Plans have been in the works at least back
to 2007 to add extra floors of residential above the landmarked 45 Great Jones St., the longtime home to the Great Jones Lumber Corp., between the Bowery and Lafayette.
There are demolition plans on file
dated from Thursday. Per the usual all-cap DOB style: "DEMOLITION OF THREE STORY STRUCTURE. PER LPC, FRONT FACADE TO REMAIN."
[Photo via
Goggla]
The Landmarks Preservation Committee OK'd
enlarging the Romanesque Revival building by five floors back in July 2012, as Curbed reported.
These are older plans from June 2012 (we have not seen the final renderings) ...
[
Via Curbed]
Building owner Joseph Lauto also ran the lumber business. (He worked at the lumber yard as a kid dating to the late 1940s.) In March 2012,
he told The Local that the changing landscape of NoHo contributed to his decision to develop the building.
"One of the reasons we merged the businesses was because forklifts and trucks moving lumber had to stop because of baby carriages," he said. "We never had that before."
The ground floor will remain a commercial space while the subsequent floors and penthouse will be residential. The plan is still waiting approval by the Department of Buildings, who last passed along a "disapproved" in July, according to
city records.
Built in 1893, 45 Great Jones served as the home of Great Jones Lumber Corp. from 1934 to June of 2008, when the company merged with Michbi Doors Inc. of Long Island,
per The Local.