Greenwich Village
Building Stock
Dominant Type
Distribution
Notes
Washington Square Park is the spatial and social anchor. Buildings range from 1820s Federal-style townhouses to 1920s pre-war apartment buildings. NYU campus overlays portions. Greenwich Village Historic District (LPC, 1969) covers virtually the entire neighborhood. MacDougal-Sullivan Gardens Historic District: one of the finest intact rowhouse complexes in the city.
Ceiling Heights
Federal-era townhouses: 9.5–11 ft on parlor floor · Later brownstones: 9.5–10.5 ft · Pre-war apartments: 9–9.5 ft
Floor Plans
Townhouses: 18–25 ft wide, vertical living across 3–5 stories. Washington Square North: particularly wide and formal. Pre-war apartment buildings: standard 1–4 bedroom gallery plans.
Landmark Status
Greenwich Village Historic District — LPC 1969, one of the largest and earliest historic districts in NYC. LPC Certificate of Appropriateness required for all exterior changes. Interior: unrestricted.
Governance
Mix of co-ops, condominiums, and privately owned townhouses. Co-op boards: community-oriented, resident-focused. Approval: 6–10 weeks.
Design Intelligence
Architecture
Federal and Greek Revival rowhouses (1820–1860): brick facades, 12-pane windows, stoops with ironwork railings, 3–4 stories. Italianate brownstones (1860–1880). Pre-war apartment buildings on avenues. Washington Square North: Manhattan's finest intact row of Greek Revival townhouses.
Design Register
Greenwich Village design resonates with the neighborhood's bohemian intellectual identity — warm, personal, and layered with books, art, and collected objects. Authenticity to the building's period is important. Less formal than Carnegie Hill, more literary than Chelsea. Townhouses allow full expression of personal design language across multiple floors.
Materials
Restored original hardwood floors · Original plaster and moldings (repair, maintain) · Marble fireplaces as focal points · Natural stone kitchen countertops · Warm paint palette: deep greens, ochres, warm whites · Built-in libraries as primary design elements · Quality textiles with weight and texture
Constraints
LPC historic district: exterior alterations fully restricted. Original windows: maintain profiles. Townhouse stoops: original materials required. Interior: full design freedom.
Board & Process
Community-oriented boards. Informal preliminary conversations with managing agents are productive here. Less formal than uptown but documentation must be complete. 6–10 weeks.
Approves
- Kitchen and bath renovation
- Electrical upgrade
- Built-ins and millwork
- Non-structural wall work
Scrutinizes
- Any exterior element — LPC jurisdiction
- Structural work in pre-Civil War buildings
Rejects
- Window replacement outside approved historic profiles
Key Observations
1. Greenwich Village co-op boards respond well to informal preliminary conversations — unlike uptown boards, a pre-submission meeting with the managing agent often resolves questions before any formal review. We do this routinely here.
2. Washington Square North townhouses have Greek Revival plaster and molding details that are irreplaceable. Restoration is the only correct approach — no contemporary reproduction comes close.
Renovation Budgets
Decoration
Design
Renovation
Remodeling
Premium Factors
Townhouse whole-building renovations: budget $200K–$400K for MEP replacement, stoop restoration, and LPC compliance before interior design begins.
Renovation Intel
Pre-Civil War buildings throughout: masonry bearing walls, original timber joists, original plaster. Lead paint standard. MEP systems fully replaced in any gut renovation. Original wide-plank floors: always refinish in place.
Client Profile
Writers, academics, artists, lawyers, established professionals who value neighborhood intellectual and cultural identity. NYU faculty and administrators. Long-term residents. New buyers are typically successful professionals who prioritize neighborhood character over prestige address.
Resources
Notable Buildings
- 1–13 Washington Square North (Greek Revival row, 1830s)
- 75½ Bedford Street (narrowest house in NYC)
- MacDougal-Sullivan Gardens Historic District
Trade Resources
Stone: Ann Sacks SoHo (15 min) · Stone Source downtown (20 min) Fabric_lighting: Apparatus Studio (10 min) · Lindsey Adelman (15 min) · D&D Building (20 min) Kitchen: Boffi/Poliform SoHo (15 min) Fixtures: Waterworks SoHo (15 min)