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Janes & Leo : ウィキペディア英語版
Janes & Leo

Janes & Leo was the New York-based architectural firm of Elisha Harris Janes and Richard Leopold Leo (1871/72 — 26 September 1911). From 1898 to 1911, the firm designed and built numerous Beaux-Arts residential structures in New York City, both richly detailed row houses and luxury apartment blocks during the building boom that constructed Manhattan's Upper West Side. Though neither Elisha Harris Janes nor Richard Leopold Leo ever studied at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, they worked within its traditions. Their most prominent structure is the ebullient Dorilton (1902), at Broadway and 71st Street, bolder and more sculptural than any professor at the École des Beaux-Arts would have encouraged. Montgomery Schuyler, the critic for the ''Architectural Record'', disapproved of its flamboyant appeal:
"It was a most questionable and question-provoking edifice in the guise of an apartment house. It not merely solicits but demands attention. It yells 'Come and look at me' so loud that the preoccupied or even the color blind can not choose but hear."〔(Schuyler with Andrew S. Dolkart, ''The Architecture and Development of New York City'' )〕

The prominent corner site had been purchased by Hamilton M. Weed before the BMT Broadway Line had been finalized. It was the first grand apartment block to be completed on Upper Broadway. When it opened it had the expected separate servant and freight elevators and separate tenant storerooms as well as filtered water and even provision for charging electric automobiles.〔(Gray: "Streetscapes: The Dorilton; A Blowzy 1902 Broadway Belle" ). ''New York Times'' 30 September 1990.〕 The Dorilton is entered through a narrow recessed court on 71st Street behind a Baroque wrought-iron screening fence with massive stone piers topped with weighty globes; far above, a masonry arch spans the recess at the ninth-floor level. Above a two-storey basement with channeled rustication, colossal limestone sculptures representing The Seasons survey Broadway.〔(The Upper West Side Book: The Dorilton )〕
Richard Leopold Leo was a graduate of the School of Architecture, Columbia University (1895). He built himself a house at Belle Harbor, Long Island, New York. He was a member of the Architectural League of New York.〔(Society of Architectural Historians. ''s.v.'' "Richard Leopold Leo" ) From obituary vol IX - 1911.〕
Like many contemporary firms, Janes & Leo often depended for repetitive sculptural details on mold-cast matte-glazed architectural terracotta imitating limestone; the firm's designers sculpted the models from which the casts were taken.〔(''New York Times'', "Architectural Terracottaa Big Factor in New Building", May 14, 1911 ) Accessed 19 June 2008.〕
==Selected commissions==

*Emanu-El Sisterhood, 320 East 82nd St. (1900).〔Christopher Gray, "Streetscapes" ''New York Times'' 28 May 1989 (("Streetscapes" Columns by Christopher Gray, 1987-1991 ))〕
*302-320 West 105th Street (1898–1902), for the real estate speculator John C. Umberfield, and 301-307, for Hamilton Weed, as well as 330, 331 and 333〔331 and 333 Riverside Drive survive.〕 Riverside Drive, for Joseph A. Farley〔"Riverside-West 105th Street Historic District Designation Report" ((on-line text )).〕
*The Alimar (1899–1900), 925 West End Avenue at 105th Street, for Hamilton M. Weed.〔(''New York Times'': "Streetscapes: the Magic of the Alimar", February 3, 2008 )〕
*The Manhasset (1901–05), Broadway between 108th and 109th Streets, completed 1905. Janes and Leo recast a design, six years after construction started, after the initial developer defaulted,〔Andrew Dolkart, Matthew A. Postal, ''Guide to New York City Landmarks'' (New York Landmarks Preservation Commission) 2003:153.〕 adding the three-storey almost vertical mansard roof. Dark brick contrasted with limestone-colored architectural terracotta, a three-story almost vertical mansard roof.〔(Christopher Gray: "Streetscapes: The Manhasset; New Crown for an Upper Broadway Wedding Cake" ''The New York Times'' ), 21 July 1996]; (New York Architectural Images: (Andrew Scott Dolkart ) "The Manhasset" )〕 The lobbies and interiors were remodeled in the 1930s, when the original apartments were subdivided.
*3 and 5 East 82nd Street (1901). A pair of townhouses built on speculation by James A. Farley. 3 East 82nd street was sold to Solomon Loeb, a founder of Kuhn, Loeb who conveyed it to his daughter and son-in-law Nina and Paul Warburg.〔(Christopher Gray, "Streetscapes: A Tale of 2 Town Houses", ''New York Times'' ), 26 October 1997.〕
*The Dorilton, also for Hamilton M. Weed, 171 West 71st Street, at Broadway. Full-blown Beaux-Arts French Baroque, with monumental sculptures.〔(The Dorilton: photos and description )〕
*The Wellsmore, Broadway and 77th Street, for realtors Bing & Bing(1910). Twelve storeys of dark brick contrasted with limestone-colored architectural terracotta, which clads the first three storeys and providing window jambs, spandrels and entablatures. there were only four apartments to a floor, each of seven to nine rooms, with rents from $1500 to $3750 per annum.〔Michael V. Susi, ''The Upper West Side'' 2009:62 (design attributed to Bing & Bing).〕
Elisha H. Janes continued to practice after Leo's death. In 1913 he provided plans for remodelling in the Twenty-Second Regiment Armory, 67th to 68th Streets, between Columbus Avenue and Broadway (demolished).〔(''New York Times'', "The Real Estate Field", January 25, 1913 )〕 He formed a partnership with the German-American architect August William Cordes, whose previous partner, Theodore William Emile De Lemos, had died in 1909.〔(Keuffel & Esser Company Building Designation Report "The Architects" )〕 Their projects included the New York Women’s League for Animals Building (1913), 348-354 Lafayette Street, (now in the NoHo District) and the Refrigeration Plant and Wholesale Market and Storage Buildings (1925–29) in The Bronx Terminal Market, Hunts Point.〔(History and Significance of the Southern Area )〕

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