Telling the Art Deco Story of the Grand Concourse, Part One Video Event

  • Tuesday, August 01, 2023
  • Tuesday, December 31, 2024
  • A link and unique password to view this video event is emailed to those who register

Registration

  • Special discount for members of fellow Art Deco Societies

Register


About the Program:

We are excited to take our Telling the Art Deco Stories of our Neighborhood's programs digital so that you can explore New York's wonderful Art Deco enclaves with the Art Deco Society of New York––from anywhere! 

In part one of our two part online "tour", architectural historian Anthony W. Robins, will lead us through superb interwar architectural treasures of The Grand Concourse––The Bronx's famed Art Deco thoroughfare! 

In this event we will explore the history of this Art Deco showplace that was once part of Westchester County and became the first area outside of Manhattan Island to be absorbed into New York City in 1874. As we wind north for 4.5 miles in this web-based "tour", we will see how The Concourse rises above surrounding streets and makes a gently curving path in a plan meant to rival the Champs Élysée in Paris. In the years after World War I, the Concourse developed into a fabled residential district, now famous for its Art Deco apartment houses––including perhaps the best-known, No. 1157, the “Fish Building,” with its over-life-size fishbowl mosaics. The façade and its interior are truly a site to behold!

In this online event we will see how West Bronx Deco takes in a variety of building types, and extends to either side of the Concourse. Our virtual walk will focus on the apartment buildings at the southern end of the Concourse, and will also include highlights such as:

  • The Bronx Post Office with its stunning Ben Shahn murals
  • The monolithic Bronx County Building, now home to the borough’s government offices
  • The Park Plaza Apartments, off to the west on Jerome Avenue, which were designed by Marvin Fine as the first Art Deco apartment building in the borough

As a special treat, our “visit” to the Bronx will also include hearing Marvin Fine talking about the Park Plaza, thanks to an interview with our tour guide taped 40 years ago. Marvin Fine, in the office of Horace Ginsbern, designed not just the Park Plaza but also many of the Grand Concourse wonders, including the Fish Building!

About the Guide:
Anthony W. Robins has been guiding natives and visitors to the city’s wonders of steel and stone for twenty-five years. He has led hundreds of walking tours of New York history and architecture. A founding member of ADSNY, Robins created the Society’s original tour program in 1981. In 2017, the Guides Association of New York City honored him with the “Guiding Spirit Award.” He lectures on New York history and architecture to audiences both in the United States and abroad, teaches various levels of students about architecture and the development of New York City, and has authored five books and a number of short guide books, as well as many newspaper and magazine articles. His latest award-winning book, New York Art Deco: A Guide to Gotham’s Jazz Age Architecture, explores Art Deco throughout the five boroughs.

This program is made possible through the support of 

Registration:

How to Register for ADSNY's Web-based programs:

  • Click the gold  Register  button located to the left of the "About the Program" section
  • Enter the requested information in the registration form and follow the instructions to pay online and complete your registration
  • In a few moments, your registration confirmation containing your link and unique password to watch the video event will be sent to the email address you used to register. If you do not see this email in your inbox, please check your spam folder

If you need further assistance registering for this event, or are experiencing a different issue, please email Events@ArtDeco.org, let us know which events you would like to register for, and we will send you an invoice that can be easily completed without going through the ArtDeco.org website.

    All ticket sales are final. Sorry, there are no refunds or exchanges.


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