give it up kid; unless you have the money to pay for the labor and materials, own the developer, and own the land. as an intern your gonna learn why we mainly build glass boxes. not to be mean but id rather not have you experience the disappointment of the industry as I did. here in NY developers are brutal monsters. they only way i see those styles come back is through legislation. a possible scenario could be property tax reductions to buildings that employed craftsmens, the more elaborate/ornate the building is the more property tax reductions for the landlord.
I would suggest creating more detail and artistry into modern buildings in a way that is fresh. These buildings were always for the most wealthy. But we don’t have to recreate the past. Do something new that represents today in a beautiful, crafted way.
I wish the demographics holding on to such properties would open them up for video viewing. Not even in-person estate tours. I don’t trust all people to value what they see and not cause costly or irreversible damage. I just want to see them on high-quality video! Edit: A heritage company that filmed them for historical and public record. Paid for privately by the demographics in ownership - or the taxpayer.
@@Jellytimehello that is truly an amazing idea. I know that Architectural Digest does short, celebrity home tours but it would be super if a non-profit like PBS would some up with historical tours. They'd actually be the ones in the best position to do that. It would be like a two-fer, because you would get a history lesson along with the tour.
I’m an architect from Germany in heritage conservation, so i renovate these old houses, because it is Europe, Houses from the 19th century are relatively new… but yeah they stand out in there detail and i always also asked myself why we don’t built like this any more too. After 5 years of university and 4 years of renovating these types of buildings, my explanation is that labour back than was very cheap, so even poorer people could afford to paint there ceiling and walls beautifully every 5-10 years. Renovating today just a painted ceiling alone costs what a new car would cost, because the labour cost of a such skilled painter is so huge. But back then if you were rich, you wanted to show that and so they went all in with the details and expensive surfaces to stand out… and especially because of the industrial revolution and many rich factory owners there are a fairly new social class who wants to be seen as noble, so they design there houses like palaces and castles of historical times… when you visit a castle from 17th century in Europe they look in the inside often like these 19th and the start of the 20th century buildings.
@@tomknox7425 in Germany slaves wasn’t a thing… normal craftsmen just were paid poorly… like every employee of the workforce… doesn’t really matter if you were a painter or a worker in the factory… from these times came also our social programs in Germany like public healthcare and accident insurance and pension insurance for every member of the workforce because the Authority especially in person of Otto von Bismarck feared a revolution to destroy the monarchy… so they gave the workforce a few of the demands to calm them down…
and to assume slaves were capable of DEEPLY detailed artisanal work is another psyop by MSM pushed upon us. Slavery has existed in every civilization for all of mankind.
either way it all comes down to money and this makes sense in the saddest way possible. my possible explanation was just it was becoming a lost art like some forms of tile making.... and the loss of so many craftsmen cause noone wants to do it anymore (which also kinda comes down to money in away)
@@erikvanconover Some slaves WERE capable of detailed artisanal work. Some of them were craftsmen bringing along some of their craft from West Africa. Some also picked up skills when they were given the opportunity and became sought very skilled craftsmen sought for their artistry. It doesn't mean that all slaves or even most slaves were highly skilled artisans but there are definitely some well documented cases.
My grandmother live in an “apartment” which was the first floor of a mansion built in 1878. The original safe was in her kitchen. She used it as a pantry! This house is absolutely gorgeous. Thank you for sharing.
Please continue with this Landmark Building series. People have to be shown these beautiful buildings by someone who cares before they are gone. Thank you,Erik.
Modern buildings keep out rats. As beautiful as this building is, it’s absolutely rat infested. I’ve lived in NYC all my life in an apartment built in 1900. I had alot of the same kind of design and crown molding. But we had to leave coz mice infestation. I didn’t see rats but I’m sure they were around. Give me modern with technology any day . This place is nice to visit but not to live in. Aside for the rats, it would be very expensive to heat and cool. Even my old NYC apt had steam heat. I loved it, but it got too hot.
@@Puddycat00 that doesent make any sense, ive lived in a 2000 modern house and now i live in a late 1700 house, just saying i always had mice in the newer building, but never seen one in the older
No one really lost this… like 0.0000001% of people experienced that type of house ever. So you would not experience it today even if it exists… oh and it does… its in million dollar penthouses etc.
I renovate historic buildings for a living all over North America (30yrs now). We preserve and replace what we call “like for like” nothing changes. Same aged wood, same fixtures… it feels good to preserve living history. It’s very expensive these days, but there is a huge passion for preservation.
I have a home in a historical district that still has all the original interior. Would you mind providing me your business name. My home needs restoration and its hard to find people that are educated or have the experience for the job.
Greetings. I, too, would like to have your contact information. I will soon start the remodeling of a rural property, which includes an 1880s hand hewn walnut post and beam frame. Could you please message your information privately? Thank you very much.
THEN you must be rich...cause it costs a fortune and many years to renovate a home like this...at least 3 years maybe more 15 million dollars would be cheap
I live in a home of this age, and yes it’s beautiful, but they are expensive to repair and upkeep, every trade adds 50% immediately, so while it’s lovely to live in it and be it’s custodian, they aren’t easy to live in. They are hard to heat, the rooms are ginormous, and the windows aren’t double glazed. The floor boards creak, the ceilings are so high the ladder to change the bulb is so huge. Hanging pictures and mirrors requires professional. It’s a commitment to take care of these old homes, but at the same time a privilege.
I grew up in an “old” farm house, circa early 1900’s. All of the children’s bedrooms were on the second floor. You couldn’t sneak down to the kitchen for a cookie because the stairs creaked 🤣 As an adult living in a 1950’s bungalow with it’s share of charm, I miss the old house 🥰
As the German architect noted of why homes like these aren't built anymore, it's the cost of labor and good luck finding a craftsman with these extraordinary skills.
lol, yeah, ya think! Pretty sure there is a very small amount of folks who can build and upkeep such a place, which might be a clue as to why many of them are in disrepair, and are abandoned.
Supply and demand in labor, industrial gains (automated stuff vs. hand made). A huge generational gap in productivity, fine motor skills being left to turn to dust, and attention spans all shortening. Plus world wars that cause weird economic fallout.
For being someone who regularly explores the most decadent and expensive modern/luxury homes, I have a new found respect for you after seeing your genuine love and appreciation for a historic building like this that is rustic and has a patina to it. THIS is the type of property I get excited about. The mysteries of what has taken place in that building over the past century, the historical moments that it lived through, it truly is something special. I bet even the smell in that building is something unique.
Couldn't deny the calling to my soul any longer. That chateau in Normandy took me down a historical rabbit hole and opened my eyes. Glad you enjoyed - more to come
Cost of skilled labor - if even available - as well as market are two reasons they don't build houses like this. New construction is not generally built for the high society occupant owners with stratospheric incomes. Builders are trying to build what sells and is in demand. Enough high end old houses from The Guilded Age are available for the wealthy who care to own.
@@jgrmtnjgrmtn3954 Precisely this. Only a tiny percentage of society back then lived in extraordinary houses like that because they were insanely expensive to build. The majority of homes that ordinary people lived in back then no longer exist because they were of such poor quality they haven't lasted. It gets a bit tedious when people complain about modern buildings nowadays. I bet those same people would complain if they didn't have an indoor toilet or hot running water ( many, many people had neither of those well into the 1980s in my part of Western Europe).
I agree with the scent comment, I can only imagine what it smells like on the top levels. I love experiencing old houses for that, and I would 100% buy this place if I were able to.
