefronts on Broadway. The central section of the facade is largely made of salmon brick, with ornamentation made of architectural terracotta. There are exterior light courts facing north, south, and west. The structure is topped by a two-story mansard roof. As built, the Manhasset had 77 apartments spread across the northern and southern sections; following a 1939 renovation, the building has had 136 apartments. The Manhasset was developed by John W. and William Noble, who acquired the site in 1899 but were unable to complete the structure. Although the Manhasset was built as an eight-story edifice, Jacob Butler expanded it to 11 stories after taking over the development in 1901. The building was finished in 1905, and the Butler family retained it until 1909. Storefronts were added to the ground floor in 1910, and the Manhasset was sold several more times over the years. The Mutual Life Insurance Company, which acquired the Manhasset in 1932, subdivided the apartments between 1939 and 1940. The Heller family acquired the Manhasset during the late 20th century and converted the apartments into a housing cooperative in 1993, retaining ownership of the retail condominium at the building's base. After undergoing a renovation in the late 1990s, the Manhasset was damaged by a fire in 1999.