Henry Engelbert (1826–1901) was a German-Americanarchitect. He was best known for buildings in the French Second Empire style, which emphasized elaborate mansard roofs with dormers. New York's Grand Hotel on Broadway is the most noteworthy extant example of Engelbert's work in this style. Many of his commissions were Lutheran or Roman Catholic churches.
Life
Engelbert was born in Germany in 1826. In 1852, he established his practice in partnership with John Edson, and their office was at 85 Nassau Street in New York City.[1] The latter years of his career were spent in Detroit, where he died in 1901.[2]
Notable buildings: New York City
In chronological order:
Fifth Avenue Baptist Church, 1856, since demolished. The architects of this church are given as "Edson and Engelbert",[3] referring to John Edson, Engelbert's office partner.
College of Mount Saint Vincent Administration Building (originally Convent and Academy of Mount Saint Vincent), 1859, 6301 Riverdale Avenue at West 263rd Street.
Grand Hotel (now Clark Apartments), 1868, 1232-1238 Broadway at West 31st Street. It was built in the French Second Empire style for carpet magnate Elias S. Higgins, who later commissioned Engelbert to design the Grand Central Hotel.
Church of the Transfiguration (formerly Zion English Lutheran Church), 1868 renovations to the original 1801 structure, 25 Mott Street. This church has a Georgian Gothic style.[4] Engelbert was responsible for 1868 renovations, principally the addition of the current bell tower. This structure should not be confused with the Episcopal church of the same name on East 29th Street.
Elias S. Higgins Warehouse and Store, (1868–1869): 424-426 Broadway. This six-story building has a cast iron facade and was designed in a French Second Empire style for carpet manufacturer Elias S. Higgins.[5] This is one of three buildings that Higgins commissioned Engelbert to design. The building has been converted into residential lofts.
Church of St. Vincent de Paul (completed 1869): 123 West 23 Street. This parish was founded in 1840 on Canal Street to serve the expanding French-speaking population of the city. The parish moved to the Chelsea neighborhood of the city after the Civil War in order to follow its congregants. The church closed in 2013, and the building is currently not in use.
Grand Central Hotel (later Broadway Central Hotel) (1870), 673 Broadway. This was the second commission for a hotel that Engelbert received from carpet magnate Elias S. Higgins, and in many ways it is a larger, more flamboyant version of Engelbert's 1868 Grand Hotel further north on Broadway. In 1973 this hotel abruptly collapsed, killing four residents. It appears that the removal of load-bearing walls in the basement, as part of a remodeling project, led to the structure's collapse.
Bouwerie Lane Theatre (previously Bond Street Savings Bank Building, and originally Atlantic Savings Bank Building), 1874, 330 Bowery. This building, with its cast iron facade, combines Corinthian columns with Second French Empire elements.
Notable buildings: other locations
In chronological order:
St. Mary's Abbey Church, 1856–1857, Martin Luther King Boulevard at William Street, Newark, New Jersey. Now known as Newark Abbey.
Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church and Parsonage, 1874–1975, 72 Spring Street at Hone Street, Kingston, New York.[6]
Sampson-Freeman Building, 1875, 1 Broadway at West Strand, Kingston, New York. This three-story building originally consisted of a store on the ground floor, with an opera house on the upper floors. A mansard roof and tower were lost in an 1885 fire. However, cast iron pillars at the ground level have survived to the present day.[7]
^Curran, Kathleen, "The German Rundbogenstil and Reflections on the American Round-Arched Style, Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Vol. 47, No. 4 (December 1988), pp. 351-373. See footnote #41 within that article.
^Meeks, Carroll L. V., Romanesque Before Richardson in the United States, Art Bulletin, Vol. 35, No. 1 (March, 1953), pp. 17-33. See page 31 of article.
^New York in Photos: Church of the Transfiguration [1] Accessed January 25, 2008
^Rhoads, William Bertholet; James Bleecker (2003). Kingston, New York: The Architectural Guide. Hensonville, New York: Black Dome Press. p. 132. ISBN978-1-883789-35-0.
^Detroit: The History and Future of the Motor City: St. Albertus Roman Catholic Church, [2]Archived 2007-12-15 at the Wayback Machine Accessed January 25, 2008
^Sinkevitch, Alice; Laurie McGovern Petersen; Perry R. Duis (2004). AIA Guide to Chicago (2nd ed.). Harcourt. p. 403. ISBN978-0-15-602908-7.