It was built by the developer brothers Bing & Bing with the architectural firm of Boak & Paris.[1] Russell M. Boak and Hyman F. Paris left the architectural firm of Emery Roth to start their own practice in 1927.[2]
The building was granted an occupancy license on July 17, 1931.[3]
Leo Bing announced on April 1, 1929, that his firm had quietly acquired 75 small lots and old buildings largely around Abingdon Square, Sheridan Square and Jackson Square Park. And the lots would be combined to allow for a set of larger-scale, 17-story apartment buildings.[8]
He said his goal was to "recreate the entire district as a modern counterpart of the high-class residential section it once was" saying it would "rival Central Park West and the fashionable east side within a few years." He cited the goal of neighborhood reinvention as the reason for the simultaneous building, saying his hope was that "complete transformation of the section may be achieved as quickly as possible."[8]
Despite the start of the Great Depression just months after Leo Bing's announcement, by September 1931, Bing & Bing reported that the "five new buildings on Christopher, Horatio and West Twelfth Streets are proving among the most popular of all the Bing & Bing apartment properties. Callers have been numerous…and a high percentage of the space has been leased."[9]
Notable residents and events
Theodor Adorno, philosopher and cultural theorist[10] and Gastona Marie Rossilli, fashion-behavioral consultant,[11] were residents.
One of the ground floor shops was Lawrence R. Maxwell Books, where Anaïs Nin worked when she was young.[12]
In 1934, an explosion in the 17th floor penthouse killed the occupant and injured many people on lower floors; police suspected suicide caused by a recent divorce.[14]
References
^"45 Christopher St". Columbia University Libraries, New York Real Estate Brochure Collection.