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Garment Center Capitol Buildings

About this listing

Loft buildings where the "new Garment District" was born

Place Details

Borough : Manhattan
Neighborhood : Garment District
Manufacturing, Office

Place Matters Profile

When they were built in 1921, the Garment Center Capitol Buildings, a pair of buildings at 498 and 500 7th Ave., heralded the move of New York's flourishing garment industry uptown to the district where it has remained ever since. New York City's continued hold on the fashion industry has preserved a symbiotic relationship between fashion design and manufacturing, which take place on the same city blocks in the heart of Midtown. At this point in time, though, the Garment District faces new development pressures. Although designers like Patricia Underwood still retain their facilities in the buildings, newcomers like the Bates USA advertising agency have moved in as well.

The Garment Center Capitol Buildings included enough modern amenities to lure almost the entire garment industry uptown--notably electricity, light, and ample space that most garment factories had lacked before. When the ready-made clothing business first began to grow in the 19th century (by producing clothing for the slave trade as well as

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Sources

Bagli, Charles V. "Holding on in the Garment Center." New York Times. March 2, 1998.

Dolkart, Andrew Scott. "History of the Garment District. Lecture, November 3, 1998.

Nominations

Anonymous Nominator

Nominated through the Garment Center Community Focus Project


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