I love how organic this video is. With all the conversations with security guard at the end to all the surprising uncut moments. Thanks for keeping it natural. Loved it.
I agree with you on the lack of beauty in architecture today. It’s just sad that only the rich can afford it. That’s why places like Penn Station, etc. were so appreciated. Anyone could enjoy it.
It's a small thing, but I appreciate how you have the floor plan and highlight each room that you visit. It helps me understand the layout of the townhouse very well!
In the UK we have laws that protect the interior as well as the exterior of historic properties. It’s horrifying to think that in New York, this gorgeous interior could be destroyed by a purchaser. What an amazing video! I hope the house gets the loving owner it deserves.
I live in Philadelphia and we have a lot of 18th & early 19th century buildings that have been beautifully restored. I knew a couple who bought one of these houses in the 1960’s for next to nothing.they spent years restoring not only the exterior but also the interior. When it was finally finished it was a gem! When they passed away the house was sold to people from New York who immediately gutted the whole thing to create an “Open Plan!”
@spaceoperastories3118 This Brit-American/Anglophile from Yankee New England says more Americans should join and support the National Trust for Historic Preservation in Washington D.C.! I studied art in Europe and found the architecture fascinating! Europeans have more pride in their past and esp. in the UK! Couldn't believe on a video on RUclips the tour of Henry the 8th's kitchen which is still in use today! When you make a film, you Brits don't have to build sets, though you do, you also already have many buildings and things saved from your historic past...bravo!!
@@littlelettuce1215 I don't think a house, grounds, and amusement park built in the '80s has much historical significance other than to his fans. Jackson only lived there for 7 years and it was foreclosed on.
I went to school in a 1915 mansion that was built for $15 million. Marble from different parts of the world, massive rooms with one tree, etc. This house has many of the same features. Beautiful!
I love this home. I am a big fan of all things antique and historical. This home is beautiful. I hope whomever buys his place keeps it as close to the original fixtures as possible. Love all the details and craftmanship in this home. I don't think builders want to build like this anymore, takes to much time and effort. Everything now is a quick flip.
I really appreciate Eric's obvious love for this old building and also that he doesn't condescend to his audience; he's just enthusiastic to share what he does or does not know.
We’ve lost so much incredible gilded age historical architecture, it’s so wonderful to see a structure so beautifully preserved and I hope it stays that way. I agree though on wishing to be able to go back and peak into life as it was.
BRO I FEEL THIS MESSAGE!!!! I love studying the gilded age where people built beautiful homes just because they freaking could. Bring it back! to last!
Here in the UK I'm used to seeing period houses full of detail and history. I absolutely love your enthusiasm and genuine appreciation for this building. Its how I feel. I so hate modern buildings and building materials. Old houses seem to whisper to us and slowly want to reveal their secrets.
A passion I share. I try to appreciate modernism and will allow that there are many modernist gems. But they will never touch the heart or satisfy the senses like the intricate, lovely classical, neo-classical, Mediterranean, Spanish, and Islamic architecture of the past. Before modernism, architects and their clients built for posterity, not for a depreciation schedule or a passing fad.
Guess what, the average person in New York City lived in a small coldwater apartment with a shared toilet in the hallway. Many did not have bathtubs so people would go to a bathhouse once a week or two. This is why apartments often had the bathtub later put in the kitchen where the water and stove to heat it or hot water was. They were common 50 years ago but probably few still exist.
So glad you are doing this series. I love old world buildings. We need to preserve them. What a fabulous building. I wonder if there are any craftsmen capable of this type of work. Please do more
I mistakenly posted this meant for a different video. Regardless, youll be older someday, plus assuming im jealous! Get over yourself dear. @angelinaduganNy
This comment section renews my faith in humanity. I have been an enthusiast of Gilded Age for 20 years, and the houses (astonishingly few of which remain, relative to the time) are a major character in the story. It's a fascinating era of American history that has been largely overlooked for the last several decades, particularly by younger generations -- but more recently, I see more people taking an interest in the era, and that makes me happy, because there is so much to learn from it.
18:08 No, not just "ornate wallpaper"...... very possibly _hand PAINTED_ ornate wallpaper. PS: Thanks ever so much to Erik Van Conover and airalo for the opportunity to tour such a beautiful piece of history.
One room looked like it had silk brocade stretched like the canvas for a painting. It was usually a half an inch from the actual wall which makes it really absorb sound. An empty room like that is oddly echo free.
I grew up with an appreciation for old homes that was well beyond my years. I just adore them. Not only do older homes have character and many beautiful touches, they are a work of art. A work of art that was built to last forever. The best part is to be able to be a part of a home that holds history and love within it's walls. My biggest gripe is someone will take a place like this and destroy it while restoring it. It is a crime to take all the character out of an old home with a new renovation. My husband and I have renovated a New England 1802 Cape and now we have a Southern 1901 farm house we are working on. There is a misguided idea that if you buy an old house you are buying lots of problems and a new house will not have problems. Not true. I am a designer and I can tell you that you can build beautifully but it does take creativity and sourcing from all kinds of places. An exquisite place like this deserves to be gently preserved and loved.
What a great idea to show us buildings like this, Erik! And I am so glad that you mentioned the the "soul-sucking" nature of modern architecture. It's the elephant in the room that so many of us have noticed but that few people in your profession have ever mentioned.
MASSIVE ELEPHANT. Don't even get me started on 'Modern Art' give me Caravaggio any day over some prick splashing paint on canvas so his Billionaire buddies can hide more money via the art.
I'd rather pay $50 million for this house than any new garbage we have today. This place truly is an exquisite masterpiece!!! ❤ Thanks for the lovely tour, Sir!
This house is absolutely gorgeous! That wallpaper… other channels painstakingly recreate these wallpapers… this is here original! And the millwork… could live here just exactly as it is!
I couldn't agree with you more. It's sad to compare modern architecture to buildings from 100+ years ago. There are beautiful old homes all over the country in dire need of restoration.
I am an architect. When attending the University of Oregon, they trashed anything historic and promoted modernism and minimalism. I see the truth as complete lack of design skill and lack of talent in builders. I have always been passionate about historic architecture and was typically criticized for it.
Woodcarving of this caliber is available in asia today. Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Korea all have craftsmen capable of this level of detail and precision, although this is very different from their usual style.
There are Woodcarvers who are capable of this level of craftsmanship found all across the globe, not just Asia. People didn't forget how to do this style of work, their rates just went up. Back in the day you could hire a team of 20 expert woodcarvers for just dollars. Today hiring a team of carvers to do that kind of work would cost almost as much as the house itself, so its not worth it.
I never get bored with viewing old houses. Please do more of these.....any home before the 1980s is worth looking at but the older the better. We Americans consider a house built in 1960 as old when the British are buying and living in homes built in the 1600's ....and even earlier. I wish I had an extra 50 million to buy this beautiful building and another 25 million to rehab and furnish it. I hope whoever buys it will treat it like a precious gemstone and leave all the original woodwork, glass and sconces alone.
I deeply appreciate this tour! I share your love and appreciation for architecture such as this. I too get emotional when buildings, especially homes, are in need of TLC. I believe you are an empath. Thank you for sharing! Blessings of love and light to all!
In a previous life I must have been a craftsman. I love, love, LOVE all the millwork. Like you, I would love to travel back to it's hey day - fully decorated; no tall buildings nearby...can you imagine the dinner parties?....Life being lived in that gorgeous mansion.....
