White
Plains Times
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Reproduced
with Permission
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The photo at left is of the original house built in 1949 by renowned architect Edward Durell Stone, with a second-story addition, designed by local architect John Mclean in 1998. The photo at right shows the first in a series of new homes to be built on the property as the result of a resolution passed by the White Plains Planning Board in January 2007 to allow a five-lot subdivision. Photo credit:
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The House on Rosedale Avenue
A Before and After Story
By Pat Casey
Published: May 11, 2009
“First we shape
our environment, and then our environment shapes
us.”
—Winston Churchill
This article is intended to give its readers
pause; to consider what it is that forms a
community’s heritage and environment, and to
ask what our collective responsibility may be
regarding our city’s future.
Most of us are familiar with the saying: “A
picture is worth a thousand words.” How true
that is, as it relates to the house that once
stood at 240 Rosedale Avenue, in contrast to the
typical colonial developer’s house that now
stands on the property. (See White Plains Times,
September 15, 2006 for pre-demolition coverage.)
The photo at left is of the original house built
in 1949 by renowned architect Edward Durell
Stone, with a second-story addition, designed by
local architect John Mclean in 1998. The photo
at right shows the first in a series of new
homes to be built on the property as the result
of a resolution passed by the White Plains
Planning Board in January 2007 to allow a
five-lot subdivision.
How one reacts to a design concept is
subjective. John Mclean received praise and a
special award from the American Institute of
Architects for his work on the Edward Durrell
Stone house. Mclean proposed a way to preserve
the Rosedale House, as well as the natural
landscaping and ponds: by the city granting a
variance to permit cluster housing, which would
prevent clearing and leveling. The White Plains
Planning Board, however, determined that: “This
house, originally designed by Edward Durell
Stone as a one-story structure, has been
substantially enlarged and modified and does not
represent a residential building of local
architectural significance.”
The building was demolished because it was not
listed on the New York State Register of
Historic Places. Historic preservation
laws are still in a state of infancy, thus
making it difficult for any building of
architectural significance that has been added
to or changed to be officially designated as
historic.
The house that once existed at 240 Rosedale Ave.
may have been the finest example of a
contemporary residence in White Plains. Edward
Durell Stone, one of the foremost architects of
the mid-twentieth century, established an
international reputation.
Stone’s principal works include the
National Geographic Society headquarters in
Washington DC; the State University of New York
at Albany, New York; the John F. Kennedy Center
for the Performing Arts in Washington DC; and
the National Assembly and Presidential Palace in
Islamabad, Pakistan.
For comments on this article and similar
projects or concerns in White Plains please
email pcasey@wptimes.com
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Copyright
2009 White Plains Times
Letter-to-the-Editor
Published June 12, 2009, and was edited to fit the space. The full letter follows:
Your recent article that revisited the Rosedale House project prompted me to do something I have not done since January 2007. What I did was to drive past the site where my Rosedale House once stood. I was saddened to see what the site looks like now, and could not help remembering what was once there.
It
is almost two and half years since the Planning
Board approved the development (and the
concomitant demolition of the Rosedale House),
and since I gave evidence and testimony as to
why the Rosedale House should be preserved (and,
at most, two other houses could be erected on
the site).
Zoning maps are essentially a misrepresentation. When a map is drawn up with its voluminous allocations of 1/4-acre and smaller sites across the landscape, the municipality is representing, if all the lots are developed, that they have planned for the schools, roads, sewers, water, police, fire fighting, sanitation and municipal services needed for that fully developed community. Why should anyone have to be fearful of selling to a developer? Because unconsciously they know the zoning map is a lie, and that something undesirable will probably happen after the sale goes through.
The
failure of the White Plains Planning Board to
exercised its mandated discretionary powers,
namely to preserved the site and the
architectural heritage incorporated in the
Rosedale House has resulted in a less than
desirable site and the presence on Rosedale
Avenue of a sump pit in the front yard, and a
site barren of its tall trees.
There was a reason why the Rosedale House site and the neighboring site to the east, and west were in such pristine condition and in such a low intensity development mode. Those sites were not touched with intense development for more than a hundred years because of the natural conditions that existed.. In addition, evidenced by the ponds on the site to the east, the sites here are a natural drainage courses for the Rosedale area. The waters eventually make their way to Mamaroneck to the south
and the Long Island Sound.. Your article on the
potential sale of the Ridgeway Country Club
speaks to that inter-municipal problem.
As
I stated to the Planning Board in 2006, which
your newspaper wrote about, the development of
five houses on the site was a squeezing of five
houses, a sump pit and an access road up the
middle of the site.. Based on what was presented
to the Planning Board, that is the future of the
site, which is still not finished.
The
architectural loss of the Rosedale House is
significant in that a mid-20th
Century house by Architect Edward Durell Stone
was lost.. As your newspaper accurately
reported, my rehabilitation and addition to the
house did not change the original house and the
addition complemented the house designed by
Stone.. White Plains has lost its only
significant piece of historic modern
architecture.
A White Plains couple, in February 2007, had called me and asked how they could reach the developer.. Their purpose was to buy the historic structure by Stone and myself and move it to their upstate New York property. They reported to me that their offer would have made the developer whole (their word)... The developer turned them down (while crying he is not getting any money)! Doesn't this scream volumes about our approach to how our cities and neighborhoods will look like?
Thank
you for offering your newspaper for public
discourse on what our cities and communities
should like.. Your quoting Winston Churchill is
to the point.
Architect
John Mclean, White Plains, NY
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