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I don't drive. Not only don't I see the sense in laying out hundreds a month for car payments, gasoline and repairs, I'm carphobic, and don't see the sense in roaring around on expressways at 60 mph, a second away from being smeared all over the BQE. Having lived in New York since 1957 (as long as I've been alive) I haven't had the need to take this kind of risk, not with the occasionally reliable New York City transit system at my disposal!
That doesn't mean, though, that I don't notice Forgotten possibilities in ancient car factories and dealerships that haven't rolled out a suicide machine for 35 years or more. So...on this Forgotten page we'll present a couple of buildings that are probably never thought of as former auto palaces by local residents.
Packard was in business between 1899 and 1956. |
"Packard" can be seen chiseled into the top of the building. |
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What concerns us here in Forgotten NY, though, is the beautiful building Studebaker left behind on Bedford Avenue and Sterling Place in Crown Heights. Not being a student of architecture, I can't tell what style this building is (shockingly, the AIA Guide does not mention it). Bedford Avenue between Eastern Parkway and Atlantic Avenue was, apparently, the center for automobile dealerships in the 1910s and 1920s, which would seem to be a likely construction date for this building. |
Note the terra cotta "Studebaker" sign atop this venerable edifice. |
Photography and research by Gary Fonville
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E me at erpietri@earthlink.net!