Where We Work

Areas We Serve.

Local master masons across Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens, and The Bronx. We know your block — its architecture, its LPC status, its weather exposure, its common failure modes.

Brooklyn 1880–1910

Park Slope

Park Slope contains one of the largest concentrations of Victorian brownstones in the United States. Designated a New York City historic district in 1973 and ex…

Brownstone restoration in Park Slope →
Brooklyn 1820–1900

Brooklyn Heights

Brooklyn Heights is the oldest historic neighborhood in New York City and the first district ever designated by the LPC, in 1965. The architecture spans an unus…

Brownstone restoration in Brooklyn Heights →
Brooklyn 1845–1880

Cobble Hill

Cobble Hill is a small but architecturally important Brooklyn historic district — about 22 blocks designated in 1969. The neighborhood's row houses date primari…

Brownstone restoration in Cobble Hill →
Brooklyn 1865–1885

Carroll Gardens

Carroll Gardens is famous for one peculiar feature: extra-deep front yards. The unique 'place' streets — 1st Place through 4th Place — have residential setbacks…

Brownstone restoration in Carroll Gardens →
Brooklyn 1855–1900

Fort Greene

Fort Greene is one of Brooklyn's largest historic districts — designated in 1978 and significantly extended in 2012. The neighborhood centers on Fort Greene Par…

Brownstone restoration in Fort Greene →
Brooklyn 1875–1905

Clinton Hill

Clinton Hill contains the most architecturally ambitious row houses in Brooklyn. Developed as the late-19th-century elite residential area of the borough — the …

Brownstone restoration in Clinton Hill →
Brooklyn 1870–1905

Bed-Stuy

Bedford-Stuyvesant has the largest collection of late-19th-century row houses anywhere in New York — over 8,000 buildings in the broader neighborhood, with mult…

Brownstone restoration in Bed-Stuy →
Brooklyn 1880–1910

Crown Heights

Crown Heights North contains some of Brooklyn's grandest late-19th-century row houses, particularly along Park Place and Sterling Place. The four phases of LPC …

Brownstone restoration in Crown Heights →
Brooklyn 1845–1875

Boerum Hill

Boerum Hill is one of Brooklyn's smaller historic districts but contains some of the borough's best-preserved mid-19th-century row houses. Designated in 1973, t…

Brownstone restoration in Boerum Hill →
Brooklyn 1875–1900

Stuyvesant Heights

Stuyvesant Heights is the heart of historic Bed-Stuy — a 575-building historic district designated in 1996 and extended in 2013. The area's Romanesque Revival r…

Brownstone restoration in Stuyvesant Heights →
Manhattan 1880–1910

Harlem

Harlem contains some of Manhattan's most architecturally significant row houses — particularly the famed Strivers' Row, designed by McKim, Mead & White, Bruce P…

Brownstone restoration in Harlem →
Brooklyn 1880–1900

Prospect Heights

Prospect Heights is one of Brooklyn's more recently-designated historic districts — protected in 2009 after a decade of community advocacy. The neighborhood's r…

Brownstone restoration in Prospect Heights →
Manhattan 1820–1900

Greenwich Village

Greenwich Village is one of New York City's most architecturally significant historic districts — designated in 1969 and covering roughly 100 blocks of Federal,…

Brownstone restoration in Greenwich Village →
Manhattan 1885–1910

Upper West Side

The Upper West Side contains the most architecturally ambitious row houses in Manhattan — built between 1885 and 1910 as the upper-class residential expansion n…

Brownstone restoration in Upper West Side →
Manhattan 1830–1880

Chelsea

Chelsea contains one of Manhattan's earliest middle-class residential districts — the original Cushman Row on West 20th Street (1840) is among the finest surviv…

Brownstone restoration in Chelsea →
Manhattan 1860–1900

Tribeca

Tribeca contains the largest concentration of 19th-century commercial cast iron and masonry storefronts in the United States — designated across four historic d…

Brownstone restoration in Tribeca →
Queens 1885–1925

Astoria

Astoria contains a substantial inventory of late-19th and early-20th-century row houses — primarily Romanesque Revival, Neo-Grec, and Renaissance Revival — buil…

Brownstone restoration in Astoria →
The Bronx 1860–1930

Riverdale

Riverdale contains The Bronx's largest concentration of historic estate-scale residential architecture — Gothic Revival, Italianate, Queen Anne, and Shingle Sty…

Brownstone restoration in Riverdale →
Don't See Your Area?

We work across
all five boroughs.

If your neighborhood isn't listed, we likely serve it. Call to confirm — most NYC neighborhoods are within our service area.