This series made me appreciate New York a lot recently. Its so densely packed with so much great architecture. I think in general most american cities are overrated compared to european cities (from an urban planning perspective), but New York is overall a world class city
These videos are just utterly brilliantly high quality. Nick Potts does a great job of taking potentially dry information and making it so approachable and fun to learn. Thank you for putting these on
This is the kind of content i wish i had when i was still in architecture school. This series really refreshed my knowledge with history of architecture. I hope AD would also do a Walking tour to other locations, like Chicago , Barcelona, Singapore, etc.
These walking tours are terrific. I appreciate the historical context and architectural details that Nick Potts presents in a way that is interesting to non architects. Please do more!
Exactly, he explained everything greatly and with poise too. The other architects are all by like "the demarque walling is really neet.........are next building is-"
thank you. really enjoy this content and getting to learn more about NYC architecture. also I really liked hearing about the history of the former Whitney museum as I'd always wanted to visit there
I'm a fairly new Long Islander moving here from the mid-west 2 years ago. I love this city for the diversity and the architecture shows it. Chicago has some but not on this scale. Thank you for the tour!
Would love to see you do the UWS! Lincoln Center, the Paterno, the San Remo, the Belnord, the Ansonia/Dorilton, brownstones in the West 70s. There are so many great places to choose from!
Great tour of the Upper East Side. I particularly like Rosario Candela's glamourous and elegant co-ops which for me are the epitome of Art Deco style and class and a defining characteristic of NYC.
Really enjoyed this video! After my visit to the Met on my first trip to NYC, in 2017, I walked by a few of these buildings... including the Ukrainian Institute, where I came upon a group of Ukrainian students celebrating a sporting event! Very fun students. Loved the Cook block of townhouses! The level of architectural detailing on all these buildings is amazing... I started to notice faces, animals, shields and quotes carved into stone. Overwhelming! I want to go back, and take more time walking these streets and breathe it all in... 🤗
When I saw Nick Potts on the thumbnail, I LIT-erally said "YES!" out loud because it meant a new NYC Walking Tour video. This series could go on forever and I'd watch every single one.
Hello Nick i am from Singapore i am 40 years old. Wow! Thank u so much for your effort of showing and telling us the history of each building. Honestly i never been to New York but at least i have some knowledge about the building in New York
Whenever you do get to New York please know it's the perfect walking city with an almost unending amount of architectural treasures to see. Fortunately there are so many books available you can easily give yourself a university-level education on the history and development of the city's myriad of architectural styles!
@@noorimeldaelle3403 I was born and lived much of my life there. But now I live out west in Las Vegas, Nevada. I like the weather out here much better. New York winters can be extremely cold!
@@johnscanlan9335 Hello John ok good to know that 👍 is another important piece of information. Thank u for telling me i really appreciate it. U are so kind.
Architecturally, New York City is head and shoulders above every other city in the U.S. (including Chicago and S.F.)..... It's just that the city is so densely packed and there is so much going on that much is overlooked.... People just walk by and fail to notice. It's great that A.D. is able to really point out what there is to see....at a walker's pace. I've always felt that the Upper East Side is architecturally stunning.
New York has an incredible wealth of great architecture which is indeed overlooked by many due to the city's density of structures. The buildings are not neatly arrayed on uniform blocks set on an endless grid, like Chicago. The blocks in Manhattan, especially north of 14th and west of 5th, are longer, hence they are packed with numerous structures of varying height and composition. One can easily trace and see the history of modern skyscraper construction in Chicago's Loop because the the historic buildings are contained within a small area comprised of a few square blocks, which is easily walkable, and they are not compressed, nor overwhelmed by neighboring structures. One can stand on the north end of the Michigan Ave. Bridge and be rewarded with a beatiful sweeping view of the Loop, the Chicago River, Lake Michigan, and North Michigan Ave. Panoramic urban views of this nature are difficult to come by in Manhattan, unless one views it from another state, like NJ, or another borough. NYC presents a much complex situation due to its topographical setting, and it's historic development. Chicago presents a neater, tidier urban appearance then NYC, but cannot match the the fantastic richness and variety of architectural styles and treatments one encounters in the Big Apple.
Amazing video, I'm going on Dec 1st to NYC for the first time since the pandemic and I'm so ready to soap up all the architecture so thank you for this. 🥰
I just finished the first season of the Gilded Age, love your content so much. Maybe we can dedicate an ep comparing architecture between New Yok old / new money
I used to live on 83rd between 1st and 2nd. I love it there. The buildings and designs are so beautiful with their own stories. Pictures and videos don't do justice.
