Hotel Margaret

The Hotel Margaret was a building in Brooklyn Heights, Brooklyn, New York. Designed by Frank Freeman and completed in 1889, the hotel was the locality's first skyscraper and for many years remained its tallest building. It was destroyed by fire during renovations. It seems that a person who was using taping compound left a heater on and forgot to turn it off which started the fire that destroyed the hotel in 1980.

Hotel Margaret
The hotel as it appeared in the 1890s
General information
TypeHotel
Architectural styleRichardsonian Romanesque
LocationIntersection of Columbia Hts. and Orange St., Brooklyn
Address97 Columbia Heights
Completed1889
Renovated1980
DestroyedBy fire, 1980
ClientJohn Arbuckle
Height10 stories
Design and construction
ArchitectFrank Freeman

History

The hotel was built for John Arbuckle, a Brooklyn coffee and sugar importer, and named after his sister Margaret. Prominent Brooklyn-based architect Frank Freeman was commissioned to design the building, which was completed in 1889.[1]

For many years, the hotel remained the tallest building in the locality,[2] becoming a "familiar and appreciated" sight to the locals. It was home to several prominent artists, including etcher Joseph Pennell, Nobel Prize-winning novelist Sigrid Undset, and Betty Smith, author of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.[3]

The building was remodelled in 1958, and at this time given a coat of "neutral-toned" paint which caused it to lose some of its polychromatic appeal.[4] In 1980, work began on converting the hotel into condominiums,[2] but the building caught fire during the renovation and burned down.[3]

In 1986, architect Stanton Eckstut was hired to design a new residence on the site, which incorporates architectural elements that pay tribute to the former hotel's copper patina details, terracotta façade, and corner bay windows. While the new building was under construction, the property was sold to the Jehovah's Witnesses and has been used to accommodate members of their headquarters staff.[5]

Description

Completed in architect Frank Freeman's signature Richardsonian Romanesque style, the building has been described as "a rangy, Victorian apartment house in brick, terra cotta and pressed metal with vivid and witty ornament"[6] and as "the outstanding building of the Post Civil War period" in the locality.[4] A contemporary source described the building as:

... a huge and imposing apartment house, designed by Frank Freeman in a free adaptation of Romanesque. From its upper story there is a superb river view, from the street or the East River Bridge an impressive sky line. It is quaintly balconied and recessed, and the deep brown red of its brick harmonizes admirably with its iron work.[7]

The building was topped by large, pyramidal-roofed rectangular towers, which offered excellent views of the cityscape.[1] Primary building materials utilized in its appearance were stone, brick, terra cotta and copper.[4]

gollark: US surveillance law cares slightly less for privacy of foreign citizens than for domestic ones.
gollark: So the domain is easily visible to them.
gollark: You don't even need that; SNIs exist.
gollark: As opposed to foreign ones.
gollark: Technically, they're meant to spy less on US people.

References

Notes

  1. Younger, p. 60.
  2. Morrone and Iska, p. 97.
  3. Wolfe, p. 418.
  4. Lancaster and Gillon, p. 68.
  5. "Witnesses to Sell 97 Columbia Heights, the Former Hotel Margaret". JW.ORG. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  6. "Frank Freeman, Architect; After a Century, a Fond Remembrance", The New York Times, February 26, 1995.
  7. Livingstone, p. 81.

Bibliography

  • Lancaster, Clay; Gillon, Edmund V. Jr. (1980): Old Brooklyn Heights: New York's First Suburb, 5th Edition, Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-23872-2.
  • Livingstone, Colin Hamilton (1893): The Citizen Guide To Brooklyn And Long Island, Jersey City Printing Co.
  • Morrone, Francis; Iska, James (2001): An Architectural Guidebook to Brooklyn, Gibbs Smith, ISBN 978-1-58685-047-0.
  • Wolfe, Gerard (2003): New York: 15 Walking Tours, An Architectural Guide to the Metropolis, 3rd Edition, McGraw Hill Professional, ISBN 978-0-07-141185-1.
  • Younger, William Lee (1978): Old Brooklyn in Early Photographs, 1865-1929, Dover Publications, 1st Edition, ISBN 978-0-486-23587-5.

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