Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation

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The Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation
File:GVSHP Logo.jpg
Formation 1980
Headquarters New York, NY
Website

The Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation (GVSHP) is a non-profit membership organization that seeks to document, honor and preserve the architectural heritage and cultural history of several downtown New York City neighborhoods: Greenwich Village, the Far West Village, the Meatpacking District, the South Village, NoHo, and the East Village.

In these historic neighborhoods, GVSHP seeks both to protect historic resources and to monitor new development via an array of advocacy and outreach efforts, involvement in governmental process and public discourse, and educational programs for adults and children. Its work toward securing historic district and landmarks protections, saving significant buildings from demolition, securing contextual zoning for sections of neighborhoods, and right-sizing plans for new construction has earned wide praise from preservation leaders.[1] GVSHP has helped secure designation of ten new historic districts or district extensions, landmark status for dozens of buildings, and four contextual rezonings.[2]

GVSHP has received numerous distinctions in preservation and real estate circles,[3] such as the Preservation League of New York State's "Excellence in Historic Preservation Award" for organizational excellence,[4] and Executive Director Andrew Berman's inclusion in the The New York Observer's "The 100 Most Powerful People in New York Real Estate." [5]

History

File:Neighborhood Preservation Center.jpg
GVSHP is currently operating from the Neighborhood Preservation Center, an incubator for preservation and advocacy groups.
GVSHP Executive Director Andrew Berman speaks at a rally against NYU 2031 at New York City Hall.

GVSHP was founded in 1980 as the Greenwich Village Trust for Historic Preservation (GVT). In 1982, Regina Kellerman, a prominent architectural historian and co-founder of GVT, was named as its first executive director, and GVT moved its operations to the Salmagundi Club at 47 Fifth Avenue. In 1984, GVT changed its name to the current one, Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation.

Throughout the 1980s, GVSHP initiated research on the history and architecture of Greenwich Village, including subjects like the Gansevoort Meat Market (a joint study with Columbia University), Bleecker Street, Broadway, and maritime history of the Greenwich Village waterfront.

In 1991, GVSHP launched its first educational program, “Greenwich Village: History and Historic Preservation,” as a joint effort with the Merchant's House Museum, and, in 1995, designed and published a 12-page children’s workbook, “Discovering Greenwich Village,” for distribution to children in the school program.[6] The education program has since been expanded to include field-trip style walking tours of Greenwich Village, encouraging students to examine the architectural form of Greenwich Village as a manifestation of its social history and context.[7]

In the mid-1990s, GVSHP initiated an oral history project to document the experiences of Village preservationists of the twentieth century, many of whom were involved in defeating Robert Moses's Lower Manhattan Expressway. The participants in the oral history project include famous Village residents such as Jane Jacobs, Edwin Fancher, and Doris Diether.[8]

Since 1999, GVSHP has operated from the Neighborhood Preservation Center, the former rectory of St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, on East 11th Street, and increased its focus on the East Village since moving its office to that neighborhood.

Major ongoing efforts include advocacy around the proposed transfer of development rights in Greenwich Village along the Hudson River Park;[9] supporting local independent businesses; and opposing NYU’s expansion plans, as by being a co-plaintiff in a lawsuit to overturn approvals granted for “NYU 2031.”[10] The group consistently testifies before the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, and monitors applications for alterations to protected buildings.[11]

As of March 2014, GVSHP is currently pursuing the following projects:

  • Advocating for South Village rezoning[12]
  • Recognizing LGBT landmarks[13]
  • Protecting East Village landmarks[14]
  • Challenging transfer of Hudson River Park air rights[15]
  • Fighting NYU expansion[16]
  • Recording oral history[17]

Work

GVSHP has taken the lead in advocating for designation of the South Village as a historic district. One section was designated in 2010, and a second in 2013, but the group continues to press for a third section to be designated.[18] In the West Village, the group is calling attention to the singular role the area has played in the LGBT civil rights movement, and has advocated for additional official recognitions of this history.[19] As the Real Estate Board of New York (REBNY) has increasingly faulted preservation protections for New York City’s housing affordability crisis, GVSHP has consistently rebutted its claims.[20]

