DiBari Realty LLC
The Art Of Downtown Living!
NoHo

The NoHo Historic District, whose name
derives from “NOrth of HOuston Street,”
extends from north of Houston St. to East
9th St., and east from Broadway and
Mercer St. to Lafayette St. and the west
side of Cooper Square. In the 1970s and
1980s artists started to occupy the area’s
loft buildings, calling it NoHo to distinguish
it from SoHo; previously NoHo was known
as a “warehouse district.”

The NoHo Historic District, which is
comprised of approximately 125 buildings,
represents the period of New York City’s
commercial history from the early 1850s
to the 1910s, when this section prospered
as one of its major retail and wholesale
dry goods centers. Acclaimed architects
were commissioned to design ornate store
and loft buildings in popular architectural
styles, providing a rich fabric against
which shoppers promenaded, looked at
display windows and bought goods, and
merchants sold products. The district also
contains early-nineteenth-century houses,
nineteenth-century institutional buildings,
turn-of-the-century office buildings, as
well as modest twentieth-century
commercial structures, all of which testify
to each successive phase in the
development of the historic district.
Today, the effect is of powerful and
unifying streetscapes of marble, cast-iron,
limestone, brick, and terra-cotta façades.
The NoHo Historic District remains
remarkably intact, providing an invaluable
view of the development of commercial
architecture in New York City.
This excerpt from: NOHO Historic District ­ Designation Book, NYC
Landmarks Preservation Commission, June 29, 1999.

NoHo BID

NoHo Manhattan

Superfuture Map Of NoHo
The Public Theatre

Schools: