The newest issue of The Blue and White will soon arrive. Until then, enjoy the magazine in its entirety as we preview it on Bwog.
Morningside old timers remember “the castle” at 106th and Central Park West as it once was. Not an inch of the restored structure betrays its past today, but for 40 years, the five crumbling turrets of 455 Central Park West dotted the skyline with decay. Only rats, squatters, and ghosts called its cluttered hallways home.
The castle first opened its doors in 1890 as the New York Cancer Hospital, a state-of-the-art experimental facility and the only one of its kind in the U.S. To visit the building in those days would have felt like stepping into the Loire Valley–its French Renaissance revivalarchitecture gleamed with red brick and black ironwork, and its circular turrets lent a romantic grandeur to its grim medical mission. (The round towers were, in fact, functionally designed to eliminate the corners where physicians once believed germs collected and grew.)
Breakthroughs in the use of radium for cancer treatment put the castle-cum-hospital at the forefront of the medical world, but by 1955 the hospital vacated the circular wards for a more modern facility. The center then became the Towers Nursing Home–a low-rent elder-care facility shuttered in 1974 for abusing and swindling its residents–before falling into total neglect. For the next 30 years, the castle lay abandoned, saved from demolition by a timely landmarks designation and the periodic, but fruitless, chatter of possible renovation projects.
A white knight finally rode to the castle’s rescue in 2003. After purchasing it in the late 1990s, developer Dan McLean finally succeeded in corralling funds to restore the building by convincing Columbia University to help cover the $150 million needed. In return, McLean would set aside for Columbia faculty 15 floors of a luxury apartment tower he planned to build and attach to the restored structure. In just two years, the castle was recreated as a complex of luxury condos so chic that they attracted the attention of celebrities like Phil Collins and Bill Clinton.
Now called “The Towers,” the once-decrepit castle stands today as a clean, beautiful model of Victorian institutional architecture and, as Sarah Bernard of New York Magazine put it on the eve of the restoration, a monument to “the winds of uptown gentrification.”
–Liz Naiden
Illustration by Adela Yawitz
10 Comments
@Alum “Dan McLean finally succeeded in corralling funds to restore the building by convincing Columbia University to help cover the $150 million needed. In return, McLean would set aside for Columbia faculty 15 floors of a luxury apartment tower he planned to build . . . .”
Not quite. McClean started the project without Columbia’s help after narrowly outbidding it for the property in a blind auction. But his financing fell through while construction was well underway. He then made a deal to sell Columbia 51 apartments (17 floors of the new tower) at a discount in order to raise the money he needed to complete the project.
@The chateau I first saw this building back in Spring 1989, on one of the first AIDS Walk New York circuits. I don’t think I’d ever been in that part of the city. It was heartbreaking: busted-out boarded-over windows, grafitti, garbage everywhere. I would have worked on it for free, just to see it back in its glory. It’s terrific to see it in its refurbished glory.
If you want photos, there are some on the Wikipedia page:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Cancer_Hospital
@nido http://www.flickr.com/photos/sandstorm889/3967354037
http://www.flickr.com/photos/sandstorm889/3977153909
@Anonymous ummmmmm..
why would you write a story about something which is suppose to be beautiful and not post pictures? Honestly, if you just posted cool pictures without the words I wouldn’t mind, but not the other way around.
@... You realize the B&W doesn’t have pictures (though it often has beautiful drawings), right? And really, you’re complaining that a mere one page article is too long? Wow.
@Anonymous where do I complain about length?
I realize that B&W doesn’t do pictures, but how are is it to attach some when they repost on Bwog? Maybe link to google street view?
@Happy now?? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Cancer_Hospital
@Anonymous yes! thanks
@Anonymous maybe you should walk there?
@castle suite