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Jay Street Firehouse Records

Call Number

RG.016

Date

1972-1981, inclusive

Creator

Extent

1.5 Cubic Feet

Language of Materials

Materials entirely in English.

Abstract

In 1976, the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn entered into a long-term lease with the City of New York to acquire the Jay Street Brooklyn Firehouse (also known as the Old Brooklyn Firehouse). Paul DeCicco and other administrators at Poly worked with architect William A. Hall for over a decade to design, plan, and fundraise for the firehouse renovations.

Biographical / Historical

The Old Brooklyn Firehouse was designed in 1892 by Frank Freedman. The red brick Romanesque-style building served as Brooklyn's fire headquarters until 1972. Its seven story tower – then the tallest structure around – enabled fire watchers to detect blazes around the borough. If billows of smoke were spotted, horse-drawn fire wagons were dispatched from the firehouse located at 365-367 Jay Street between Myrtle Avenue and Willoughby Street. In 1972, it was included in the National Register of Historic Places.

Later that same year, the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn developed interest in purchasing and renovating the Jay Street Firehouse. After years of negotiation and planning, Poly entered long-term lease with the City of New York to develop a fire research center at the site in June 1976.

Paul DeCicco, director of Poly's Center for Urban and Environmental Studies, spearheaded the development of the Fire Research Center. Working with Architect William A. Hall and administrators at Polytechnic, the building was designed to include a demonstration laboratory, a large computer display to simulate fires and firefighting situations, and a low speed wind tunnel to study fire phenomena. The center also included classrooms, training areas, a fire reference library, as well as assembly and gallery space for public exhibitions and performances. Proposals for the building included a shared space with the Poly Media Institute.

The project was funded by the Max C. Fleischmann Foundation; the New York State Department of Parks and Recreation, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the U.S. Department of the Interior Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service. The remainder came from private donations.

Arrangement

The Jay Street Firehouse Records collection is arranged chronologically in one series. Box #2 contains oversized material such as architectual plans and community board form.

Scope and Contents

The Jay Street Firehouse Records (1972-1981) chronologically document the acquisition and renovation plans of the Old Brooklyn Fire House. The collection includes correspondence, architectural plans, meeting minutes and notes, grant proposals, papers, reports, press releases, contract agreements, building leases, newspaper clippings, and a certificate of landmark appropriateness.

Conditions Governing Access

Open for research without restrictions.

Conditions Governing Use

Permission to publish materials must be obtained from:

Poly Archives & Special Collections Bern Dibner Library of Science and Technology 5 MetroTech Center Brooklyn, NY 11201

Phone: (718) 260-3943 Fax: (718) 260-3756 E-mail: archives@library.poly.edu

Preferred Citation

Identification of item, date; Jay Street Firehouse Records; RG 016; box number; folder number or item identifier; Poly Archives at Bern Dibner Library of Science and Technology, New York University.

Location of Materials

Bern Dibner Library of Science and Technology 5 MetroTech Center Brooklyn, New York, 11201 (646) 997-3943 polyarchives@nyu.edu

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Materials found in collection; there is no documentation concerning the provenance of these materials.

Related Material at the Poly Archives

Center for Urban Environmental Studies (CUES) Records

Collection processed by

Nicole Lindberg Richard

About this Guide

This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on 2023-08-22 10:07:58 -0400.
Using Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language: English

Revisions to this Guide

November 2021: Finding aid revised and edited by Zoe Blecher-Cohen, Mandy Abokhair, and Aileen Thong in 2021 to update the institutional change from NYU-Poly to NYU and for compliance with DACS Required Elements for Archival Description.

Repository

Poly Archives at the Bern Dibner Library of Science and Technology, NYU Libraries
Poly Archives at Bern Dibner Library of Science and Technology
Bern Dibner Library of Science and Technology
5 MetroTech Center
Brooklyn, NY 11201