Posts Tagged new york city
Limelight on New York City
Posted by LimeWorks.us in Limelight "Spark Segment" on January 27, 2012
New York City surpassed Philadelphia in 1790 as the largest city in the United States. Throughout the 19th and 20th centuries immigration and modern developments changed many facets of the people, transportation and infrastructure. But what still remains in the city that never sleeps are gorgeous relics of the past, being preserved for generations to come. A team from LimeWorks.us recently visited the Big Apple to take look at a few places which have been repaired in-kind with historically appropriate materials.
The New York Life Building was completed in 1928 at a cost of $21 Million. It’s currently undergoing a repair campaign using Lithomex for stone repairs and patchwork.
The Irish Hunger Memorial stands as a tribute and reminder of the Great Irish Famine and the tragedy of world hunger. Stones were donated from each county of Ireland and even an entire cottage was transported and reassembled on site at Battery Park in Manhattan. Historically accurate lime mortar was used in the construction of this memorial which ensures that it will remain standing tall.
The Eldridge Street Synagogue is an incredibly gorgeous testament to the architecture and influence that once spanned across the Lower East Side from the Eastern European Jewish community. This was the first Synagogue constructed by the Eastern European Jews emigrating from Russian, Romania, and Poland. It was built in the late 1800s and flourished into the mid 20th Century. As the neighborhood changed and new immigrants arrived, membership dropped and the synagogue was left virtually abandoned through the rest of the 20th Century. The rescue effort of the Eldridge Street Synagogue began in the late 70s when volunteers and the Friends of the Eldridge Street Synagogue initiated efforts that led to an $18.5 million dollar repair campaign. This campaign included repointing work of the facade using historically accurate Natural Hydraulic Lime Mortar from LimeWorks.us Additional repairs to the ceiling, wallpaper, paint and almost every aspect of the central room was restored returning it to its original glory. The final element was set during the fall of 2010, the stained-glass window commissioned by Kiki Smith and Deborah Gans is the only 21st century element inside the historic space.
More details of the Eldridge Street Synagogue restoration can be found in the latest issue ofTraditional Building Magazine
We also visited the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine and the Ephesus Seventh Day Adventist Church in Harlem. Both have used in-kind repair materials from LimeWorks.us. By using breathable masonry repair materials, all of these historic structures will surely stand as testaments to the rich history of the Big Apple for generations to come.
-LimeWorks.us (Linked-in : Blog : Facebook : Twitter)
All Photos Copyright: Sean K Maxwell
Restoration of the Eldridge Street Synagogue in New York City with Ecologic® Mortar
Posted by LimeWorks.us in Historic Sites, Uncategorized on January 12, 2012
In the heart of what is now Chinatown on the Lower East Side in Manhattan lives the Eldridge Street Synagogue. A very important Jewish Synagogue built in the late 1800s, it was the first synagogue to be built by the Eastern European Jews emigrating from Russia, Romania and Poland. The synagogue flourished for its first 50 years and was revered for its gorgeous vaulted ceilings and stained glass windows. But the membership began to dwindle following the great depression and was abandoned in the 1950s. Harsh city life ate away at the building, it became home to flocks of pigeons and other critters. Leaks developed and the stairs became unstable, the remaining members retreated to the basement where they remained for almost half a century.
The rescue effort of the Eldridge Street Synagogue began in the late 70s when volunteers and the Friends of the Eldridge Street Synagogue initiated efforts that led to an $18.5 million dollar repair campaign. This campaign included repointing work of the facade using Ecologic® Mortar from LimeWorks.us Additional repairs to the ceiling, wallpaper, paint and almost every aspect of the central room was restored returning it to its original glory. The final element was set during the fall of 2010, the stained-glass window commissioned by Kiki Smith and Deborah Gans is the only 21st century element inside the historic space.
More details of the Eldridge Street Synagogue restoration can be found in the latest issue of Traditional Building Magazine
-LimeWorks.us (Linked-in : Blog : Facebook : Twitter)
- Facade after restoration, photo credit: Kate Milford
All Photos Copyright Sean K Maxwell
Historic Fabric melded with Traditional Mortar at the Irish Hunger Memorial in New York City
Posted by LimeWorks.us in Monuments and Memorials on December 28, 2011
Blocks from the World Trade Center Memorial and the construction site of the new World Trade Center sits a half acre patch grass dedicated to raising awareness of the Great Irish Famine. This memorial was under construction on September 11, 2011 when the Twin Towers fell. The memorial saved that day, simply because of the direction the wind was blowing. The plume of dust blew from 1 World Trade Center in just a way that it didn’t touch a single stone, all of which were donated from each county throughout Ireland. Even a 19th century cottage was disassembled in the County of Mayo and re-laid in Manhattan using a lime mortar that was determined to most closely match that of the original. The memorial was dedicated in 2002 by former New York mayor Ed Koch.
A team from LimeWorks.us recently visited the site and put together a collection of images seen below. The names carved in the stones represent the counties of Ireland. St. Astier Natural Hydraulic Lime was used throughout the memorial walls and cottage, supplied by LimeWorks.us. The structure has been holding up very well and we are very proud to have been part of this important piece of built heritage.
-LimeWorks.us (Linked-in : Blog : Facebook : Twitter)
All photos Copyright Sean K Maxwell
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