1000% yes, do more tours like this one!! I absolutely love old, European style detailing like this. It's a perfect balance elegant detail without being too visually busy. Many of the walls don't even need art, because the walls ARE the art! If I one day get the money to build a fully custom home, it would definitely have a ton of ornate detailing down to this level, with the help of modern CNC machine if course 😅
I live in a log home in N ID woods. I think log homes is one type of building material that we have continued to keep beautiful architecture. The way the builder integrated logs and hardwoods into our home is so beautiful. I’m grateful it’s not grey and white.
I also live in Northern Idaho but I have a newly built custom home but nowhere near what they did back then. I'd love to have all the details, the wood, marble etc. Nobody does that type of work anymore.
There's a neat YT channel called, "This House" that shows a lot of old homes. Most were demolished and the few survivors have been remodeled. This is a true treasure!
This house has a soul. You can feel it from the grand entry right down to what used to be the kitchen. Nothing ever really leaves a home like this. This one at least has mostly good "vibes". I've been in historic structures that made me want to leave the minute I crossed the threshold, but this one is welcoming. Good job, Erik.
@michaelmoran4157 Maybe some of those historic structures were haunted? A great many are here in old Yankee New England like my late grandmother's house built in 1776 on Cape Cod and New Hope, and Gettysburg, PA are known to be haunted! Historic Williamsburg, VA is another wonderful historic place to visit, don't know of any ghosts there, though! lol
@@brendadrew834 I've had experiences in old structures. A few times, while on a tour, the house would grab me. Someone who is really into this stuff advised me to be very cautious when venturing into old homes. This one has vibes that come through, but they're very positive. It's a good house.
@@michaelmoran4157 Good or bad vibes, spirits often like to visit where they once lived, it's still home to them after they go back to their spiritual home! I had a really scary experience once when my husband's family were trying to sell their fairly new home in Yonkers, NY! At four in the morning a very loud crashing sound came from over head in the attic! Sounded like someone locked in a glass closet trying to punch their way out! Terrifying, we ran out of the house, called the police, they went up into the crawl space and couldn't find anything! Seemed like whatever spirit or energy that was up there didn't want the family to leave? Another time, an old radio in the kitchen that was broken and hadn't been turned on for years, suddenly went off real loud! You never know what you'll encounter in homes, new or old! Love old antique houses with good vibes!
I too have a great love of mid to late 19th century architecture. My great grandparents had a home with many of these architectural features - mahogany staircases, heavy pocket doors, stained glass high windows for light and beauty, marble fireplace. He was a cabinet maker who immigrated from Austria-Hungary. So heartbroken that the family had to sell. The neighborhood around the family home deteriorated. No one wanted to live there due to crime.
I am an old lady born and raised in Florida. I have never seen anything like this building and in remarkable condition. Thank you for sharing and look forward to more of your adventures.
I have been enamored by the gilded age for along time. Thank you for the tour and sharing your passion for old homes. I felt like I was there beside you sharing the moment. I was raised in SE PA where there is a plethora of colonial homes and mansions. I learned to love them as they always peaked my curiosity and sparked my imagination of what life would have been like. So much history lives in my heart and soul.
I wouldn't be surprised if that Sky light was designed by Tiffanys! Don't forget that servants' quarters were in the attic, and they had to be on constant call for their employers.
I'm maintenance for listed buildings and churches. Climbing the bell tower to find graffiti/tags from 100s of years ago of pass maintainers always makes me smile. The public will never see them so I added my own
This was such an amazing video I feel that I was born in the gilded age back in the 1800s myself. Please do more videos like this of these beautiful mansions from the gilded age
A group of buildings in Manhattan that are worth a video about grand buildings is Tudor City. They were built as apartments for middle class office workers, with the first building erected in the 1920s. They are landmarked and the exteriors are beautiful. I have had the pleasure of visiting Tudor City several times because my child bought a condo at 45 Tudor City Place, Prospect Tower, the first building constructed. Though the interiors, except the lobbies, aren’t very grand, Tudor City is a hidden jewel in NYC. Love your videos!
@@brendadrew834 Thanks for letting me know about the RUclips videos, I’ll do a search for them. ❤️ Tudor City is such a great story for many reasons, but the thing I love the most about them, is the fact they were built for the middle class, not the filthy rich. People who work hard for a moderate income deserves to live in beautiful buildings too. A lovely park, built for the residents, is across from my child’s building, and it’s also landmarked.
Two months ago we moved into a house built in 1920 in Cumberland, Maryland. We love the old woodwork around the stairs and doorways. The stair rails are carved and absolutely beautiful and what caused us to fall in love with this house. A lot of the original features have been lost, but we still have two sets of pocket doors - they need major repairs and probably won't be used - but we love the age and character of our old house.
This video makes me want to change my career. I must have an old soul because this building kept giving me goosebumps. THANK YOU for the tour. Hope you’re invited to showcase more of these landmark properties around NYC, and around the country.
I love that you are an old soul and appreciate the beautiful things of life. Hoping this beauty will be maintained and brought back to its former glory.
Another contributing factor as to why we don't build like that anymore is that back then, the cost of labor was far cheaper than the cost of the materials.
Good labor was never cheap. However, Victorian-era trim was incredibly cheap, relative to pre-industrial times. This is mostly factory-produced trim that was installed, not handcrafted woodwork. Suppliers and contractors, got lazier and greedier after they put artisans out of business, while architects became egomaniacs and ditched the old ways for their own "style," and that's why we're stuck in Uglyville now.
Definitely more of this! There is so much from before the Gilded age too that has incredible artisan work. Alexandria, Virginia, Annapolis, Maryland, Boston. I look forward to seeing more of these videos
So glad I came across your video. I am in the midst of writing an historical novel that includes the late 19th to early 20th century New York architectural descriptions. Thank you so much for making my job on this so much easier to possibly include specific aspects of this mansion.
All the curves, flourishes, gold filigree, leaded glass etc are to provide a richness that truly represents the Gilded Age. Stanford White the architect was a genius at blending all these elements. The energy of these materials when orchestrated in such a fashion is embracing and comforting. I love it ~ thank you so much for your expressive appreciation of this Landmark . I go to Egypt and the experience is similar inside the great temples, pyramids, and tombs. Great Work!
Greetings from Paris and looking forward to this! I wouldn't not mind, if you could also consider exploring mansions in the "rural" New York area, should be plenty of grand jewels...
I absolutely love this as a new series. I'd be thrilled to see you do more, including smaller buildings, all boroughs, and not just residences, but old warehouses, restaurants, buildings built for merchants, and so on.
What a wonderful video! I wonder, like you do - when I see all that beautiful craftsmanship, how long those artists studied their craft and what their life was like. I hope they'd be proud that their work is still being admired and honored today. I'd love to see more videos of this type of building! It's something I'll never be able to see otherwise. Thank you so much - I will go through your library and find more treasures to view. If only walls could talk!!
Yes, fashions change. But it's more complicated than that. As one fashion style fades away, the jobs for those craftspeople are also eliminated, so people move on to other jobs and obtain other skills. The mass produced goods from that fashion style also go away. More items are mass produced than most people think. Millwork catalogs with ornate newels and balusters, hardware catalogs with ornate doorknobs, vent covers and fixtures, terracotta catalogs, plaster molding catalogs, door catalogs... etc. All of those change with the fashion too.
