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Schenectady Armory

Schenectady Armory
Front view of entrance and north wing of armory, a brown brick building in the Art Deco architectural style
West elevation with entrance pavilion, 2008
Location Schenectady, NY
Coordinates 42°48′48.13″N 73°56′57.36″W / 42.8133694°N 73.9492667°W / 42.8133694; -73.9492667Coordinates: 42°48′48.13″N 73°56′57.36″W / 42.8133694°N 73.9492667°W / 42.8133694; -73.9492667
Area 1.9 acres (0.77 ha)
Built 1936
Architect William Haugaard
Architectural style Art Deco (exterior), Tudorbethan (interior)
MPS Army National Guard Armories in New York State
NRHP Reference # 95000087
Added to NRHP 1995

The Schenectady Armory is located on Washington Avenue in the city of the same name in the U.S. state of New York. It is a brown brick building dating to 1936.

New York's state architect at that time, William Haugaard, used the Art Deco architectural style for the exterior of the building and the Tudorbethan mode for the interior. The armory remains virtually intact today. It was home to two units of the New York Army National Guard until it was closed in 2008. In 1995 it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The armory is on a one-way extension of Washington Avenue just north of its interchange with Interstate 890 and just south of Schenectady County Community College's Elston Hall opposite, the former Hotel Van Curler. To its east is Fuller Street and some industrial buildings.

It is on a 1.9-acre (0.77 ha) lot with one other building, a modern garage not considered a contributing resource to the Register listing. The armory itself is a T-shaped building of brick on a steel frame structural system. The main block is three and a half stories in height with slightly asymmetrical two-story side wings. It has a projecting entrance pavilion on the west (front) elevation, with a segmented arch over its sally port, filled with two heavy oak doors with medieval-inspired hardware. The facade is otherwise embellished with details representing both the Art Deco and Tudorbethan styles.

Projecting perpendicularly to the main administration building on the east is the drill shed, a gable-roofed wing with its windows spaced by buttresses with stone caps. The brick-faced concrete block garage is to the southeast.


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