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Any reproduction of archive photos must credit the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission as the source. All photos can be downloaded from the archive at no cost.

It will be regularly updated with newly digitized and catalogued images. The LPC Designation Photo Collection is just part of the agency’s photo archive. Though most of the images were taken by staff photographers working for the agency, some images have been donated and submitted by historic preservation advocacy groups. Given the advances in photography, LPC transitioned from analog to digital photography in 2004. The images in the LPC Designation Photo Collection are an interesting mix of 35 mm black-and-white and color film, medium and large format negatives, color slides, and miscellaneous darkroom prints and Polaroids.
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For more information on how to navigate the archive, please visit, How to Navigate the LPC Photo Archive on the main page. This enhancement offers additional search and filter functions that will allow users to search images by architect, style, construction date, building type, or materials. The digital photo archive is enhanced by LPC’s historic building data, which includes building-by-building information on more than 37,500 buildings. The LPC Designation Photo Collection, available at, allows user to search for images by landmark name, address, block and lot number, and landmark number. Until now, these designation photos had only been available by request, and now they are accessible to all in a digital format that is easy to access. When LPC designates a property, it documents it in a designation report with a written description and photographs, both of which serve as a baseline for future work. Read the press release here.įor more than 55 years, LPC has been documenting designated buildings and sites through photography as part of the designation process. This project was made possible, in part, through a grant from the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation.
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The digital photo archive allows the public to easily search and explore high-resolution images of designated buildings and sites throughout the five boroughs, and property owners, architects and contractors can now easily search and download designation photos as they consider work on these properties. The call for contributions is still open: gaycenter.On August 18, 2022, the Landmarks Preservation Commission launched the LPC Designation Photo Collection, a digital photo archive of New York City’s designated landmarks and historic districts. See a trio of exhibits showcasing the LGBTQuarantine project at our Google Arts & Culture page. Special thanks to Dante Hussein, Caitlin McCarthy and Avery Novitch-and all of the contributors to the project. Nonetheless, connection among our communities continues to be a source of hope and strength for many. In a period when physical distance becomes a necessity for public health, social lives are transformed. Some stay connected with those they live with, some meet loved ones in socially-distanced settings, while others maintain or create relationships through digital means.

In response to the particularities of the COVID-19 health crisis, the nature of social interaction and the means through which we experience connection has shifted. Queer Life in Quarantine highlights contributions to The LGBT Community Center National History Archive’s LGBTQuarantine Archive Project, an open call to collect stories, photographs, diary entries, artworks and more representing the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and quarantine. Holdings consist of personal papers created by individuals and records of organizations periodicals (newspapers and magazines) organization files (printed matter created by organizations for their membership bases) and the organizational records of The Center. Materials in the collections run from as early as 1878 to the present day, and are made up of a variety of media, including paper, scrapbooks, photographs, audio and video recordings, pamphlets and printed materials, posters and born-digital records. Through our collections, we enable the stories and experiences of New York’s LGBTQ people to be told with historical depth and understanding. The LGBT Community Center National History Archive is a community-based archive that collects, preserves, and makes available to the public the documentation of LGBTQ lives and organizations centered in and around New York. For material available from home, check out the Remote Research Guide. We’ve reopened for limited onsite research appointments reach out to to learn more.