(5:48) "...tower in the center which didn't survive..." True story from the 24th edition of the Seventh Regiment Gazette dated December 1909: Charles Clinton was the architect who designed that building (constructed in 1880) and he was a member of the Seventh Regiment. He died in 1910 and the tower (belfry) was removed within weeks of his death in 1911 to make the facade "considerably more important than heretofore".
Our neighborhood. We live on 72nd and 1st. Would never live anywhere else in Manhattan. We love the neighborhood. Close to everything and quiet at night.🎉
I live at 85/5 and learned a lot about the buildings in my neighborhood. I will have to pay more attention when I am out and about. The only fact I did know was about MET.
Having enjoyed years of being NYC residents we've moved to greener pastures. We really enjoy the NYC explorations. May we suggest a review of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine. During a recent visit to enjoy a Holiday Mass, all we could think of was, "What happened to all the grandiose renovation plans?" What did the decades of scaffolding and stone mason apprenticeships produce? Will we ever see the Grand Organ return?
This interesting video brought to mind the movie "The Anderson Tapes", an entertaining bitter-sweet caper-comedy directed by Sidney Lumet from 1971, starring Sean Connery. It is about the burglary of the Italianate palazzo on 1 East 91st Street on 5th Avenue, which is today the Convent of the Sacred Heart. A lot of really great on loction shots. The Whitney Museum was designed by Hungarian born architect Marcel Breuer (1902-1981).
The upper east side can be attributed to many places, at first I was thinking Harlem, but it was just the area where I like to call the “Consulate District”, where a lot of consulates and diplomatic sovereign nations offices come and work. Any consulate district is generally pretty exquisite, and New York is no exception to that.
I never knew the top of the MET was unfinished. I always thought the blocks up there were evoking Egyptian structures like the pyramids, blending into the Greek and Roman inspired columns.
Interesting video. Something I never quite understood is the border between Upper East Side & Harlem. Seems so odd that there is this fancy neighbourhood and on the other side of the street there is a... not so fancy neighbourhood.
96th St is generally considered the border between the Upper East Side and East Harlem, but luxury development has crept north of 96th. I was lucky enough to live for a year in a new upscale apartment building a couple of blocks north of 96th. There was a housing project directly across the street from us (never had any problems and it was kind of cool to have such a mix of income levels).
@@christianwestling2019 There was never a hard dividing line between rich and poor. In the video he explained how Park Avenue is rich now but was poor before Park Avenue was built over top of the railroad tracks.
5:46 “[The Park Avenue Armory] is missing its central tower. Originally, it had a much taller tower in the center which didn’t survive.” What happened to it? Towers don’t simply disappear, as far as I know.
Many architects and historians do a great disservice in perpetuating the myth that Brutalism (as embodied in the example of the Whitney Museum) is aggressive or brutal on the viewer/dweller because they think that coined name for the style comes from Brutal. This isn’t so. The coinage of Brutalism comes from the French term “Beton Brut” meaning raw concrete. This movement sought to be more democratic than the loftier, more refined predecessors in urban or civic architecture. Many now prefer to call this architecture “Heroic.”
No, "brutal, " aptly fits the look. Live in Manhattan, and as often as I have walked by the former Whitney on Madison, Ave, the structure cannot be more then what it is; a bunker-like fortification with the subtlety of clenched concrete fist. To believe this thudding expression was designed with democracy in mind is pure rubbish. To insert this in a stately neighborhood merely smacks of egoism and is hardly heroic.
@@LUIS-ox1bv Define democracy because you seem to have a Disney-esque version of it in mind. Architecture like brutalism which lacks ornamentation certainly seems more egalitarian on the surface and is something that could be replicated more easily as it doesn't require specially sourced components. Not that I think the style is ideal, it's good for a novelty.
Great video. Although sometimes I had hard times understanding some of his words . Requesting to properly mic the presenter. EDIT : I turned subs on and found that hes not finishing pronouncing whole words. eg. at 6.17 it says "particularly" in subs, but hes not saying that.
This series made me appreciate New York a lot recently. Its so densely packed with so much great architecture. I think in general most american cities are overrated compared to european cities (from an urban planning perspective), but New York is overall a world class city
USA in 4 every single time
The Upper East Side is the highest population density neighborhood in the USA, so it truly exemplifies what you said.
"most American cities are overrated compared to European cities" Who in the world is rating American cities over European cities?? 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@colors6692 their is plenty of us
Only proper city in the US. The rest look like strip malls.