Erik, your house tour videos really are the best! I love your relaxed, honest, and friendly approach, devoid of theatrics or fake hyperactivity. Addressing your big question "Why don't we build like this anymore?" -- I would propose that the real reason has nothing to do with labor costs, or availability of trained artisans. I mean, which of us wouldn't rather purchase and find the decorating team that could bring these glorious Gilded Age properties to life, (and there are thousands of firms and workshops that can do exactly that!), instead of those soul crushing, vertigo inducing concrete airplane hangar monstrosities on the Billionaire's Row skyscraper block? All things considered, a property like this is actually LESS expensive than anything at the top of 432 Park Avenue! The real question is not "Why don't we build like they used to anymore?" but "Why do they keep building ridiculous, ugly skyscraper condo towers that nobody wants to buy?" Would be interested in your response, of course, and can't wait for the next video!
Great great comments. If you go back and see my OLDER home tours you can see how turned off I am by the bland modern builds. The Billionaire Row Sky Scrapers are just so outrageous they pique my interest in their own right but not for the same reasons old world homes do.
I’m from Australia and we don’t have buildings like this here, so, it’s amazing to watch your videos and to have a virtual walk-through. I love your raw presentation approach also.
Thank you so very much!!! Absolutely loved this tour of this historic building. We would love to see more of this content to appreciate the architectural design and extraordinary craftsmanship of days gone by. It inspires our creativity! Yes, it’s old but the old is the foundation of the NEW. Without the old we have no reference. Thank you so very very much!!!!
You should visit the Hallwyl museum in the center of Stockhoolm. Its one of the last private palaces build in the late 1800s. Today its a museum and everything is preserved. lts a time capsule. Come visit!
Beautiful tour. In the US, culturally, we have fallen terribly, and my clients are more interested in how much more square footage they can get with their dollar vs. quality of design or details of any kind.
thats the ethos of this new series. Hit record and let it play out. He scared the shit out of us lol. The agent who let us in said that the building has has breakins just given how close to being abandoned it really is.
@@erikvanconover I bet he did scare you to death 🤣 but John seems like a cool guy we don’t appreciate our maintenance workers and the hard work that they do to keep the buildings running like they should 😊
There’s an architect on RUclips who talks about the new buildings as what is called ‘Globalism’ - the idea/movement that wherever you go in the world you will find uniformity among new architecture. She talks about how it removes individuality of national/regional architecture, which obviously is sad. It removes the idea that there is an Italian/greek/English form. She also talks about the negative side effects upon a population when that happens. Very interesting. DamiLee
The way I see it, to maximize this space, probably the best idea would be to turn it into a boutique hotel so it becomes an income-generating asset while still being able to preserve the design and dignity of the house as well as opening it up for more people to enjoy and marvel at. The income generated can go into further preserving the house AND giving employment to members of the community. That being said, Im not entirely sure how easy it would be to secure permits in New York to change this from residential to commercial, especially since its a preserved landmark, but honestly, I think the effort would be very worth it. Just my two cents
And it would incur devasting changes with rooms converted to "a room' with bathroom so parlors, dining room and all others converted! Then signs and traffic in rooms and we all know everyone is respectful of hotel rooms 🙄 I know people think hotel but I think that's horrible idea, my opinion.
I actually feel gratitude watching this video, because I've seen other vids of yours and I'm so encouraged to see that you care about this building like I do. I'm a New Yorker and for a short time I lived in an 1860s brownstone in Brooklyn, which also hadn't been renovated. (This was back in the early 1990s before everything got ruined in NYC.) Original mantles, decorative plaster ceilings (parts falling down), wide plank floors... it wasn't the house of a rich person but I loved it a lot. Tall windows, high ceiling downstairs. I was an art history student... thank you for bringing us in to see a building that we wouldn't otherwise get to see.
Thank you Erik for this fascination, educational tour of mansions/brownstones I passed by in my years growing up in NYC. I was born in nyc and we lived on East 57th street all my life. Pre war buildings are the most exquisite pieces of NEW YORK HISTORY. They had those vaults for their cash, jewelry, silver. No one trusted the banks. The detail, you point out tells us so much more about the people who lived and built these amazing houses. My husbands family owned a brownstone on East 66th street that used to be the carriage house for his great grandparents. They lived on 5th Ave, in a mansion. The Vanderbilt Whitney mansion. Fascinating life growing up in NYC. Thank you for these tours.
As a 23 y/o intern at an architecture firm, my life goal is to bring classical/gothic/victorian architecture back into the mainstream world
give it up kid; unless you have the money to pay for the labor and materials, own the developer, and own the land. as an intern your gonna learn why we mainly build glass boxes. not to be mean but id rather not have you experience the disappointment of the industry as I did. here in NY developers are brutal monsters. they only way i see those styles come back is through legislation. a possible scenario could be property tax reductions to buildings that employed craftsmens, the more elaborate/ornate the building is the more property tax reductions for the landlord.
I would suggest creating more detail and artistry into modern buildings in a way that is fresh. These buildings were always for the most wealthy. But we don’t have to recreate the past. Do something new that represents today in a beautiful, crafted way.
If I were 22 I would be madly in love with you!
godspeed! 😊
Omg!!!! This man is beyond stunning!!!! I want to put my face next to the arch of his foot!!!!!!!!
finally someone who tours homes with character.. not modern square boxes with no color
I wish the demographics holding on to such properties would open them up for video viewing.
Not even in-person estate tours. I don’t trust all people to value what they see and not cause costly or irreversible damage.
I just want to see them on high-quality video!
Edit: A heritage company that filmed them for historical and public record. Paid for privately by the demographics in ownership - or the taxpayer.
@@Jellytimehello that is truly an amazing idea. I know that Architectural Digest does short, celebrity home tours but it would be super if a non-profit like PBS would some up with historical tours. They'd actually be the ones in the best position to do that. It would be like a two-fer, because you would get a history lesson along with the tour.
@@Kymberlee_W absolutely agree.
I miss PBS being a corner stone and receiving funding.
I miss PBS days so much.
I’m an architect from Germany in heritage conservation, so i renovate these old houses, because it is Europe, Houses from the 19th century are relatively new… but yeah they stand out in there detail and i always also asked myself why we don’t built like this any more too. After 5 years of university and 4 years of renovating these types of buildings, my explanation is that labour back than was very cheap, so even poorer people could afford to paint there ceiling and walls beautifully every 5-10 years. Renovating today just a painted ceiling alone costs what a new car would cost, because the labour cost of a such skilled painter is so huge. But back then if you were rich, you wanted to show that and so they went all in with the details and expensive surfaces to stand out… and especially because of the industrial revolution and many rich factory owners there are a fairly new social class who wants to be seen as noble, so they design there houses like palaces and castles of historical times… when you visit a castle from 17th century in Europe they look in the inside often like these 19th and the start of the 20th century buildings.
we had slaves back then, now we dont
@@tomknox7425 in Germany slaves wasn’t a thing… normal craftsmen just were paid poorly… like every employee of the workforce… doesn’t really matter if you were a painter or a worker in the factory… from these times came also our social programs in Germany like public healthcare and accident insurance and pension insurance for every member of the workforce because the Authority especially in person of Otto von Bismarck feared a revolution to destroy the monarchy… so they gave the workforce a few of the demands to calm them down…
and to assume slaves were capable of DEEPLY detailed artisanal work is another psyop by MSM pushed upon us. Slavery has existed in every civilization for all of mankind.
either way it all comes down to money and this makes sense in the saddest way possible. my possible explanation was just it was becoming a lost art like some forms of tile making.... and the loss of so many craftsmen cause noone wants to do it anymore (which also kinda comes down to money in away)
@@erikvanconover Some slaves WERE capable of detailed artisanal work. Some of them were craftsmen bringing along some of their craft from West Africa. Some also picked up skills when they were given the opportunity and became sought very skilled craftsmen sought for their artistry. It doesn't mean that all slaves or even most slaves were highly skilled artisans but there are definitely some well documented cases.
