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An acronym for SOuth of HOuston (pronounced
"how-stun") Street. This eclectic neighborhood in lower Manhattan had a long
history before becoming New York City's artistic haven.
The SoHo that surrounds you, with its cast-iron warehouses and
cobblestone streets arose in the 1850's after the residential population moved uptown. |
Up rose these ornate edifices
housing fabrics, china, glass and more for companies like Lord & Taylor and Tiffany's.
The lower floors were designed for displays and became perfect for the art galleries to
come. |
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By the late 1900's, the fashionable businesses
moved uptown and the area developed into a seedy, sweatshop-filled slum known as
"hell's hundred acres." New
labor laws forced the sweatshops to evacuate leaving SoHo a ghost town ripe for a
revolution! |
Through the 1960's artists quietly
moved into the abandoned buildings which provided "lofty" spaces to contain
their creativity. (Even if there often was no electricity!) But by the 1970's SoHo developed into a community, transforming
itself into a residential / commercial / artistic zone. |
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Let's
explore today's SoHo! |
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