These videos are just utterly brilliantly high quality. Nick Potts does a great job of taking potentially dry information and making it so approachable and fun to learn. Thank you for putting these on
This is the kind of content i wish i had when i was still in architecture school. This series really refreshed my knowledge with history of architecture. I hope AD would also do a Walking tour to other locations, like Chicago , Barcelona, Singapore, etc.
Yes!
i would like to see 43rd street where tony randall use to live eastside
manhatten
These walking tours are terrific. I appreciate the historical context and architectural details that Nick Potts presents in a way that is interesting to non architects. Please do more!
Very, very, very informative. And to get a real architect, that's historically knowledgeable about the buildings is super dope👌🏾🙏🏾
Exactly, he explained everything greatly and with poise too. The other architects are all by like "the demarque walling is really neet.........are next building is-"
I am enjoying this AD series. There is artistic detail on seemingly insignificant buildings in NYC, also. The city is magic when you look up.
Adding the black and white photos from that time gives an extra dimension to these buildings
Yes, I loved the soft but crisp contrast of the photographs with no doubt a more lit up sky on that day.
I love this series, hope you do one for the Upper West Side.
same!! there are so many great buildings here. as a lifelong uws resident, that would be a dream come true 😌
This is such a fun idea! Loved this video.
thank you. really enjoy this content and getting to learn more about NYC architecture. also I really liked hearing about the history of the former Whitney museum as I'd always wanted to visit there
Nick Potts did a great job, very interesting and enlightening!
I'm a fairly new Long Islander moving here from the mid-west 2 years ago. I love this city for the diversity and the architecture shows it. Chicago has some but not on this scale. Thank you for the tour!
Thank you!!
That was fascinating!! I could have listen to this for 3 hours!!
Can't wait to see the next one!
What a great walking tour. Love learning about all the different styles in New York. Thanks so much.
This series with architect Nick and the one with architects Michael and Meredith where they talk about architecture in movies are my favourites
Would love to see you do the UWS! Lincoln Center, the Paterno, the San Remo, the Belnord, the Ansonia/Dorilton, brownstones in the West 70s. There are so many great places to choose from!
Great tour of the Upper East Side. I particularly like Rosario Candela's glamourous and elegant co-ops which for me are the epitome of Art Deco style and class and a defining characteristic of NYC.
I've walked to the Met hundreds of times and you can always see something new on the way just like inside. NY will always be my city
Really enjoyed this video!
After my visit to the Met on my first trip to NYC, in 2017, I walked by a few of these buildings... including the Ukrainian Institute, where I came upon a group of Ukrainian students celebrating a sporting event! Very fun students.
Loved the Cook block of townhouses!
The level of architectural detailing on all these buildings is amazing... I started to notice faces, animals, shields and quotes carved into stone. Overwhelming!
I want to go back, and take more time walking these streets and breathe it all in... 🤗
post videos like this more often.
Loved the idea🤘🏻
Loved this video. Rockefeller centre is arguably the most beautiful part of New York. Classic 30s architecture 🤌🏽
I love watching these walking tours. I lived in New York for 15 years and often wished I knew more about the architecture
When I saw Nick Potts on the thumbnail, I LIT-erally said "YES!" out loud because it meant a new NYC Walking Tour video. This series could go on forever and I'd watch every single one.
Hello Nick i am from Singapore i am 40 years old. Wow! Thank u so much for your effort of showing and telling us the history of each building. Honestly i never been to New York but at least i have some knowledge about the building in New York
Whenever you do get to New York please know it's the perfect walking city with an almost unending amount of architectural treasures to see. Fortunately there are so many books available you can easily give yourself a university-level education on the history and development of the city's myriad of architectural styles!
@@johnscanlan9335 Hello John thank u so much for telling me i really appreciate it. I am just wondering are u a New Yorker?.
@@noorimeldaelle3403 I was born and lived much of my life there. But now I live out west in Las Vegas, Nevada. I like the weather out here much better. New York winters can be extremely cold!
@@johnscanlan9335 Hello John ok good to know that 👍 is another important piece of information. Thank u for telling me i really appreciate it. U are so kind.
Architecturally, New York City is head and shoulders above every other city in the U.S. (including Chicago and S.F.)..... It's just that the city is so densely packed and there is so much going on that much is overlooked.... People just walk by and fail to notice. It's great that A.D. is able to really point out what there is to see....at a walker's pace. I've always felt that the Upper East Side is architecturally stunning.