My grandmother live in an “apartment” which was the first floor of a mansion built in 1878. The original safe was in her kitchen. She used it as a pantry! This house is absolutely gorgeous. Thank you for sharing.
Please continue with this Landmark Building series. People have to be shown these beautiful buildings by someone who cares before they are gone. Thank you,Erik.
People looking around our soulless modern world and are starting to realize what we have lost. More of this series please.
Modern buildings keep out rats. As beautiful as this building is, it’s absolutely rat infested. I’ve lived in NYC all my life in an apartment built in 1900. I had alot of the same kind of design and crown molding. But we had to leave coz mice infestation. I didn’t see rats but I’m sure they were around. Give me modern with technology any day . This place is nice to visit but not to live in. Aside for the rats, it would be very expensive to heat and cool. Even my old NYC apt had steam heat. I loved it, but it got too hot.
@@Puddycat00 My in-law's 10-year-old house was infested with rats too. I believe any building is susceptible to this without care and upkeep.
@@Puddycat00 that doesent make any sense, ive lived in a 2000 modern house and now i live in a late 1700 house, just saying i always had mice in the newer building, but never seen one in the older
And that our world has been run by soulless creatures now for quite some time.
No one really lost this… like 0.0000001% of people experienced that type of house ever. So you would not experience it today even if it exists… oh and it does… its in million dollar penthouses etc.
I renovate historic buildings for a living all over North America (30yrs now). We preserve and replace what we call “like for like” nothing changes. Same aged wood, same fixtures… it feels good to preserve living history. It’s very expensive these days, but there is a huge passion for preservation.
I have a home in a historical district that still has all the original interior. Would you mind providing me your business name. My home needs restoration and its hard to find people that are educated or have the experience for the job.
Whats your business name?
You are doing God’s work! Thank you for keeping these buildings as close to original as possible!
Greetings. I, too, would like to have your contact information. I will soon start the remodeling of a rural property, which includes an 1880s hand hewn walnut post and beam frame. Could you please message your information privately? Thank you very much.
THEN you must be rich...cause it costs a fortune and many years to renovate a home like this...at least 3 years maybe more 15 million dollars would be cheap
As a carpenter, all this gorgeous woodwork makes me smile 😊
I’m not a carpenter, but all that gorgeous woodwork makes me smile too.
Scab
Makes me happy until I see the white gloss paint...that gets me disgusted. The venetian plaster alone is worth the asking price.
Termites: 😀😀
Some millennial will come along and paint it grey...... Probably
I live in a home of this age, and yes it’s beautiful, but they are expensive to repair and upkeep, every trade adds 50% immediately, so while it’s lovely to live in it and be it’s custodian, they aren’t easy to live in. They are hard to heat, the rooms are ginormous, and the windows aren’t double glazed. The floor boards creak, the ceilings are so high the ladder to change the bulb is so huge. Hanging pictures and mirrors requires professional. It’s a commitment to take care of these old homes, but at the same time a privilege.
I grew up in an “old” farm house, circa early 1900’s. All of the children’s bedrooms were on the second floor. You couldn’t sneak down to the kitchen for a cookie because the stairs creaked 🤣 As an adult living in a 1950’s bungalow with it’s share of charm, I miss the old house 🥰
Yes it is.
Yes I agree on everything you said. It hurts my wallet but my heart explodes being here too 😊❤
@@amandalynn9237 absolutely agree
You have a precious Privilege 🙏💞 so br grateful & Thankful 💖🙏
As the German architect noted of why homes like these aren't built anymore, it's the cost of labor and good luck finding a craftsman with these extraordinary skills.
lol, yeah, ya think! Pretty sure there is a very small amount of folks who can build and upkeep such a place, which might be a clue as to why many of them are in disrepair, and are abandoned.
Supply and demand in labor, industrial gains (automated stuff vs. hand made).
A huge generational gap in productivity, fine motor skills being left to turn to dust, and attention spans all shortening. Plus world wars that cause weird economic fallout.
Agreed.
For being someone who regularly explores the most decadent and expensive modern/luxury homes, I have a new found respect for you after seeing your genuine love and appreciation for a historic building like this that is rustic and has a patina to it. THIS is the type of property I get excited about. The mysteries of what has taken place in that building over the past century, the historical moments that it lived through, it truly is something special. I bet even the smell in that building is something unique.
Couldn't deny the calling to my soul any longer. That chateau in Normandy took me down a historical rabbit hole and opened my eyes. Glad you enjoyed - more to come
Cost of skilled labor - if even available - as well as market are two reasons they don't build houses like this. New construction is not generally built for the high society occupant owners with stratospheric incomes. Builders are trying to build what sells and is in demand. Enough high end old houses from The Guilded Age are available for the wealthy who care to own.
@@jgrmtnjgrmtn3954 Precisely this. Only a tiny percentage of society back then lived in extraordinary houses like that because they were insanely expensive to build. The majority of homes that ordinary people lived in back then no longer exist because they were of such poor quality they haven't lasted. It gets a bit tedious when people complain about modern buildings nowadays. I bet those same people would complain if they didn't have an indoor toilet or hot running water ( many, many people had neither of those well into the 1980s in my part of Western Europe).
I agree with the scent comment, I can only imagine what it smells like on the top levels. I love experiencing old houses for that, and I would 100% buy this place if I were able to.
I love how organic this video is. With all the conversations with security guard at the end to all the surprising uncut moments. Thanks for keeping it natural. Loved it.
Been dying to make something like this (still in the genre which I found myself on RUclips) glad you enjoyed.
I agree with you on the lack of beauty in architecture today. It’s just sad that only the rich can afford it. That’s why places like Penn Station, etc. were so appreciated. Anyone could enjoy it.
The destruction of Penn Station was a disgrace. How could anyone look at the beauty and art and tear it down. What a soulless thing to do.
It's a small thing, but I appreciate how you have the floor plan and highlight each room that you visit. It helps me understand the layout of the townhouse very well!
Yes that’s a excellent thing to include, the floor plan adds a lot.
So happy to see an untouched gilded age house! The velvet wallpaper is so beautiful
Well, mostly untouched 😂 And that SKYLIGHT
Love exploring older buildings, can't wait to see more Landmarked stories.
Glad you like them!
In the UK we have laws that protect the interior as well as the exterior of historic properties. It’s horrifying to think that in New York, this gorgeous interior could be destroyed by a purchaser.
What an amazing video! I hope the house gets the loving owner it deserves.
I live in Philadelphia and we have a lot of 18th & early 19th century buildings that have been beautifully restored. I knew a couple who bought one of these houses in the 1960’s for next to nothing.they spent years restoring not only the exterior but also the interior. When it was finally finished it was a gem! When they passed away the house was sold to people from New York who immediately gutted the whole thing to create an “Open Plan!”
