You are reading

Two Local Properties Removed From Landmarks Consideration

Fairway Apartments 2014, 1937. Source: LPC

Fairway Apartments 2014, 1937. Source: LPC

Feb. 24, 2016 By Jackie Strawbridge

After waiting for decades to be designated a City landmark, two Jackson Heights properties were booted from consideration Tuesday, as part of a sweeping review of nearly 100 properties City-wide.

The Fairway Apartments, at 76-09 34th Ave., and Spanish Towers, a group of residences on 75th Street between 34th and 35th Avenues, had both been under consideration by the LPC since the 1990s.

The Fairway Apartments were built in 1937 in neo-Tudor style, with a prominent six-story central entrance block, according to LPC research documents.

The Spanish Towers were constructed in 1927-1928 with glazed Spanish-style tile roofs, tan brick and arched entrance features.

The decision came during a hearing on 95 New York City properties that have spent decades in limbo at the agency.

The Fairway Apartments and Spanish Towers were removed alongside three other Queens properties. However, these properties would be able to reapply for designation consideration in the future.

Thirty properties were given the thumbs up from LPC, and will likely be designated landmarks by the end of the year.

These included three Queens properties: the Pepsi Cola sign on Long Island City’s waterfront; Bowne Street Community Church in Flushing; and the Lydia Ann Bell and William Ahles House in Bayside.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Homeless men charged in deadly 7 train subway brawl in Woodside: DA

Three homeless men were arraigned in Queens Criminal Court on Tuesday and variously charged with felony robbery, attempted gang assault, and assault for allegedly stealing the belongings of a 69-year-old homeless man who was asleep on a Manhattan-bound 7 train in Woodside early Sunday morning.

The victim woke up and tried to regain his property. During the ensuing brawl, the victim fatally stabbed a 37-year-old assailant and slashed a second man. The victim has not been charged in the fatal stabbing. The investigation by the NYPD’s Queens Homicide Squad and members of the 108th Precinct in Long Island City remains ongoing.