Urban archaeology: A defunct bank still has a ominous warning on the sidewalk
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The Haier Building in midtown (Photos by Rolando Pujol)
The neo-classical Haier Building stands out among the warehouses and offices buildings of the Garment District. Considered among the best works of the firm York and Sawyer, the building is now headquarters to Haier America, which sells everything from HVAC systems to wine cellars.
But the building was once home to the Greenwich Savings Bank, which had it roots in the Village, not the tony neighborhood full of well-heeled finance types in Connecticut.
Haier's name is now prominently displayed outside the building, but the Greenwich bank's link to the site has not entirely been chiseled away. Just look down on the sidewalk, where small brass plaques demarcate the property line of the Greenwich Savings Bank. We're told somewhat imperiously that we are "crossing by permission only" and that "permission is revocable at will."
Take that, wanna-be squatters! And read more for an explanation behind these plaques, which are designed to prevent "adverse possession" of a property by someone who does not own it.
And by the way, the bank's ending came in a way that's all too familiar to us today. It collapsed in 1981, its remnants were absorbed by Metropolitan Savings Bank, then Crossland Savings, and today, its DNA survives in HSBC.
-- Rolando Pujol