@spaceoperastories3118 This Brit-American/Anglophile from Yankee New England says more Americans should join and support the National Trust for Historic Preservation in Washington D.C.! I studied art in Europe and found the architecture fascinating! Europeans have more pride in their past and esp. in the UK! Couldn't believe on a video on RUclips the tour of Henry the 8th's kitchen which is still in use today! When you make a film, you Brits don't have to build sets, though you do, you also already have many buildings and things saved from your historic past...bravo!!
It made me sick to think Michael Jackson’s home was completely renovated along with Neverland being nonexistent now😭
@@tomterrific4377How sad. All that love and beauty they put into it to not be appreciated.
@@littlelettuce1215 I don't think a house, grounds, and amusement park built in the '80s has much historical significance other than to his fans. Jackson only lived there for 7 years and it was foreclosed on.
I went to school in a 1915 mansion that was built for $15 million. Marble from different parts of the world, massive rooms with one tree, etc. This house has many of the same features. Beautiful!
Love the emotion you put into this video. Hope this reaches the perfect owner who can preserve it. More in this series!
I love this home. I am a big fan of all things antique and historical. This home is beautiful. I hope whomever buys his place keeps it as close to the original fixtures as possible. Love all the details and craftmanship in this home. I don't think builders want to build like this anymore, takes to much time and effort. Everything now is a quick flip.
I really appreciate Eric's obvious love for this old building and also that he doesn't condescend to his audience; he's just enthusiastic to share what he does or does not know.
I have learned that TRUE growth only comes from being wrong - a true master knows that he is forever a student.
@@erikvanconover Wise words, indeed.👍 I wish more people in the world think this way.💕
I agree!
We’ve lost so much incredible gilded age historical architecture, it’s so wonderful to see a structure so beautifully preserved and I hope it stays that way. I agree though on wishing to be able to go back and peak into life as it was.
Yes! Like Lynnewood Hall in Elkins Park, PA.
I am so happy to have found this channel. As a granddaughter of an architect I am a huge fan of architecture. Especially something this old.
BRO I FEEL THIS MESSAGE!!!! I love studying the gilded age where people built beautiful homes just because they freaking could. Bring it back! to last!
Where are the skilled craftsmen who could build/ renovate them?
Here in the UK I'm used to seeing period houses full of detail and history. I absolutely love your enthusiasm and genuine appreciation for this building. Its how I feel. I so hate modern buildings and building materials. Old houses seem to whisper to us and slowly want to reveal their secrets.
Dude i love not just these old buildings but how passionate you are about them! Thank you for this. I cant wait to see more of this series.
That Chateau stirred something deep in me. It has been nothing short of an enlightenment since. Thanks for the kind words.
A passion I share. I try to appreciate modernism and will allow that there are many modernist gems. But they will never touch the heart or satisfy the senses like the intricate, lovely classical, neo-classical, Mediterranean, Spanish, and Islamic architecture of the past. Before modernism, architects and their clients built for posterity, not for a depreciation schedule or a passing fad.
Older homes have so much character and beauty
Guess what, the average person in New York City lived in a small coldwater apartment with a shared toilet in the hallway. Many did not have bathtubs so people would go to a bathhouse once a week or two. This is why apartments often had the bathtub later put in the kitchen where the water and stove to heat it or hot water was. They were common 50 years ago but probably few still exist.
So glad you are doing this series. I love old world buildings. We need to preserve them. What a fabulous building. I wonder if there are any craftsmen capable of this type of work. Please do more
At all costs. Nothing fills me up more than putting on some classical music and walking down fifth ave to look at all the stunning old world buildings
Lol, he's doing nothing but lying about his properties. He's a greedy pos
@patriciafuchs5970 More Americans should join and support The National Trust for Historic Preservation so we don't lose more of our historic past!
@@markpb4767Seems like you are a ripe ol’ chap….Just came here to spread negativity…..or jealousy.
I mistakenly posted this meant for a different video. Regardless, youll be older someday, plus assuming im jealous! Get over yourself dear. @angelinaduganNy
This comment section renews my faith in humanity. I have been an enthusiast of Gilded Age for 20 years, and the houses (astonishingly few of which remain, relative to the time) are a major character in the story. It's a fascinating era of American history that has been largely overlooked for the last several decades, particularly by younger generations -- but more recently, I see more people taking an interest in the era, and that makes me happy, because there is so much to learn from it.
18:08 No, not just "ornate wallpaper"...... very possibly _hand PAINTED_ ornate wallpaper.
PS: Thanks ever so much to Erik Van Conover and airalo for the opportunity to tour such a beautiful piece of history.
One room looked like it had silk brocade stretched like the canvas for a painting. It was usually a half an inch from the actual wall which makes it really absorb sound. An empty room like that is oddly echo free.
I grew up with an appreciation for old homes that was well beyond my years. I just adore them. Not only do older homes have character and many beautiful touches, they are a work of art. A work of art that was built to last forever. The best part is to be able to be a part of a home that holds history and love within it's walls. My biggest gripe is someone will take a place like this and destroy it while restoring it. It is a crime to take all the character out of an old home with a new renovation. My husband and I have renovated a New England 1802 Cape and now we have a Southern 1901 farm house we are working on. There is a misguided idea that if you buy an old house you are buying lots of problems and a new house will not have problems. Not true. I am a designer and I can tell you that you can build beautifully but it does take creativity and sourcing from all kinds of places. An exquisite place like this deserves to be gently preserved and loved.
I could have written almost every word of your comment. I say it all the time, lol..
What a great idea to show us buildings like this, Erik! And I am so glad that you mentioned the the "soul-sucking" nature of modern architecture. It's the elephant in the room that so many of us have noticed but that few people in your profession have ever mentioned.
MASSIVE ELEPHANT. Don't even get me started on 'Modern Art' give me Caravaggio any day over some prick splashing paint on canvas so his Billionaire buddies can hide more money via the art.
@@erikvanconover I love you, man! Your honesty is matched by your wisdom (although I must say your suits are great, too)!
I'd rather pay $50 million for this house than any new garbage we have today. This place truly is an exquisite masterpiece!!! ❤ Thanks for the lovely tour, Sir!
This house is absolutely gorgeous! That wallpaper… other channels painstakingly recreate these wallpapers… this is here original! And the millwork… could live here just exactly as it is!
Well done, Erik! Hope you can keep bringing attention to these works of art, honoring the builders and history!
I love the old world elegance. Please continue showing us these beautiful places!
I couldn't agree with you more. It's sad to compare modern architecture to buildings from 100+ years ago. There are beautiful old homes all over the country in dire need of restoration.
Me to
I am in love with The Gilded Age Era. So happy that you showed us this amazing property. ❤
I am an architect. When attending the University of Oregon, they trashed anything historic and promoted modernism and minimalism. I see the truth as complete lack of design skill and lack of talent in builders. I have always been passionate about historic architecture and was typically criticized for it.
because you sound like a MAGApede
I live here on the Oregon coast and I thank you. So munch.
Absolutely gorgeous. I love the style and Architecture.
Woodcarving of this caliber is available in asia today. Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Korea all have craftsmen capable of this level of detail and precision, although this is very different from their usual style.
True, apart from maybe Korea labour is much cheaper in those countries than in the west though so it's still feasible to build like that.
There are Woodcarvers who are capable of this level of craftsmanship found all across the globe, not just Asia. People didn't forget how to do this style of work, their rates just went up.
Back in the day you could hire a team of 20 expert woodcarvers for just dollars. Today hiring a team of carvers to do that kind of work would cost almost as much as the house itself, so its not worth it.
