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Riverside Drive–West 80th–81st Streets Historic District

1890s architecture in the United States1890s establishments in New York CityHistoric districts on the National Register of Historic Places in ManhattanNew York City Designated Landmarks in ManhattanResidential buildings completed in the 1890s
Upper West SideUse American English from April 2026Use mdy dates from April 2026
Riverside 80th
Riverside 80th

The Riverside Drive–West 80th–81st Streets Historic District is a historic district on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City, New York, US. The district includes 32 attached rowhouses, built between 1892 and 1899. These include 11 houses designed by Charles H. Israels in the Renaissance Revival, Romanesque Revival, and Gothic Revival styles, and 12 houses designed by Clarence F. True in an Elizabethan style. There are also four apartment buildings: three 6-story structures dating from between 1898 and 1901, and a 16-story building dating from 1927. The district is both listed on the National Register of Historic Places and designated by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Riverside Drive–West 80th–81st Streets Historic District (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Riverside Drive–West 80th–81st Streets Historic District
Riverside Walk, New York Manhattan

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Latitude Longitude
N 40.791111111111 ° E -73.982222222222 °
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Riverside Walk

Riverside Walk
10024 New York, Manhattan
New York, United States
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Riverside 80th
Riverside 80th
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Isaac L. Rice Mansion
Isaac L. Rice Mansion

The Isaac L. Rice Mansion (also the Isaac L. Rice House, Villa Julia, and the Solomon Schinasi House) is a mansion at 346 West 89th Street and Riverside Drive on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City. It was designed by Herts & Tallant and built between 1901 and 1903 for the family of the businessman Isaac Rice and his wife Julia. Several further expansions in the 20th century, designed by C. P. H. Gilbert, Bloch & Hesse, and William Lazinsk, are similar in style to the original building. The Rice Mansion has served as a yeshiva, or Jewish school, since 1954 and is one of only two free-standing mansions extant on Riverside Drive. The house is a New York City designated landmark and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The mansion was designed in a mixture of the Colonial Revival, Italianate, Georgian, and Beaux-Arts architectural styles. The facade is made of brick and marble and is four stories high, with an attic and basement; it is surrounded by a marble perimeter wall. There is a double-height entrance arch along Riverside Drive. On 89th Street, the first two stories are curved outward and contain a porte-cochère and a carved bas relief panel. The building is topped by a hip roof, clad with Spanish tile. The mansion's interior was decorated in classical architectural styles, and was intentionally designed to be soundproof. It was built with spaces such as a main hall, library, and dining room on the main floor; a chess room in the basement; and bedrooms on the upper stories. Although various subsequent tenants have modified the interior spaces over the years, the house largely retains its original interior layout. At the end of the 19th century, Isaac Rice and his wife Julia sought to erect a residence in a quiet part of New York City. The Rices bought the site at Riverside Drive and 89th Street in 1900 and hired Herts and Tallant to design a house there. The Rice family decided to move to the Ansonia Hotel in 1907 and sold it to the tobacconist Solomon Schinasi, whose family modified the house in 1908, 1912, and 1927. The Schinasi family lived there until around 1945, after which the Heckscher Foundation for Children leased it. Yeshiva Chofetz Chaim acquired the house in 1954. The yeshiva attempted to sell and demolish the mansion in the late 1970s, prompting a heated dispute with local preservationists. The house was taken over in 1988 by another Jewish day school, Yeshiva Ketana, which restored the house in the 1990s. There has been architectural commentary of the house over the years.