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Housing of the holy: Church to be luxury residences

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  • Housing of the holy: Church to be luxury residences

    Village Voice, NY
    March 30 2005

    Housing of the holy: Church to be luxury residences

    By Albert Amateau


    The facade and tower of St. Ann's Church at 124 E. 12th St. is about
    all that remains of a house of worship that has gone through multiple
    transformations serving Protestant, Jewish and Catholic communities
    since it was first built in 1847.

    But former parishioners, East Village neighbors and preservation
    advocates are still hoping to save the remnant of the unofficial
    landmark where Mass was celebrated for the last time on Jan. 16.

    The church, built as the 12th St. Baptist Church with a facade of
    locally quarried Manhattan schist, was acquired in 1856 by Temple
    Emmanuel-El, a congregation of Reform Jews who remained there until
    they moved to Fifth Ave. at E. 65th St. in 1870, when St. Ann's, a
    Roman Catholic parish on Astor Pl., acquired the building.

    The interior was demolished and rebuilt in the French gothic style
    according to a design by Napoleon LeBrun. Over the years, the
    parishioners included luminaries like Alfred E. Smith, who became
    governor of New York State and ran for president in 1928, and Peter
    Maurin, founder of The Catholic Worker.

    In 1929 the church was declared the National Shrine of St. Ann,
    dedicated to the mother of the Virgin Mary, but the parish later
    declined due to changing demographics. In 1977 the National Shrine of
    St. Ann was transferred to a new church in Metairie, La., a New
    Orleans suburb.

    However, the Armenian Catholic community convinced the Catholic
    Archdiocese of New York in 1983 to give them the church for as long
    as they could maintain the building. But in recent years, the
    archdiocese had to cover maintenance expenses and the Armenian
    Catholics had to move in February of last year.

    The archdiocese sold the property for $15 million to a developer
    based in Brooklyn, Hudson Companies. In February of this year, the
    archdioceses removed the carved white marble altarpieces, the
    statuary and the organ built in 1864 by Henry Erban to a diocesan
    warehouse in Staten Island.

    Alan Bell and David Kramer, principals of Hudson Companies, said last
    week their plans to build luxury apartments on the site are still
    very general, but they have indicated that they are sympathetic to
    preservation concerns.

    `They told us they would like to keep the facade and tower of the
    church but they warned that height and setback requirements in the
    zoning might prohibit that,' said Andrew Berman, executive director
    of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation. While
    City Planning has confirmed that keeping the church facade and tower
    would violate zoning rules, Berman said he still hopes to find a way
    that would allow the developer to preserve the front of the church.

    Berman said he is also asking the developers to salvage elements of
    the adjacent rectory at 110 E. 12th St. built as a rowhouse before
    the 1847 church.

    In a letter to Landmarks Preservation Commissioner Robert Tierney,
    Berman said the rectory's only major alterations are changes to the
    window lintels and the addition of a fourth floor and roof cornice in
    the 19th century.

    Nancy Cosie, a longtime neighborhood resident who worshiped at St.
    Ann's over the years, said she was devastated at the loss of the
    church that served so many diverse worshipers.

    `We had the Armenian Rite and an Ecuadorian parish dedicated to Our
    Lady of Quinche in Ecuador,' Cosie recalled. `And since the late
    1980s we had traditional Latin Masses at 2 p.m. on Saturdays - I
    think it was the only Latin Mass in Manhattan. The Armenian Bishop
    Tertzakian gave approval for them and for an English Catholic Rite
    that's been celebrated here since the late 1990s,' Cosie said. `The
    Armenians spent about $500,000 fixing things like the roof and then
    they were evicted even though the archdiocese says they chose to
    move,' Cosie added.

    The parish school at the rear of the church with a front on E. 11th
    St. was sold in the early 1980s and was converted into apartments.
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