Harlem Courthouse
170 East 121st Street
New York, NY 10035
Date Built: 1891-1893
Architect: Thom and Wilson
"One of the most impressive buildings in East Harlem …"
-- NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission
The Harlem Courthouse, located at the corner of East 121st Street and Sylvan
Place, is one of the most impressive buildings in East Harlem.
This building was built between 1891 and 1893 for use by the Municipal and Magistrate's
Courts, and was said to be one of the City’s earliest county seats. The building
included the Fifth District Prison, a jail with temporary holding cells. Its original
function as a court ended in 1961 in the reorganization of the state court system.
Public justice functions returned to the building in 2001 with the opening of a
Community Justice Center.
Photo by: Ralph Selitzer, DCAS
This vibrant Romanesque Revival style courthouse has elements of the Victorian Gothic,
most notably in its pinnacles, multiple steep gables and polychromy. Romanesque
Revival characteristics include the blocky massing, and typical round arched door
and window openings. The four-story masonry structure has a granite base with a
red brick facade trimmed with bluestone and terra cotta. The five-story corner tower
is topped by eight small gables with two clocks below.
A marble and iron spiral staircase leads from the lobby to the top of the tower.
Other interior features include marble mosaic floors and oak door and window trim.
The double-height third-floor courtroom has a vaulted ceiling, oak paneling and
trim, and federal Works Progress Administration (WPA) murals by David Karfunkle.
Photo by: Ralph Selitzer, DCAS
The firm of Thom & Wilson designed the courthouse. Arthur M. Thom & James
W. Wilson were prolific residential architects, designing row houses on the Upper
East Side and the fanciful Moorish style Hampton Apartments on Perry Street in Greenwich
Village. In 1894, with John E. Schaarschmidt, they designed the Criminal Courthouse
on Centre Street and Franklin, which is no longer standing.
Today, as the Harlem Community Justice Center, the building provides a variety of
Civil Court functions, hearing Family, Housing and Small Claims matters. The surrounding
neighborhood contains a public school, a housing development and an art park. Together,
they form a neighborhood version of a Civic Center.
The Harlem Court House was designated a New York City Landmark on August 2, 1967.
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