New York isn’t the oldÂest city in the UnitÂed States of AmerÂiÂca, and it cerÂtainÂly isn’t the newest. But it is, quite posÂsiÂbly, the AmerÂiÂcan city where more layÂers of hisÂtoÂry coexÂist than any othÂer, a qualÂiÂty that manÂiÂfests most vividÂly in its built enviÂronÂment. Even the most casuÂal tourist can sense the sheer variÂety of time periÂods embodÂied in the buildÂings around them on, say, a stroll down BroadÂway — one of the streets feaÂtured in the ten-part walkÂing tour comÂpiled in the new ArchiÂtecÂturÂal Digest video above. As a whole, it offers a two-hour jourÂney through the city beginÂning in CenÂtral Park and endÂing on Wall Street.
In between come on-foot examÂiÂnaÂtions of everyÂthing from the fin-de-sièÂcle “apartÂment hotels” of the Upper West Side to the recentÂly built “super-tall” resÂiÂdenÂtial towÂers of West 57th Street to the develÂopÂments atop the buried Grand CenÂtral StaÂtion to the disÂused indusÂtriÂal railÂway now known — and imiÂtatÂed around the world — as a linÂear park called the High Line.
Tend though longÂtime New YorkÂers may to regard each part of the city as more or less a nation unto itself, a perÂspecÂtive with a bit more disÂtance reveals signs of the nevÂer-endÂing social, ecoÂnomÂic, and aesÂthetÂic exchange between them: an imporÂtant facÂtor in how the use of and role played by even the city’s most august strucÂtures has been subÂject to change after unanÂticÂiÂpatÂed change.
HelpÂing us to underÂstand all this are archiÂtects Michael WyetÂznÂer and Nick Potts, both proÂfesÂsionÂalÂly well placed to explain both the big picÂture of New York’s evoÂluÂtion and the sigÂnifÂiÂcance of the varÂiÂous oddÂiÂties and eccenÂtricÂiÂties on its streets. Even an archiÂtecÂturÂal layÂman would take impressed notice while passÂing, say, the manÂsions once inhabÂitÂed by AlexanÂder HamilÂton and Aaron Burr; the jagged bunker that has housed the WhitÂney MuseÂum of AmerÂiÂcan Art, the Met Breuer, and Frick MadiÂson; the imposÂsiÂbly skinÂny-lookÂing skyÂscrapÂers of the so-called “BilÂlionÂaire’s Row”; or the DakoÂta, John Lennon’s final resÂiÂdence. But to learn what such buildÂings have to tell us about the hisÂtoÂry and nature of New York, we must look at them, as anothÂer famous rock star once sang, thru’ these archiÂtects’ eyes.
RelatÂed ConÂtent:
The Lost NeighÂborÂhood Buried Under New York City’s CenÂtral Park
A WalkÂing Tour of Los AngeÂles ArchiÂtecÂture: From Art Deco to CalÂiÂforÂnia BunÂgaÂlow
A 5‑Hour WalkÂing Tour of Paris and Its Famous Streets, MonÂuÂments & Parks
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.