Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
For the music critic John Rockwell, Soho was an ideal home base. He could walk to see performances by Meredith Monk or Steve Reich in lofts that didn’t look so different from the one he lived in at 543 Broadway. A Philip Glass concert, on Wooster Street in 1973, seemed, in Rockwell’s words, to be almost designed for the neighborhood to hear while strolling past, with its “motoric rhythms, burbling, highly amplified figurations and mournful sustained notes booming out through the huge black windows.” Later, in 1988, Rockwell interviewed Robert Wilson and David Byrne from the latter’s kitchen table — also in Soho.
The open living area.
Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
Rockwell covered music, dance, theater, film, books, and art for the New York Times, eventually running the “Arts & Leisure” section and serving as the paper’s cultural correspondent in Europe. He also hosted a WNYC show on culture (Rockwell Matters), oversaw the Lincoln Center Festival, and wrote books — a career in the arts that largely unfolded while he lived at No. 543. The ten-story, 1903 industrial building stretches all the way back to Mercer and was overtaken by artists in the 1970s. Gale Ormiston ran a dance company at 543; dancer Luise Wykell invited the public to an “evening of energy exploration” in 1981; and Gaetano Pesce named a whimsical chair after his home address.
Price: $4.5 million
Specs: 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
Extras: Media room, office, dining room, roof access, keyed elevator.
10-minute walking radius: Fanelli Café, the New York Earth Room, Balthazar
Listed by: Gavin Shiminski & Jonathan Stein, Douglas Elliman
Rockwell and his filmmaker wife, Linda Mevorach, moved to the top-floor apartment in 1978, according to their broker, Gavin Shiminski, who listed the space for $4.5 million this week. The price accounts for a rarity in Soho: 22 windows across three exposures, with endless views, thanks to how the ten-floor building sticks out of the historic neighborhood. Other charms include exposed brick, high-barrel vaulted ceilings, old hardwood, and built-ins that stretch along a hall off the main, open living area.
But the standout might not be the selling point. Listing photos include images of Rockwell’s inner sanctum, lined floor to ceiling with special shelving to fit the CDs, tapes, and records that he listened to as a critic. That space is soundproofed, Shiminski says, “so he can really listen to his music and do his thing.”
Huge views in the open living area.
Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
The built-ins lead to a hallway of more built-ins.
Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
This wing of the apartment is now set up with two offices and a bedroom.
Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
Rockwell’s office is the larger space, listed on floor plans as a media room. It’s soundproofed.
Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
A desk in back set up for a writer.
Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
The other wing of the apartment, which stretches from Broadway to Mercer, contains a kitchen, dining room, and more bedrooms.
Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
From left: Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDrepsPhoto: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
From top: Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDrepsPhoto: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
A dining nook.
Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
A view over Manhattan.
Photo: Francisco Rosario/DDreps
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