This article appears in the Summer/Fall 2003 issue of the Heritage Magazine
Last Look... A. M. & A's Downtown
by John H. Conlin
A.M.&A.s
is long gone from Downtown Buffalo along with traffic on Main Street and retail
shopping in general. In 1960, after nearly 100 years in the building that replaced
the second American Hotel (see Heritage
vol 3 #2), Adam Meldrum and Anderson moved across Main Street. They left
behind the vast creaky wooden floors of the old building to occupy one of the
most modern-looking stores in Buffalo. The building, covering half of a large
city block, was the design of one of the premier New York City architectural
firms, Starrett & Van Vleck. They were the designers of Saks Fifth Avenue,
Bloomingdale's Lexington Avenue and Lord &Taylor's Fifth Avenue. In 1945,
ten years after their initial unification of several building components, Starrett
& Van Vleck perfected the composition.
The
former J.N. Adam department store, one of the best pieces of modernism on Main
Street, has been a major component of downtown streetscape for half a century.
It presents a masterful play of abstract form, interconnecting horizontal and
vertical elements with the sophistication of a Gershwin arrangement. Unified
horizontal window bands and layered horizontal monochrome materials: travertine-like
stone, buff brick banded with glazed buff tiles, subtly reinforce the linear
precision of the composition. The crowning glory of the whole complex is the
Washington Street elevation three earlier components designed by Buffalo architects:
E.B. Green, 1892 and 1896, and Esenwein &Johnson,1909, are well-preserved.
Recently,
while the current owner was in the process of establishing a reuse of the now
vacant building, it was revealed the city was "moving ahead" with
plans for the demolition of the whole complex to create a "shovel ready"
site for some unspecified and likely non-existent developer. If there were a
demand for such "shovel ready" sites on Main Street in Downtown Buffalo,
why are three major sites now devoted to surface parking lots? Half of the block
south of the Ellicott Square Building has been vacant for decades. The site
of the old Federal Reserve at Main and Swan has been empty since that building
was demolished in the late 1950s. And the Main & Seneca Street site awaits
- "shovel ready."
To eagerly plan the demolition of this building, on simple speculation that something better will be built, is sheer madness.