It's available everywhere in the world.
This house deserved to be turned into a museum, that would bring the life back to it
I never get bored with viewing old houses. Please do more of these.....any home before the 1980s is worth looking at but the older the better. We Americans consider a house built in 1960 as old when the British are buying and living in homes built in the 1600's ....and even earlier. I wish I had an extra 50 million to buy this beautiful building and another 25 million to rehab and furnish it. I hope whoever buys it will treat it like a precious gemstone and leave all the original woodwork, glass and sconces alone.
I deeply appreciate this tour! I share your love and appreciation for architecture such as this. I too get emotional when buildings, especially homes, are in need of TLC. I believe you are an empath. Thank you for sharing! Blessings of love and light to all!
In a previous life I must have been a craftsman. I love, love, LOVE all the millwork. Like you, I would love to travel back to it's hey day - fully decorated; no tall buildings nearby...can you imagine the dinner parties?....Life being lived in that gorgeous mansion.....
1000% yes, do more tours like this one!! I absolutely love old, European style detailing like this. It's a perfect balance elegant detail without being too visually busy. Many of the walls don't even need art, because the walls ARE the art!
If I one day get the money to build a fully custom home, it would definitely have a ton of ornate detailing down to this level, with the help of modern CNC machine if course 😅
I live in a log home in N ID woods. I think log homes is one type of building material that we have continued to keep beautiful architecture. The way the builder integrated logs and hardwoods into our home is so beautiful. I’m grateful it’s not grey and white.
I love log homes!!! I’m envious!!!
I also live in Northern Idaho but I have a newly built custom home but nowhere near what they did back then. I'd love to have all the details, the wood, marble etc. Nobody does that type of work anymore.
Long story short, incredible.
more to come
That red wallpaper and the white plaster just are pure perfection.
his excitement is the cutest thing
There's a neat YT channel called, "This House" that shows a lot of old homes. Most were demolished and the few survivors have been remodeled. This is a true treasure!
This House is awesome.
Love them!!
This house has a soul. You can feel it from the grand entry right down to what used to be the kitchen. Nothing ever really leaves a home like this. This one at least has mostly good "vibes". I've been in historic structures that made me want to leave the minute I crossed the threshold, but this one is welcoming. Good job, Erik.
@michaelmoran4157 Maybe some of those historic structures were haunted? A great many are here in old Yankee New England like my late grandmother's house built in 1776 on Cape Cod and New Hope, and Gettysburg, PA are known to be haunted! Historic Williamsburg, VA is another wonderful historic place to visit, don't know of any ghosts there, though! lol
@@brendadrew834 I've had experiences in old structures. A few times, while on a tour, the house would grab me. Someone who is really into this stuff advised me to be very cautious when venturing into old homes. This one has vibes that come through, but they're very positive. It's a good house.
@@michaelmoran4157 Good or bad vibes, spirits often like to visit where they once lived, it's still home to them after they go back to their spiritual home! I had a really scary experience once when my husband's family were trying to sell their fairly new home in Yonkers, NY! At four in the morning a very loud crashing sound came from over head in the attic! Sounded like someone locked in a glass closet trying to punch their way out! Terrifying, we ran out of the house, called the police, they went up into the crawl space and couldn't find anything! Seemed like whatever spirit or energy that was up there didn't want the family to leave? Another time, an old radio in the kitchen that was broken and hadn't been turned on for years, suddenly went off real loud! You never know what you'll encounter in homes, new or old! Love old antique houses with good vibes!
I too have a great love of mid to late 19th century architecture. My great grandparents had a home with many of these architectural features - mahogany staircases, heavy pocket doors, stained glass high windows for light and beauty, marble fireplace. He was a cabinet maker who immigrated from Austria-Hungary. So heartbroken that the family had to sell. The neighborhood around the family home deteriorated. No one wanted to live there due to crime.
I am an old lady born and raised in Florida. I have never seen anything like this building and in remarkable condition. Thank you for sharing and look forward to more of your adventures.
I have been enamored by the gilded age for along time. Thank you for the tour and sharing your passion for old homes. I felt like I was there beside you sharing the moment. I was raised in SE PA where there is a plethora of colonial homes and mansions. I learned to love them as they always peaked my curiosity and sparked my imagination of what life would have been like. So much history lives in my heart and soul.
This house is stunning. As a interior designer it warms my heart to see all the detail.
I wouldn't be surprised if that Sky light was designed by Tiffanys!
Don't forget that servants' quarters were in the attic, and they had to be on constant call for their employers.
The elegance that is in these old buildings is beautiful!
I'm maintenance for listed buildings and churches. Climbing the bell tower to find graffiti/tags from 100s of years ago of pass maintainers always makes me smile. The public will never see them so I added my own
This was such an amazing video I feel that I was born in the gilded age back in the 1800s myself. Please do more videos like this of these beautiful mansions from the gilded age
A group of buildings in Manhattan that are worth a video about grand buildings is Tudor City. They were built as apartments for middle class office workers, with the first building erected in the 1920s. They are landmarked and the exteriors are beautiful. I have had the pleasure of visiting Tudor City several times because my child bought a condo at 45 Tudor City Place, Prospect Tower, the first building constructed. Though the interiors, except the lobbies, aren’t very grand, Tudor City is a hidden jewel in NYC. Love your videos!
There are some videos on RUclips about iconic Tudor City! Thanks for shining a light on that!♥
@@brendadrew834 Thanks for letting me know about the RUclips videos, I’ll do a search for them. ❤️ Tudor City is such a great story for many reasons, but the thing I love the most about them, is the fact they were built for the middle class, not the filthy rich. People who work hard for a moderate income deserves to live in beautiful buildings too. A lovely park, built for the residents, is across from my child’s building, and it’s also landmarked.
Two months ago we moved into a house built in 1920 in Cumberland, Maryland. We love the old woodwork around the stairs and doorways. The stair rails are carved and absolutely beautiful and what caused us to fall in love with this house. A lot of the original features have been lost, but we still have two sets of pocket doors - they need major repairs and probably won't be used - but we love the age and character of our old house.
I live 15 minutes from Cumberland. Welcome!
This video makes me want to change my career. I must have an old soul because this building kept giving me goosebumps. THANK YOU for the tour. Hope you’re invited to showcase more of these landmark properties around NYC, and around the country.
Yes please,Eric,keep them coming...amazing craft work...a by gone era...love your passion! 😊
I love that you are an old soul and appreciate the beautiful things of life. Hoping this beauty will be maintained and brought back to its former glory.
Another contributing factor as to why we don't build like that anymore is that back then, the cost of labor was far cheaper than the cost of the materials.
Good labor was never cheap. However, Victorian-era trim was incredibly cheap, relative to pre-industrial times. This is mostly factory-produced trim that was installed, not handcrafted woodwork. Suppliers and contractors, got lazier and greedier after they put artisans out of business, while architects became egomaniacs and ditched the old ways for their own "style," and that's why we're stuck in Uglyville now.
And this was a house of a super rich person.
@@WLNLW You can still get hand made plaster moldings, But it's very messy and takes weeks to dry.
Definitely more of this! There is so much from before the Gilded age too that has incredible artisan work. Alexandria, Virginia, Annapolis, Maryland, Boston. I look forward to seeing more of these videos
So glad I came across your video. I am in the midst of writing an historical novel that includes the late 19th to early 20th century New York architectural descriptions. Thank you so much for making my job on this so much easier to possibly include specific aspects of this mansion.
