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In the 1920s, the Fred F. French company started to buy
lots on the east side of Midtown Manhattan for a large housing project.
The run-down area consisted mostly of tenements and brownhouses, bordered
on the east by a gas company, breweries In 1925 Fred F French - also known for the Fred F. French
Building and Knickerbocker village - started construction of what he called
'The largest project in Midtown'. The project was named Tudor
City. In an effort to attract part of the middle class that
had moved to suburban areas, the buildings featured many amenities and
was well ahead of its time. It also boasted two private Tudor city currently houses about 5000 people and most
of the apartments and hotel rooms are now co-operative housing projects.
It is based on a plateau that seems to isolate it from the rest of Midtown,
creating a quiet refuge from hectic Manhattan. |