In 2014 sidewalk bridges still partially obscure the facade after a two year restoration. |
By the turn of the last century, apartment living for upper class residents had become acceptable. To distance high-end apartment buildings from tenements, their developers marketed them as French Flats. Well-to-do residents enjoyed spacious apartments on a par with private dwellings as well as luxuries and amenities not found in most houses.
Apartment builders vied with one another to lure high class clientele with new technology like telephone service, elevators and electric refrigeration. Nowhere in the city was the trend more evident than the booming Upper West Side.
Apartment builders vied with one another to lure high class clientele with new technology like telephone service, elevators and electric refrigeration. Nowhere in the city was the trend more evident than the booming Upper West Side.
Hamilton M. Weed saw the opportunity in the rapidly-expanding neighborhood and commissioned architects Janes & Leo to design an ambitious project of four row houses along West 105thStreet and an adjoining, elegant Parisian apartment building on the corner at No. 925 West End Avenue.
The architects’ energetic design of The Alimar exploded in Beaux Arts decoration—the height of fashion of the day. A two-story rusticated limestone base supported four stories of deep red brick, capped by a sloping copper mansard roof. Frothy-topped dormers, oriel windows exuberant carvings created a slice of Paris on West End Avenue. High above the corner, at the base of the mansard, a chubby carved cherub watched the foot traffic below.
In March 1899, months before the building’s completion, The Evening Post Record of Real Estate Sales noted that “The Alimar, a seven-story apartment-house” had been sold by Hamilton M. Weed to E. G. Theiry. But the deal apparently fell through and Weed retained possession until March 1900. Nevertheless Thiery would live in The Alimar for decades.
There were two apartment per floor in The Alimar, each with eleven rooms. Included were a library, parlor, servant’s room connected to the kitchen, and multiple bedrooms. Guests entered into “charming and picturesque reception-room” with a “Colonial” fireplace and seat. The dining rooms, with the oriel windows, were paneled in mahogany, as were the libraries. Throughout the floors were hardwood parquet.
An advertisement in The World’s New York Apartment House Album boasted “Every known device of comfort, luxury and convenience was adopted in the construction, and in the decorative scheme nothing that superior skill and refined taste can achieve is left undone.”
The ad stressed the conveniences for making the completion of life’s mundane chores less onerous. “The butlers’ pantries contain improved patent refrigerators. In the basement there are laundries, with patent steam driers, servants’ baths, bicycle and store rooms. A telephone is placed in each apartment. In short, every comfort and convenience known to modern architecture is provided, affording each tenant the luxury and exclusiveness of a private residence.” Another advertisement in the New-York Tribune boasted “A Cold Air Refrigerating system [does] away with the use of ice.”
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Two large apartments shared a floor -- The World's New York Apartment House Album 1901 (copyright expired) |
The Alimar was built around a central landscaped courtyard with “graveled walks, shrubbery and exotic plants.” An advertisement in the New-York Tribune on November 12, 1899 called it “A New House With New Ideas—Built Around a Garden.” Weed impressed upon his potential residents the safety of the building and the neighborhood, saying that “the best of uniformed hall service is always assured. The neighborhood is the choicest and most select of the upper West Side, being almost entirely built up with fine private residences.”
The Tribune gushed on about the new apartment house on October 26, 1899 calling it “A perfect model of the fin de siècle apartment.” Saying that “nothing could be more charming,” the article praised the low ceilings, calling them “agreeable.” “The reception hall is a feature that must bring gladness to the housewifely soul,” it said. “The pretty fireplace, the picturesque oriel window, with seat below, the polished floor, on which rich rugs look their best, produce an effect of hospitality that puts the guest at ease even before a word of welcome has been spoken.”
The frothy carved limestone continued throughout the upper floors. |
The Cold Air Refrigerating system caught the writer’s attention. “A new feature is the large refrigerating closet that dispenses once and forever with the autocratic iceman. The temperature may be made freezing if desired.”
At the end of November 1899 The Alimar was officially completed. In fewer than three months Weed had rented all but two apartments. Among the first residents was the building’s designer, architect E. Harris Names.
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Canvas awnings shade the interiors from the summer heat -- The World's New York Apartment House Album 1901 (copyright expired) |
Other respected tenants followed. In 1902 Dr. S. Olin Hardy announced through The North American Journal of Homeopathy that he “has removed to ‘The Alimar,’” and a year later William Hill Hunt, President of the International Bank and Trust Company of America was living here.
