131-133 Second Avenue Lot #40
![Local Business: An economic enterprise solely based within the community, not a national franchise or chain store. Locally owned and managed, sources goods locally and reduces impacts associated with shipping, but not necessarily a green business. Local Business](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/category_pictures_7.gif)
![Cultural Site: Important contributors to the community's sense of place and built environment. Historical, art, music, legendary, non-institutional resources, monuments, organizations and places, even temporary projects may be included. Cultural Site](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/cultural.gif)
![Historical Feature: Institution, monument or unmarked historical area with special significance to the community's sense of place and environment. Historical Feature](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/historical_feature.gif)
Overview
Type of resource: Business & Private home
Original use: Residential
Current use: Business & Private home
Over all condition: excellent
Explain:
Description of resource: 5 story huge building has business, restaurant and private home. Overall tide upper stories of the building.
History of resource: Before becoming known as a hotspot for counterculture, St. Marks Place was one of the most elite streets in the entire city when it was first built up in the 1830s by developer Thomas E. Davis.
The first structure built on this lot was a large mansion that was sold after its first decade to Eugene Keteltas, whose family kept the mansion in the family for as long as they lasted. In 1912 after the last Keteltas has passed, a permit was filed to replace the mansion with a movie theater. Various newspaper articles claim that before its destruction, the mansion was the last remaining grand private dwelling in the neighborhood, and the final holdout from Second Avenue’s original glory days. The theater was modified periodically for decades following. Today, it is a building of lofts and businesses. At some point in between the end of the movie theater and the complete revision of the building, the Negro Ensemble Company held its first performances here, launching such actors as Phylicia Rashad, Laurence Fishburne, and Angela Bassett.
Architect: Unknown
Owner: original Owner : Eugene Keteltas.
Location:
Comments
Connections
- New York
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- SevillaSpain
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- WallingtonUnited Kingdom
- RichmondUnited States
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- Cape TownSouth Africa
- Silver SpringUnited States
- Silver SpringUnited States
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- College ParkUnited States
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- Jersey CityUnited States
- BayreuthGermany
- Mount PleasantUnited States
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Multimedia
Impacts
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