GVSHP responds to development and preservation issues as they arise, but also programs a full yearly calendar of community, educational and commemorative events. Each month, the group offers several free programs, such as a lecture on the history of the Greenwich Village Halloween Parade by founder Ralph Lee or a walking tour of the East Village’s unique community gardens. Its primary annual fundraiser is the Village House Tour, held on the first Sunday in May. Its major members’ event is the Village Awards and Annual Meeting each June, at which important local citizens, businesses, and civic groups are recognized for their work benefiting the community.[21]

In 2014 the organization produced a book of stories and artworks called “Greenwich Village Stories,” published by Rizzoli. This collection of art and text by contributors including Nat Hentoff, Lou Reed, Hettie Jones, Saul Leiter and Jane Freilicher is sold through mainstream booksellers as a partial fundraiser for GVSHP.[22] In partnership with a local business, the group places two historic plaques per year on sites of cultural or historic importance, such as the former location of the San Remo Café in July 2013 and the former home of poet Frank O’Hara in June 2014.[23]

It also runs a children’s program through local schools, employing trained educators to teach youngsters how history can be understood through the built environment, using Greenwich Village as a living museum.[24] A continuing education program for real estate professionals includes lectures, slide shows and walking tours on aspects of architecture, zoning, and planning history.[25] Another ongoing project that promotes an understanding of the Village’s historic importance is the Greenwich Village Preservation Archive and Oral History Project,[26] which collects the reflections of preservation pioneers and Westbeth leaders, as well as residents of the South and East Village. The organization also publishes a daily blog of local and historical interest called “Off the Grid,” as well as "The Anthemion," a semiannual newsletter detailing the status of its advocacy and other projects.

Landmarks designation efforts

File:Participants in 2014 House Tour enter a house in the West Village.jpg
Village House Tour-goers enter a 19th-century townhouse on Commerce Street.

Although a large portion of the Village was designated in 1969 as part of the Greenwich Village Historic District, many buildings outside the district’s boundaries are unprotected. During the decade between 2003 and 2013, GVSHP helped secure landmark designation of over 1,100 buildings, as well as community-scaled "contextual rezonings" of nearly 100 blocks.[2]

Some of its more notable efforts include:

Selected honors and awards

  • 2013 – Vanity Fair's “Hall of Fame”: GVSHP’s Executive Director Andrew Berman was named to the magazine’s “Hall of Fame” for being “the pesky David to the Goliath developers who have come to define post-millennial Manhattan … savvy and pugnacious enough to recognize that there is no respite for the preservationist, ever, from those who would make the Village ‘bigger, glassier, newer.’”
  • 2008 – The New York Observer's “100 Most Powerful People in New York Real Estate”: GVSHP’s Executive Director Andrew Berman was recognized by the Observer in 2008 for work in standing up to overdevelopment within Greenwich Village and its environs. Among the list of real estate developers, financiers, brokers, and government officials, Berman was the only neighborhood preservation advocate chosen to make the list of the “100 Most Powerful People in Real Estate.”
  • 2007 – The Preservation League of New York State's Excellence in Historic Preservation Award: Of GVSHP, PLNYS said, “The Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation’s efforts to build grassroots support, and to monitor and inform the decisions of New York City agencies should serve as an inspiration to other preservation organizations. GVSHP recently achieved a number of preservation goals that for decades had proved elusive. From the implementation of measures to protect the historic buildings and character of the Far West Village and Greenwich Village waterfront, to the designation of the Gansevoort Market Historic District, once-endangered buildings are now protected.”
  • 2006 – The Village Voice's “Best Greenwich Village Defender” in “Best of NYC 2006": The Village Voice writes that “It’s been a big year in the push to preserve the Village, thanks largely to the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation. The group’s vigilant director, Andrew Berman, has exhibited a knack for stopping 'out of context' buildings from sprouting up on quaint, historic streets, despite the red-hot development pressures."
  • 2006 – New York Magazine’s “Influentials 2006”: New York Magazine says of Berman, "He persuaded the City Council to stop a spate of 'out of context' buildings in their tracks. Now he’s taking on NYU, determined not to let the university take over the neighborhood in its expansion.”
  • 2006 – New York Landmarks Conservancy's Lucy G. Moses Organizational Excellence Award: The NYLC established the Lucy G. Moses award to "recognize the property owners, builders, artisans, and designers who renew the beauty and utility of New York City’s distinctive architecture."

Historic districts

File:South Village Historic District.PNG
A map of the boundaries for the proposed South Village Historic District.

The following designated historic districts fall within GVSHP's purview, followed by the year in which they were designated in parentheses:

See also

References

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External links