The Albemarle–Kenmore Terraces Historic District is a small historic district located in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York City. It consists of two short cul-de-sacs, Albemarle Terrace and Kenmore Terrace, off of East 21st Street, and the 32 houses on the two streets,[4] as well as a four-family apartment building at the end of Albemarle Terrace. The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, which designated the district as a landmark in 1978, noted that the "terraces are distinguished by the uniform use of materials, height and color producing a harmonious effect".[5]
Architecture
The structures were designed by the local firm of Slee & Bryson, but differ in style between the two streets.
Albemarle Terrace
The houses on Albemarle Terrace, built between 1916 and 1917, are Colonial Revival[2] two and one-half- or three-story brick buildings located on courts and raised above street level behind terraces or front gardens.[6] Many of these gardens are shaded by a generous canopy of mature Pin Oak trees. The buildings on Albemarle Terrace have long been praised by architectural critics as "the most fully realized Neo-Federal houses in the city—especially the smaller, gabled houses with dormers—they represent perfect bookends of New York's row house building history stretching from 1783 to 1917".[7]
The southern row of Albemarle Terrace was constructed from 1916 to 1917 as the "model" homes and were generally alike in form and finish. The homes on the northern row were constructed between 1917 and 1918, and buyers were able to choose from an array of trim packages and finishes inside.
Both rows use the same material: red brick (with occasional burned singles) laid up in the Flemish bond pattern, limestone ornament, white-painted wood trim. Two general types of structure are used in both rows: "an 'A' type of three stories with flat roofs, and a 'B' type of two stories with a pitched attic story".[8] Each type has two subtypes, with variance in fenestration between the two. For the A-type, A1 features four symmetrical 6-over-6 double hung windows on the upper two floors, while the second story of A2 features a triple window, underneath an elliptical arch with a fluted sunburst design.[8] For the B-type, B1 features a triple-windowed bay at the first story, and a rectangular doorway consisting of a multi-light paneled door with a leaded glass transom, flanked by fluted pilasters, and topped with a limestone lintel carved with a paneled urn motif. B2 has an unbroken front facade, with a triple window instead of the bay, and an arched doorway with leaded glass fanlight flanked by Greek-revival style Doric colonettes.[8] Copper roofing adorns the enclosed stoops on the A-type houses, as well as the dormers and bay windows on the B-types, with the pitched attic stories finished with Vermont Green slate roofs.
Kenmore Terrace
On Kenmore Terrace, three of the houses are also in the Colonial Revival style, one of which was built in 1918 and other two in 1919–20,[5] but the remaining six on the south side of the street show the influence of the Garden city movement,[5] and were designed in the English Arts and Crafts style.[3] These Kenmore cottages were built in 1918–19,[5] and presage the automobile-based look of many suburbs built in the decades to come, as each house has a driveway leading to a private garage.[2]
Located on Kenmore Terrace, but not part of the historic district, is the landmarked parsonage of the Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church, a two and one-half-story wood-frame house designed in a vernacular style transitional between the Greek Revival and Italianate styles.[9] The parsonage was built in 1853 on the west side of Flatbush Avenue (near present-day 892 Flatbush Avenue), and moved to its present location in 1918.
Additionally, a handful of non-landmarked yet architecturally significant buildings stand nearby:
2101 Church Avenue opened in 1928 as the Keith-Albee Kenmore Theatre—a vaudeville house—and later became a single screen movie theater, split up into four screens in 1970.[12] The theater is now occupied by retail chain Target, among others. The building was designed by Eugene De Rosa,[12][13] with its southern elevation adorned with Colonial Revival architectural vernacular similar to the buildings on Albemarle Terrace, as well as the church house of the Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church opposite it.
2127 Church Avenue/882 Flatbush Avenue once housed the office of Midwood Associates—the developer of the historic district—and still stands with marquees bearing the branding "Midwood Associates Buildings" along the southern and eastern façades.
Despite the changing landscape of Brooklyn as a whole, the area directly surrounding the historic district is remarkably intact in form from when it was developed after the Lott farm was sold in 1910.