Greenwich Village Neighborhoods

The Twin Peaks of Greenwich Village

Last updated · New York

The original structure at 102 Bedford Street dates to 1830, but what stands there now is something far more eccentric. In 1925, architect Clifford Reed Daily borrowed a substantial sum from financier Otto Kahn and set about renovating the building into his vision of an “island growing in a desert of mediocrity” — a ten-unit, two-towered wooden cabin that looks like it belongs in a Swiss forest rather than lower Manhattan.

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When the building was completed in 1926, silent film star Mabel Normand christened it with a ceremonious champagne bottle smashing. The roster of early residents reads like a pop culture roll call: Douglas Fairbanks, Walt Disney, Cary Grant, and Miles Davis all called its modest “artist studios” home at various points. Each unit runs just 20 by 18 feet — rustic by design, uncomfortable by necessity.

The property converted to co-ops in the 1980s and continued to attract New York’s creative types. The building is still privately owned — a peculiar landmark hiding in plain sight on one of the Village’s quietest blocks.

Location: 102 Bedford Street

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