Magnificent building, inside and out!
Can you even start to imagine the furnishings to match the quality of the building?
All the curves, flourishes, gold filigree, leaded glass etc are to provide a richness that truly represents the Gilded Age. Stanford White the architect was a genius at blending all these elements. The energy of these materials when orchestrated in such a fashion is embracing and comforting. I love it ~ thank you so much for your expressive appreciation of this Landmark .
I go to Egypt and the experience is similar inside the great temples, pyramids, and tombs.
Great Work!
Greetings from Paris and looking forward to this! I wouldn't not mind, if you could also consider exploring mansions in the "rural" New York area, should be plenty of grand jewels...
There were so many historic mansions that were torn down.
I absolutely love this as a new series. I'd be thrilled to see you do more, including smaller buildings, all boroughs, and not just residences, but old warehouses, restaurants, buildings built for merchants, and so on.
True! People would be surprised to see how beautiful some old breweries, hospitals, or even prisons were. Also water towers, bridges, etc.
Art Deco is my favorite era!
What a wonderful video! I wonder, like you do - when I see all that beautiful craftsmanship, how long those artists studied their craft and what their life was like. I hope they'd be proud that their work is still being admired and honored today.
I'd love to see more videos of this type of building! It's something I'll never be able to see otherwise. Thank you so much - I will go through your library and find more treasures to view. If only walls could talk!!
Please do more tours like this. I loved it.
Yes, fashions change. But it's more complicated than that. As one fashion style fades away, the jobs for those craftspeople are also eliminated, so people move on to other jobs and obtain other skills. The mass produced goods from that fashion style also go away. More items are mass produced than most people think. Millwork catalogs with ornate newels and balusters, hardware catalogs with ornate doorknobs, vent covers and fixtures, terracotta catalogs, plaster molding catalogs, door catalogs... etc. All of those change with the fashion too.
Erik, your house tour videos really are the best! I love your relaxed, honest, and friendly approach, devoid of theatrics or fake hyperactivity. Addressing your big question "Why don't we build like this anymore?" -- I would propose that the real reason has nothing to do with labor costs, or availability of trained artisans. I mean, which of us wouldn't rather purchase and find the decorating team that could bring these glorious Gilded Age properties to life, (and there are thousands of firms and workshops that can do exactly that!), instead of those soul crushing, vertigo inducing concrete airplane hangar monstrosities on the Billionaire's Row skyscraper block? All things considered, a property like this is actually LESS expensive than anything at the top of 432 Park Avenue! The real question is not "Why don't we build like they used to anymore?" but "Why do they keep building ridiculous, ugly skyscraper condo towers that nobody wants to buy?" Would be interested in your response, of course, and can't wait for the next video!
Great great comments. If you go back and see my OLDER home tours you can see how turned off I am by the bland modern builds. The Billionaire Row Sky Scrapers are just so outrageous they pique my interest in their own right but not for the same reasons old world homes do.
I’m from Australia and we don’t have buildings like this here, so, it’s amazing to watch your videos and to have a virtual walk-through. I love your raw presentation approach also.
Love seeing the Landmark buildings.
The reason homes aren't built like this anymore is the lack of pride in our work and it's become profit over people & design.
McKim, Mead & White, the GOATs of Beaux Arts Architecture
Suck
Thank you so very much!!! Absolutely loved this tour of this historic building. We would love to see more of this content to appreciate the architectural design and extraordinary craftsmanship of days gone by. It inspires our creativity! Yes, it’s old but the old is the foundation of the NEW. Without the old we have no reference. Thank you so very very much!!!!
You should visit the Hallwyl museum in the center of Stockhoolm. Its one of the last private palaces build in the late 1800s. Today its a museum and everything is preserved. lts a time capsule. Come visit!
YES, SHOW US MORE OLDER HOMES IN NYC! GREAT SHOW AS USUAL!
Thank goodness this one hasn't been destroyed by those new eccentric homeowners yet.
yet
They're not homeowners--they're flippers pandering to the lowest common denominator.
Beautiful tour. In the US, culturally, we have fallen terribly, and my clients are more interested in how much more square footage they can get with their dollar vs. quality of design or details of any kind.
I don't think it's a sign of cultural decline that people would rather have more living space in their home than more decoration.
23:11 I have never seen that on a tour channel before a maintenance guy, interrupting your tour🤣 john is a legend 🤣🔥👏🏾
thats the ethos of this new series. Hit record and let it play out. He scared the shit out of us lol. The agent who let us in said that the building has has breakins just given how close to being abandoned it really is.
@@erikvanconover I bet he did scare you to death 🤣 but John seems like a cool guy we don’t appreciate our maintenance workers and the hard work that they do to keep the buildings running like they should 😊
Definitely want you to continue this series! ❤
Spectacular home !
These vids are just fantastic, Erik. Keep up the good work, and thank you.
There’s an architect on RUclips who talks about the new buildings as what is called ‘Globalism’ - the idea/movement that wherever you go in the world you will find uniformity among new architecture. She talks about how it removes individuality of national/regional architecture, which obviously is sad. It removes the idea that there is an Italian/greek/English form. She also talks about the negative side effects upon a population when that happens. Very interesting. DamiLee
Support you always! Welcome back! Always wait you to drop clips again.
Theres a few new videos! Go check em
This was totally awesomeness ❤❤❤❤❤
Thanks for the subtitles.
The way I see it, to maximize this space, probably the best idea would be to turn it into a boutique hotel so it becomes an income-generating asset while still being able to preserve the design and dignity of the house as well as opening it up for more people to enjoy and marvel at. The income generated can go into further preserving the house AND giving employment to members of the community. That being said, Im not entirely sure how easy it would be to secure permits in New York to change this from residential to commercial, especially since its a preserved landmark, but honestly, I think the effort would be very worth it. Just my two cents
At 50million, you would never make money on the idea
And it would incur devasting changes with rooms converted to "a room' with bathroom so parlors, dining room and all others converted! Then signs and traffic in rooms and we all know everyone is respectful of hotel rooms 🙄 I know people think hotel but I think that's horrible idea, my opinion.
In my opinion, this is your best house tour yet. I really enjoyed it.
I agree. Had the most fun making this one.
Love from Nagaland.❤
I actually feel gratitude watching this video, because I've seen other vids of yours and I'm so encouraged to see that you care about this building like I do. I'm a New Yorker and for a short time I lived in an 1860s brownstone in Brooklyn, which also hadn't been renovated. (This was back in the early 1990s before everything got ruined in NYC.) Original mantles, decorative plaster ceilings (parts falling down), wide plank floors... it wasn't the house of a rich person but I loved it a lot. Tall windows, high ceiling downstairs. I was an art history student... thank you for bringing us in to see a building that we wouldn't otherwise get to see.
Thank you Erik for this fascination, educational tour of mansions/brownstones I passed by in my years growing up in NYC. I was born in nyc and we lived on East 57th street all my life. Pre war buildings are the most exquisite pieces of NEW YORK HISTORY.
They had those vaults for their cash, jewelry, silver. No one trusted the banks. The detail, you point out tells us so much more about the people who lived and built these amazing houses. My husbands family owned a brownstone on East 66th street that used to be the carriage house for his great grandparents. They lived on 5th Ave, in a mansion. The Vanderbilt Whitney mansion.
Fascinating life growing up in NYC. Thank you for these tours.