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The Knickerbocker and Arnink Garages were two attached stone buildings located on Hudson Avenue in central Albany, New York, United States. Both were built in the early 20th century; the Knickerbocker garage was added to the Arnink garage 12 years after it was built. In 1980 they were listed on the National Register of Historic Places; nine years later they were both demolished and delisted. At the time, many garages were adapted from stables or carriage houses. The first to be built, the smaller, was instead adapted from an existing commercial building by the owner of a successful Ford dealership in the city for his car-rental and repair service. His superintendent later bought the business from him and had the larger one built in the same style by the same architect. They were among the earliest structures in Albany built specifically in response to the increasing use of the automobile at that time. Their neo-Gothic cast stone facades are an unusual choice of style and material for that time. They may have been inspired by the nearby Delaware and Hudson Railroad office building,〔 a contemporary catalyst for the redevelopment of downtown that is today the system administration building for the State University of New York. One was later converted into a warehouse and used for that purpose until its demolition. That came about as part of a plan for two large office towers proposed for the neighborhood as redevelopment. Nothing has been built on the space since; it is used as part of a parking lot that serves another nearby redevelopment project, the Times Union Center. ==Buildings== The two garages were located on the south side of downtown Albany, in a three-quarter acre () lot on the south side of Hudson midway between South Pearl (New York State Route 32) and Green streets.〔 The terrain is generally flat, reflecting the Hudson River to the east. Today the land is, along with everything east to Green, a parking lot. The buildings of the Downtown Albany Historic District, including 48 Hudson Avenue, the oldest building in the city, are two blocks to the north and east. An 18-story office tower is located on the west.〔 Across the street is a large parking garage serving the Times Union Center arena, and another old commercial building to the northwest at the corner of Hudson and South Pearl. The arena itself is across South Pearl. To the south, just beyond Division Street, is the elevated South Mall Arterial, which leads from nearby Interstate 787 at the Dunn Memorial Bridge to the parking areas under Empire State Plaza.〔 Both buildings used a structural system of steel framing and reinforced concrete. Brick is on the outside, faced in cast stone. The Knickerbocker, at 72 Hudson, was four stories tall to the Arnink's three; both were three bays wide and flat-roofed. Due to different materials in the composite for the cast stone, the Knickerbocker had a more distinctly golden color, like sandstone, while the Arnink was granite gray.〔 While the upper fenestration of both garages was similar, the street entrances were not. The Knickerbocker's was a single wide pointed arch stretching across all three bays, with separate entrances. Its window spandrels had decorative touches meant to mimic Gothic tracery. On the Arnink, every bay had a separate garage, the western one slightly larger each in a pointed-arch entrance with original folding door and metal lantern-style light above. Above it a frieze bore the inscription "Arnink Garage 1915" carved into the cast stone.〔 The garages were set with casement windows, which continued with the large, pointed-arch windows in the upper stories. Between them the tracery continued. At the top of the Arnink were cast-stone finials shaped like bells.〔 At the time they were listed on the Register the Knickerbocker was in use as a Hertz rental-car location. For this purpose a vertical illuminated sign with the company name was affixed to the facade. This was the only significant modification to either building during their lifetime.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Knickerbocker and Arnink Garages」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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