The district's buildings fall into three types, representing different eras of local development: two
Italianate rowhouses, 11
carriage houses and two taller structures built for commercial purposes. The rowhouses are the oldest, dating to the early development of the
Upper East Side during the
Civil War. The carriage houses came later, some built on the site of demolished early rowhouses, with the commercial buildings coming near the end of the block's development.
Carriage houses All the carriage houses follow a similar basic plan that persists despite later conversion into private homes and a variety of
facade materials. The ground floor entrance has a large round or segmental arch, but is sometimes flat, with an accompanying pedestrian entrance. Specifically equestrian decorative touches such as symbols or
cartouches were kept to a minimum. The interiors have often been extensively remodeled for their current residential use. They are two or three stories tall. The neighboring building at 165 East 73rd is a Beaux-Arts style building in yellow
Roman brick with foliate
carvings. The Romanesque house at 166 has a finely detailed corbelled brick cornice with its date of construction, 1883, in cast iron letters below. Architectural eclecticism arises further down the block's south side. At 168 East 73rd the roofline is broken by the stepped gable, a hallmark of the neo-Flemish Renaissance style unusual in the city and usually not developed to the extent it is at 168 East 73rd. Next door, 170 and 172–74 show signs of the
Neo-Grec style with the latter also having some
Queen Anne elements. The last building in the carriage house row on the south side, 178 East 73rd, combines Beaux Arts decor with
neo-Georgian brickwork.
Commercial buildings The two commercial buildings, at 177–79 and 182 East 73rd, are the highest on the block at five stories. Both were originally built for paying customers who rented and were not wealthy enough to afford their own separate buildings rather, with 177–79 the only one on the block designed with automobile use in mind. It is a
Beaux Arts building on an exposed
limestone and
granite foundation with the middle stories faced in brick with
terra cotta trim. Its upper story is a
mansard roof pierced by three unusually large
dormer windows with terra cotta enframements. The central dormer takes the form of a
triumphal arch with heavy stone blocks. Its overall level of decoration is unusually sophisticated for a utilitarian structure. Across the street, 182 East 73rd is a brick
Romanesque Revival structure with stone trim and cornices separating several of its stories. Above the fourth story "S KAYTON & CO." is inscribed on a
corbelled name panel in the middle of a round-arched cornice. Many of the windows are set in arches themselves. ==See also==