The post office is a one-story, five-by-five-
bay steel frame building occupying the corner lot. The ground slopes slightly from the rear to the west-facing front facade (the
Hudson River is a short distance in that direction). Thus it was built on a raised
foundation. From the rear a three-bay wing projects, giving access to the
parking lot. The foundation and exteriors are faced with red brick laid in common bond. The front section, one bay deep, has a roof done in
copper with
parapeted
gables on the end walls. The remainder of the roof is flat. Cast-stone
coping outlines the entire roof, and the front has a boxed wood
cornice. Bronze lettering above the entrance identifies it as the Dobbs Ferry post office. The entrance centers the entire main facade. It is
arched, with flanking wooden
pilasters topped with
dosserets and a denticulated (toothed) broken-bed
pediment. The windows feature splayed brick
lintels and capping
keystones. Two iron lantern-style lamps frame the door. Inside, the
lobby takes an L-shaped form through four of the five bays. It features orange quarry tile and a counter-height
dado. The plaster ceiling is coved, and the original wood frames on the
bulletin boards and windows, as well as iron
grilles on the screenline, remain. ==History==