New York has an incredible wealth of great architecture which is indeed overlooked by many due to the city's density of structures. The buildings are not neatly arrayed on uniform blocks set on an endless grid, like Chicago. The blocks in Manhattan, especially north of 14th and west of 5th, are longer, hence they are packed with numerous structures of varying height and composition. One can easily trace and see the history of modern skyscraper construction in Chicago's Loop because the the historic buildings are contained within a small area comprised of a few square blocks, which is easily walkable, and they are not compressed, nor overwhelmed by neighboring structures. One can stand on the north end of the Michigan Ave. Bridge and be rewarded with a beatiful sweeping view of the Loop, the Chicago River, Lake Michigan, and North Michigan Ave. Panoramic urban views of this nature are difficult to come by in Manhattan, unless one views it from another state, like NJ, or another borough. NYC presents a much complex situation due to its topographical setting, and it's historic development. Chicago presents a neater, tidier urban appearance then NYC, but cannot match the the fantastic richness and variety of architectural styles and treatments one encounters in the Big Apple.
I really hope this series to be extended into multiple cities when finished NYC.
Paris next please
i loved how potts narrated this tour. so much information to digest.
great video! Nicholas makes it so available and understanding. Thank you!
I really appreciate these kinds of episodes. i would love to see something about historical skyscrapers...
Amazing video, I'm going on Dec 1st to NYC for the first time since the pandemic and I'm so ready to soap up all the architecture so thank you for this. 🥰
Such an interesting series. Love it! 🙂🇬🇧
Nick Potts did a great job, very interesting and enlightening!. Nick Potts did a great job, very interesting and enlightening!.
i could listen to this guy talk all day
the horizontal lines for the Whitney really do enhance and help the building fit in it's location - thanks for pointing that out!
Excellent, excellent host.
Ooh shoot, our angel Nick Potts is back!!!
I love these videos- so great to hear in-depth information about the city.
Amazing! I love your vids and just moved to UES so enjoying greatly!
I love this guy 🥰. Cute and pleasant to listen. More please.
Appreciate your knowledge Nick Potts!
I just finished the first season of the Gilded Age, love your content so much. Maybe we can dedicate an ep comparing architecture between New Yok old / new money
I used to live on 83rd between 1st and 2nd. I love it there. The buildings and designs are so beautiful with their own stories. Pictures and videos don't do justice.
everything in this video is so incredibly gorgeous
What a blessed time to be an architect. It's all about circumstances.
Read, Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell.
Great video. Incredible knowledge you have.
Great architecture....thanks for showing it happy christmes
I like to watch the architecture 😊
Thank you for sharing your walk there in New York. So nice be there in the Upper East Side..
Loves this video so much. Learned a lot because he was interesting!
love learning about american architecture! very fascinating
Love NYC
I lived in the ues for nearly a decade! It's the best!
I’m surprised you didn’t include the Guggenheim! It’s in the Upper East Side too.
Variety of architecture, variety of people
They are some large lavishing building
(5:48) "...tower in the center which didn't survive..." True story from the 24th edition of the Seventh Regiment Gazette dated December 1909: Charles Clinton was the architect who designed that building (constructed in 1880) and he was a member of the Seventh Regiment. He died in 1910 and the tower (belfry) was removed within weeks of his death in 1911 to make the facade "considerably more important than heretofore".
Our neighborhood. We live on 72nd and 1st. Would never live anywhere else in Manhattan. We love the neighborhood. Close to everything and quiet at night.🎉
Thanksssss i am in New York right now and your vidéo is very very interesting ! Thankssss
I live at 85/5 and learned a lot about the buildings in my neighborhood. I will have to pay more attention when I am out and about. The only fact I did know was about MET.
Hope to visit new York one day ~
Love it!! Will you do one for the UWS as well? 😊
The first house showed is where they film the movie cruel intentions 2
i truly love living on the ues!
Would love to see one of these videos for a neighborhood that isn’t historically a center of wealth
More like this, please.
Great video. Please make more.
Having enjoyed years of being NYC residents we've moved to greener pastures. We really enjoy the NYC explorations. May we suggest a review of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine. During a recent visit to enjoy a Holiday Mass, all we could think of was, "What happened to all the grandiose renovation plans?" What did the decades of scaffolding and stone mason apprenticeships produce? Will we ever see the Grand Organ return?
My dream neighborhood 😍
I live here and it's kind of boring...
Really cool video - well done! 👏
These walking tours are great. Thanks! FYI, the word is "deteriorate."
More Nick Potts!
Methinks that AD hath contributed to knowledge, culture and sophistication.
On RUclips no less.
👍🎩🌂🇨🇦
This interesting video brought to mind the movie "The Anderson Tapes", an entertaining bitter-sweet caper-comedy directed by Sidney Lumet from 1971, starring Sean Connery. It is about the burglary of the Italianate palazzo on 1 East 91st Street on 5th Avenue, which is today the Convent of the Sacred Heart. A lot of really great on loction shots.
