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United States Post Office (Granville, New York)

U.S. Post Office
A  1 1⁄2-story brick building with a flagpole in front, lit from the right by late afternoon sun
North elevation and west profile, 2008
Location Granville, NY
Nearest city Hudson Falls
Coordinates 43°24′27″N 73°15′36″W / 43.40750°N 73.26000°W / 43.40750; -73.26000Coordinates: 43°24′27″N 73°15′36″W / 43.40750°N 73.26000°W / 43.40750; -73.26000
Built 1935–36
Architect Louis A. Simon
Architectural style Colonial Revival
MPS US Post Offices in New York State, 1858–1943, TR
NRHP Reference # 88002520
Added to NRHP May 11, 1989

The U.S. Post Office in Granville, New York, United States, is located on Main Street (NY 149) in the center of the village. It is a brick building serving the ZIP Code 12832, which covers the village and surrounding areas of the Town of Granville.

It was built in the mid-1930s as part of a relief effort to provide jobs during the Depression. Like many post offices in small towns from that era designed by Treasury Department Supervising Architect Louis Simon, it uses the Colonial Revival architectural style. Within that style of post office in New York, it is distinguished by the raised parapet on its roofline, found on only two other post offices in the state, and the asymmetrical arrangement of its front facade, very unusual on a post office of that size erected at that time. In 1989 it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the only building in the village of Granville yet listed.

The post office is situated on a narrow lot on the south side of Main Street. The surrounding neighborhood is entirely composed of two-story commercial buildings. There is a narrow alley between the post office and the building to its east, and a driveway on the west leading to a parking lot in the rear. It is set back from the street slightly more than its neighbors, with plantings and a flagpole in front.

It is a five-by-six-bay one-and-a-half–story steel frame structure on a raised foundation of slate on the front and cast stone on the rear and sides. The upper floors are faced in brick laid in common bond. The gabled roof is shingled in slate with raised parapets topped by stone coping at the gable ends. The bricks of the parapets are stacked to appear as a false chimney. The four-bay rear wing has a flat roof with stone coping; a loading dock projects from it.


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