

Astor Row is a group of 28row houses on the south side of West 130th Street, betweenFifth andLenox Avenues in theHarlem neighborhood ofManhattan, New York City, which were among the first speculativetownhouses built in the area. Designed byCharles Buek, the houses were built between 1880 and 1883. Astor's grandson,William Backhouse Astor, Jr., was the driving force behind the development.
The design of the three-story brick, single-family houses[1] is unusual, in that they are set back from the street. All have front and side yards – an oddity in Manhattan – as well as wooden porches. The first group of houses, numbers 8 through 22, comprises freestanding pairs, while the remainder, numbers 24 through 60, are connected together at the rear.[2]
The Astor Row houses were designatedNew York City Landmarks on August 11, 1981.[3]
The houses were built between 1880 and 1883 in three phases, on landJohn Jacob Astor had purchased in 1844 for $10,000.[2] WhenWilliam Backhouse Astor Jr. died, the houses were divided among his grandchildren: Mary, James, and Sarah Van Alen.[3] Ownership stayed in the Astor family until 1911, when the westernmost 10 houses were sold to real estate investor Max Marx, who partially traded them for an apartment building inWashington Heights.[4] The new owners, the Brown Realty Company, defaulted on their mortgage, and the houses passed to theNew York Savings Bank.[5]
In 1920, the houses were described by a reporter forThe New York Times as "one of the most attractive and exclusive home centers" in Harlem, presenting "a picture of domestic tranquility and comfort which few other blocks in the city possess."[3]
The Astor Row townhouses rented originally for $1,100 per year and were so popular that for years there was a waiting list for them. The townhouses were occupied originally by whites, but in 1920, 20 of the 28 houses – the 10 owned by New York Savings Bank, plus 10 still owned by the Astors – were purchased by James Cruikshank, a real estate operator[5] and leased to black tenants.[6][7]
Generally, the houses were not well maintained, and the porches were gradually lost. In 1978, the second edition of theAIA Guide to New York City described the row as having "restrained beauty which has been tarnished by years of economic distress."[8] In 1981, New York City designated the entire row as landmarks, and money was raised to restore their facades, and improve their plumbing, heating systems, and electrical lines where needed. The group overseeing and financing the work included theNew York Landmarks Conservancy,New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC), theVincent Astor Foundation,Manhattan Community Board 10, the Abyssinian Development Corporation, theCommonwealth Fund, theNew York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development, and several local banks. In 1992,Ella Fitzgerald performed at a benefit atRadio City Music Hall to raise money for the restoration. By the end of the 1990s, the porches and other decorative elements had been restored to almost all the buildings on the block. In August 2009,The New York Times would write "the block is at the center of an intense but, as yet, unfinished revival of the surrounding streets in Central Harlem."[9] The restoration of the row was overseen by Roberta Washington and Li/Saltzman.[1] In late 2021, the house at 28 West 130th Street was demolished following several years of degradation,[10][11] years after the LPC had sued the house's owner to force her to repair the house.[12]
In his novelHome to Harlem (1928),Claude McKay described Astor Row as "the block beautiful."[3]
40°48′36″N73°56′29″W / 40.81°N 73.9414°W /40.81; -73.9414