 The Alhambra in 2010 photo by Jim.henderson
                                                                                          The Alhambra in 2010 photo by Jim.henderson The Alhambra in 1890 Architect Montrose W. Morris
                                                                                          The Alhambra in 1890 Architect Montrose W. MorrisOne of the most magnificent apartment houses in New York City is  The  Alhambra. The name Alhambra means literally "the red one"  which comes from  Morrish Spain.   In Spain Alhambra is a palace and fortress complex constructed  during the mid 14th century by the Moorish rulers of the Emirate of Granada in  Al-Andalus, occupying the top of the hill of the Assabica on the southeastern  border of the city of Granada in the Autonomous Community of Andalusia. In the  old Bedford section of Brooklyn The Alhambra is a grand apartment erected in  1889 by Louis F. Seitz.  It faces Nostrand avenue, and  has a frontage of two  hundred feet and a depth of seventy feet which is on Macon and Halsey Street.   Six large octagon towers ornament the edifice; two of them being in the center  and one at each of the four corners.  According to the Brooklyn Daily Eagle the  originally ground floor center of the building had a lofty stone arch that  welcomed you as you entered a vista of an open court  with fountains, gardens,  croquet and tennis grounds.  Similar arches on Macon and Halsey Street remain  today.  One of the most noticeable features of the front is a center pavilion of  arcade balconies which use to give views of the long gone gardens. 
 The architect and Bedford resident was twenty-eight year old Montrose  Morris who was a big fan of the Romanesque style at the time.  Morris brought  this style to Bedford Stuyvesant in 1885 with his own house on Hancock Street.   Morris use elaborately delicate red Terra-cotta carvings, rock-face Stone and  light-colored brick, and is beautified by chimneys, lofty gables, recessed  balconies, arched windows and tiled covered roofs.  The original building housed  30 families of upper and upper middle class status.

1890's Montrose W. Morris apartment interior Individually Landmarked in 1986 the once vacant building of the 1980's has  come almost full circle. The beautiful jewel fell into complete  disrepair including a great fire in 1994.  Thanks to developer and  preservationist Tom Anderson of Anderson Associates the building was repaired  and restored in the late 1990's/2000.