Young Richard S. Hunter lived in The Alimar with his parents when, on January 17, 1908, he took his father’s touring car for a spin with his friend, Leon Sherburne, an electrician. Before long there were three young women in the car with the boys—a situation that possibly contributed to Hunter’s distraction that ended tragically.
The New York Times reported the following day that Hunter’s “machine was going south” on 7th Avenue near 15th Street. Six-year old John Miller of No. 24 West 13thStreet stepped into the street and the automobile struck him." The newspaper listed his injuries as three fractured ribs and a broken collarbone, possible internal injuries; adding that he was “probably fatally injured.”
Back home at The Alimar the Hunters were no doubt traumatized to hear that both their son and Sherburne were arrested, charged with felonious assault.
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A chubby cherub teeters on the corner of the cornice. -- Architectural Digest, 1910 (copyright expired) |
Proper New York socialites may have been a bit taken aback when they realized they would be sitting on cushions “and chopsticks were the only table implements provided.”
The sumptuous bowed windows steal the show. |
Then in October of the following year the secret became scandalously public. Havemeyer’s friends, said The Times, “were surprised to learn yesterday that not only had Mr. Havemeyer obtained a divorce from his wife…but that there was to be a wedding sequel to his secret divorce proceedings.
“Report has it that he is to marry Mrs. Maude Thorburn Backus, widow of Foster L. Backus, former District Attorney of Kings County, within the next five weeks.”
“Few, if any of Mr. Havemeyer’s friends knew that any differences had existed between him and his wife,” said the article.
The affair smacked of adulterous behavior and Havemeyer tiptoed around the issue. “While freely admitting that he had obtained the divorce, Mr. Havemeyer yesterday evaded committing himself as to his approaching marriage to Mrs. Backus, declaring that as she was out of town at present, it would be indelicate of him to say anything positive about it.”
On the whole, however, life at The Alimar was refined and proper. Mrs. Charles L. Dwenger, niece of millionaire James E. Nichols was here in 1914 and in 1922 the quiet wedding of Louise Meyer and John Kenneth Porter took place in the apartment of Louise’s parents.
But that briefly changed in February 1940. Thirty-nine-year old soprano Nina Tal, who performed as Nina Palini, arrived in New York that January in preparation for a concert tour. With her was her husband, Osip, a former wallpaper manufacturer, and their 8-year old son, Ilja. The family took a furnished apartment in The Alimar.
The opera singer’s hopes were dashed when the plans for the concert tour fell through. On the morning of February 28 a maid found her here, hanging from a noose made from four scarves knotted together.
Times and neighborhoods change and by January 23, 1943 the spacious flats where society teas and weddings had been held were divided. There were now eight, rather than two, apartments on each floor.
Perhaps the Alimar's most notorious resident was Bess Bernard who lived here during the 1940s. The quiet housewife was part of a sensational and nationally-publicized trial in June 1950. On June 14, the St. Petersburg Times said “Two lawyers and a housewife, accused of running a New York and Florida “systematic black market in babies,” went on trial yesterday.
The prosecutor alleged that the black market baby-selling ring was so profitable that “Mrs. Bernard had a $50 a week secretary and made weekly trips to Florida.” Witnesses told of selling their newborns. One was a 17-year old girl “who described how in May, 1949, she received $100 for her illegitimate baby,” reported The New York Times.
On June 29 Bess Bernard was found guilty of running a “black market” in baby adoption deals.
The second half of the 20th century was not kind to the once-grand Alimar. By the mid-70s the mansard roof had been removed, along with much of the decoration. In 1997 the building’s owners commissioned Fernando Didal to renovate the crumbling structure. Didal replaced the mansard level with a vertical façade that, like the limestone base, contrasted nicely with the red brick. A convincing turn-of-the-century façade was fabricated. The completed project dared unknowing passersby to notice the deception—an ingenious and well-done solution.
Although lesser-known than his later Dorilton apartments, Hamilton Weed's Alimar invokes memories of the days when West End Avenue lured moneyed families from the East Side of Manhattan.
The 1997 upper floor successfully pretended to be designed a century earlier. |
non-historic photographs taken by the author