Downtown Community House (Q5303405)

Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Downtown Community House at 105-107 Washington Street is a six-story, five-bay red brick building that is among the last vestiges of the Lower West Side of Manhattan's former life as an ethnic neighborhood known as “Little Syria.” From the time of its establishment, the Bowling Green Neighborhood Association, housed in the Downtown Community House beginning in 1926, was a pioneering organization that served the local immigrant population as a settlement house and continued to provide services for the area well after the community house became defunct. Built in 1925 with philanthropic funds from William H. Childs, the founder of the Bon Ami household cleaner company, the Downtown Community House was designed by John F. Jackson, architect of over 70 Y.M.C.A. buildings and community centers, and through its Colonial Revival style speaks to an underlying desire for the neighborhood's immigrant population to become Americanized and associate themselves with the country's foundations. In recent years, a collection of historic preservationists and Arab-American activists have lobbied the Landmarks Preservation Commission and its Chairman Robert Tierney to designate the building as a city landmark.

Wikidata location: 40.7084, -74.0141 view on OSM or edit on OSM

matches

login to upload wikidata tags

found a single match candidate

way: Downtown Community House (OSM), 11 feet from Wikidata [show tags]
name: Downtown Community House
height: 27.2
building: yes
wikidata: Q5303405
addr:city: New York
wikipedia: en:Downtown Community House
roof:shape: flat
addr:street: Washington Street
nycdoitt:bin: 1001046
addr:postcode: 10006
roof:material: concrete
building:colour: #818275
building:levels: 6
addr:housenumber: 105-107
building:material: brick

wikidata match: Q5303405

Search criteria from categories

Settlement houses historic=manor, building=country_house