The two garages were located on the south side of downtown Albany in a lot on the south side of Hudson Avenue, midway between South Pearl Street (
New York State Route 32) and Green Street. Today the land is, along with everything east to Green, a parking lot. The buildings of the
Downtown Albany Historic District, including the city's oldest building
48 Hudson Avenue, 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 Avenue and South Pearl Street. The arena is across South Pearl Street. 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. The exteriors were brick faced in
cast stone. The Knickerbocker, at 72 Hudson Avenue, was four stories tall; the Arnink's was three stories; both buildings were three
bays wide and had flat-roofs. Different materials in the
composite for the cast stone meant the Knickerbocker had distinct golden hue that resembled the color of sandstone while the Arnink was granite gray. The upper
fenestration of both garages was similar. The Knickerbocker's street entrance was a single, wide, pointed arch stretching across all three bays with separate entrances. Its window
spandrels had decorative touches that were intended to mimic
Gothic tracery. On the Arnink, every bay had a separate garage; the western one was slightly larger and each garage had a pointed-arch entrance with an original folding door and a metal lantern-style light above. Above it was a
frieze that bore the inscription "Arnink Garage 1915" carved into the cast stone. The garages were set with
casement windows that 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 used a
Hertz rental-car location and a vertical, illuminated sign with the company name was affixed to the facade. This was the only significant modification to either building during their lifetimes. ==History==