Guastavino Home on the Market

Readers seek help for preservation emergencies
/ September 8, 2004

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Guastavino's home in Bay Shore, N.Y.,
is
on the market.(Eric Ramsay)
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Dear Preservation 911,
From what I've heard from Long
Island preservationists, the house is under contract to a new
buyer and a demolition permit has already been filed.
This house was the family residence of one of America's
most significant builders, Rafael Guastavino y Esposito (1872-1950),
son of Rafael Guastavino y Moreno (1842-1908). RGyM was an architect
working in Barcelona who emigrated to America in the 1881 and,
after failing to find work as an architect, became a builder of
fireproof structural vaults and domes. His vaulting technique
was an adaptation of a medieval type of Mediterranean construction
known as timbrel vaulting. The company's method transcended pure
structural uses and became a key aesthetic component in many of
America's most important buildings of the period.
Guastavino's first major project in the States
was the Boston Public Library. His vaults are extremely strong,
made of cheap materials (ceramic tile and Portland cement), fireproof,
could be erected quicker than his competitors' vaults, and could
also be adapted to various shapes and sizes. He also had 24 patents
on the technique. His spiral stairways are particularly breathtaking.
The success of the Boston project launched Guastavino's
career, and he proceeded to work with the greatest architects
of the late 19th and early 20th century: McKim Mead and White,
Cass Gilbert, Warren and Wetmore, Carrere and Hastinings, Palmer
and Hornbostel.
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(Eric Ramsay)
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Buildings that contain Guastavino's vaults and
domes can be found in every major city in America. Anytime you look
up in a building and see a herringbone pattern of ceramic tile,
6x12 with a raised mortar joint, you can be almost 100% certain
he built it. Guastavino's firm worked on almost every major public
building built in the United States between 1890 and 1920. It went
out of business in the 1960s.
RGyE, born in Barcelona in 1872, worked for his
father, probably from a very young age, and took over the company
upon his father's death in 1908. He is responsible for some of
the company's most daring and beautiful structures, including
the dome over the crossing of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine
in NYC, The Library of the Albany State Education Building, The
Nebraska State Capitol, The Registry Room ceiling at Ellis Island
(also a rebuild) and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
RGyE undoubtedly built this house in Bay Shore
for his own family, and may have died in it. The listed construction
date is 1917. The photos speak for themselves, but no one knows
much about this house since it has been owned for the last 50
years by a very private family who would not allow access to it.
I've heard that it has had very little work done to it over the
years.
I think it could be easily argued that this house
has international significance. Both RGs were born in Spain. RG
Sr.'s residence in Barcelona, which he built with his own hands,
much like his son's did in Bay Shore, is now gone. The family
home in Asheville, N.C., is now a museum, I believe. Judging from
the photos, the house in Bay Shore employs the timbrel-vault technique
that was the company's trademark, and may well have been designed
by RG Jr. It was certainly built by the company.
On the international side, there has recently been
a tremendous outpouring of interest in the Guastavino legacy in
Spain, specifically Cataluna, where RG Sr. attended school and
did the majority of his work before leaving for America.
In 2001, I attended an exposition on RG Sr.'s work
in Spain and his legacy in America. This was pretty unprecedented
and was the first step in a revival of interest in a native son
whose work had been vastly underappreciated and was quickly overshadowed
by the Spanish Modernista movement that directly followed his
departure from Spain.
Sincerely,
Daniel Lane
Architectural Conservator
Jan Hird Pokorny Associates, Inc.
New York, New York
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