The Whitney Museum was designed by Hungarian born architect Marcel Breuer (1902-1981).
Thank you
The upper east side can be attributed to many places, at first I was thinking Harlem, but it was just the area where I like to call the “Consulate District”, where a lot of consulates and diplomatic sovereign nations offices come and work. Any consulate district is generally pretty exquisite, and New York is no exception to that.
This is really aswome
Love this
A brilliant overview of the Lower-West-Upper-East-Side! To be fair, the other 3/4 of the neighborhood doesn't fit the brand as well.
Barely a wasted word. Superb economy of expression. Seems to speak from memory, not notes. Subscribed just to double down on my approval!
Hello my friend❤😍
Thanks for sharing beautiful videos🥰🙏💯
be successful and victorious❤❤❤❤❤👍👍👍🌺🌺🌺☺💯
Mr Potts misspoke: The Duke Mansion (now housing NYU's Institute of Fine Arts) is Louis 16th in style, not 15th.
Amazing 👍
I never knew the top of the MET was unfinished. I always thought the blocks up there were evoking Egyptian structures like the pyramids, blending into the Greek and Roman inspired columns.
V nice
Interesting video.
Something I never quite understood is the border between Upper East Side & Harlem.
Seems so odd that there is this fancy neighbourhood and on the other side of the street there is a... not so fancy neighbourhood.
welcome to NYC! Same could be said of downtown Brooklyn areas like Willamsburg, Park Slope next to Flatbush and Bed-Sty
96th St is generally considered the border between the Upper East Side and East Harlem, but luxury development has crept north of 96th. I was lucky enough to live for a year in a new upscale apartment building a couple of blocks north of 96th. There was a housing project directly across the street from us (never had any problems and it was kind of cool to have such a mix of income levels).
@@ThreeRunHomer So its just a normal street? Below 96th there was luxury and north of 96th there was poverty? And none of it crept over the boundary?
@@christianwestling2019 There was never a hard dividing line between rich and poor. In the video he explained how Park Avenue is rich now but was poor before Park Avenue was built over top of the railroad tracks.
@@ThreeRunHomer Yes, but this was well before the area was built up?
Does anyone know the brand of shirt Potts is wearing? Love it!
That QWOP walk 😂
Love these videos! Has he done Chelsea/Meatpacking yet?
5:46 “[The Park Avenue Armory] is missing its central tower. Originally, it had a much taller tower in the center which didn’t survive.”
What happened to it? Towers don’t simply disappear, as far as I know.
Great tour! I wonder what would be the purpose of those tall roofline walls as seen in the last two buildings? 🤔
Very interesting and well done!
Many architects and historians do a great disservice in perpetuating the myth that Brutalism (as embodied in the example of the Whitney Museum) is aggressive or brutal on the viewer/dweller because they think that coined name for the style comes from Brutal. This isn’t so. The coinage of Brutalism comes from the French term “Beton Brut” meaning raw concrete. This movement sought to be more democratic than the loftier, more refined predecessors in urban or civic architecture. Many now prefer to call this architecture “Heroic.”
No, "brutal, " aptly fits the look. Live in Manhattan, and as often as I have walked by the former Whitney on Madison, Ave, the structure cannot be more then what it is; a bunker-like fortification with the subtlety of clenched concrete fist. To believe this thudding expression was designed with democracy in mind is pure rubbish. To insert this in a stately neighborhood merely smacks of egoism and is hardly heroic.
@@LUIS-ox1bv Define democracy because you seem to have a Disney-esque version of it in mind. Architecture like brutalism which lacks ornamentation certainly seems more egalitarian on the surface and is something that could be replicated more easily as it doesn't require specially sourced components. Not that I think the style is ideal, it's good for a novelty.
I'm fairly certain that the Ukrainian institute was used as the exterior for the Valmont mansion in the 1999 film Cruel Intentions.
More Nick Potts
fascinating..educational. Check out the CORRECT pronunciation of Jacobean
Fascinating
Oh so the government is just going to take the nicest building in this video. I like imthe clay like red color and window placement.
I am not sure what the antonym of sublime is but in architectural terms it must be The Frick Museum.
Great video. Although sometimes I had hard times understanding some of his words . Requesting to properly mic the presenter.
EDIT : I turned subs on and found that hes not finishing pronouncing whole words. eg. at 6.17 it says "particularly" in subs, but hes not saying that.
I thought this was Mad Men Joh Hamm when I saw the thumbnail