Over the course of several months in 2022 and 2023, Walter Chatham, representing the Galvan Foundation, appeared before the Historic Preservation Commission with the plans to convert the buildings at the corner of Warren and North Fourth streets into a hotel. During the course of the review, the design for hotel evolved from something rather fanciful to something more respectful of the buildings' original architectural design.
Yesterday, Joshua Moon, representing Galvan, was back before the HPC seeking a certificate of appropriateness to install awnings on the building. The awnings over the entrances would be fixed; the awnings over the windows would be retractable. These mocked-up photographs were presented to illustrate what was being proposed.
Moon told the HPC that the fixed awnings over the entrances would project six feet from the building. When the retractable awnings over the windows were extended, they would protect eight feet from the building, which means they would extend beyond the sidewalk.
In the discussion of the awnings, HPC member Miranda Barry reminded her colleagues, "Generally, we have approved awnings on the theory they are removable."
In the end, the HPC decided they needed more information and visuals that showed what the building would look like with the awnings extended.
Awnings on buildings were common in the 19th and early 20th centuries . . .
but somehow the awnings proposed for the future Hudson Public Hotel seem inappropriately modern-looking.
COPYRIGHT 2026 CAROLE OSTERINK



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