neighborhood: clinton hill | space type: living space, maker | active since: 1979 | links: facebook, flickr
This article was written for Hyperallergic. See the original here.
Most of the coverage you’ll find about the Broken Angel, a handmade architectural
marvel in Clinton Hill, begins the story in 2006, when there was a small fire
that started all the trouble. That’s the year the tale switches from one about
brilliant bohemian artists building their crazy dreamhouse to one about an
eccentric old man overwhelmed by legal troubles, shady business partners, and
the strangling bureaucracy of the city.

Before I delve into a little history of this incredible space, here’s the
time-sensitive part: there’s a block party
tonight to say farewell to the Broken Angel, which was originally organized as a
small, ten-person gathering but has ballooned to an enormous, two-part
spectacle, with over 900 people planning to attend. The festivities begin
outside the house itself (4–6 Downing St.) for a family-friendly fête, and will
then move to the Irondale Center for a
fundraiser turned Brooklyn underground extravaganza, filled to the brim with
dancers and performers and tall bikes and DJs and many, many surprises.
And now please read on to learn more about the mad genius whose work is being
celebrated.

Arthur Wood has been likened to an American Gaudí. The Broken
Angel has been compared to LA’s Watts Towers and
Austin’s Cathedral
of Junk. Borough President Marty Markowitz called it “a Rubik’s Cube of a spaceship.” It’s been
termed vernacular
architecture, folk art, outsider
art, and—naturally, by some—a frightening eyesore. In its heyday, the
Brooklyn Angel was surely the most strikingly unique sculptural works in all of
New York. Tragically, much of it has been dismantled in the past decade, and
what’s left is not likely to last much longer.

Arthur Wood (who is now 84) and his wife Cynthia (who passed away in 2010) bought
the former Brooklyn Trolley headquarters at a city auction in 1979. They paid a
mere $2,000 for the four-story, 10,000-square-foot building. And then they began
to turn it into art.
Cynthia & Arthur in
2005
According to Shannon Kerner, a close friend of Arthur’s, the Woods began by
tearing out the walls and floors and creating many different-sized rooms, some
four sweeping stories high, others only five feet. The main staircase was a
series of ladders and bridges. Most of the wood and other materials used were
salvaged from the streets and garbage dumps, and the space was filled with
handmade stained-glass windows Cynthia created from found glass and bottles. In
the basement Arthur built a hot tub with a waterfall. And the best-known element
of the Broken Angel was on the roof: the Woods constructed a spectacular
forty-foot wood-and-glass sculpture on a mirrored platform, which made the whole
structure seem to be floating in the clouds.

Shannon describes the rooftop sculpture:
The roof structure branched into two towers. The front one had a huge camera
obscura which gave a 360º view of the neighborhood (seven flights up!). You
could see blocks and blocks in great detail on a huge white linoleum table
scavenged from the street. There was a sweet wooden deck up there too, for
stargazing (Arthur loves inventing star-gazing equipment) or hanging out or
making art. The back tower was a cool sculpture; you couldn’t hang out
on it so much, but you could tangle yourself in its branches (I use the term
“branches” metaphorically). In the back there was also another deck that was
all stucco, it was like being in the Southwest U.S. The house was an amalgam
of all kinds of amazing environments!

Brandon Stanton from Humans of New York, who interviewed Arthur in 2011, said,
“Arthur’s sparkling ideas were built with other people’s trash. The concepts
were towering and glistening. The realities were made of plywood.” The Woods
spent decades creating their masterpiece, finishing major construction in 2002.
On their son Chris’ Flickr page
(from which all the photos in this post are taken), he said his parents
“creat[ed] a home which brought mystery, magic and magnificence to a small
cul-de-sac in Brooklyn.” The Village Voice deemed it the “Best
Urban Folly” of 2001. In 2002 the New York Times wrote: “Depending on the angle, Broken Angel may
resemble a blimp impaled on a church or a laboratory from which some mad
scientist might launch a pedal-driven flying machine.” In 2004, Michel Gondry
used the Broken Angel as the backdrop for Dave
Chappelle’s Block Party. It represents the kind of fantastic
treasure that revitalizes your excitement about your neighborhood, that renews
your faith in art triumphing over everything—up to and including reason.

And then in 2006 there was a fire. It was small, on one of the top turrets. There
was minimal damage and no one was hurt, but that was the point when things began
to go downhill. The firefighters on the scene deemed the building unsafe to
enter, and the Department of Buildings was notified. They immediately ruled the
place unfit for occupancy and evicted the Woods, who were arrested a few days
later when they refused to leave. To bring the building up to code—including
tearing down the forty feet of additional structure on the roof—would cost
around $3 million.

The community rallied around the Woods, including Pratt architecture professor
Brent M. Porter, who, along with seven of his students, tried
to prove that the building was, in fact, structurally sound. When that didn’t
work, the Woods partnered with real estate developer Shahn Andersen to bring it
up to code and convert it into condos and art studios. This was a hopeful
moment, where it seemed that Arthur’s full vision for the Broken Angel would
finally be realized, saving the fantastical space and even opening it up to
artists and the community.

On Brownstoner, a commenter named phyllyslim recently talked
about having considered joining the project, and the plans Arthur had
for it:
The building was [going to be] transformed into a “museum of
light” as he termed it… There was to be a parabolic dish in the cellar
where light from a prism in the then existing cupola would be directed…
There was to be the “cathedral of light” in the front addition
where schoolchildren would come to play with interactive exhibits in light,
and much more.
In addition, Brownstoner reported
at the time that Arthur planned to cap it all off by creating a huge whale out
of an old helicopter and hanging it from the building.
Arthur's blueprint
for the finished project
After the fire, the Chris Woods wrote,
“Many of you wonder what the hell my parents are doing with that building. They
have always been building an outline of a dream.” And sadly, as with most such
spectacularly unlikely dreams, this one was not to be. There followed three
years of complicated legal and financial troubles, with loans defaulted on,
trusts broken, promises unkept, and money gone missing. Shahn and Arthur went
from collaborators to litigious enemies, and the property was foreclosed upon by
the lender, Madison Realty Capital, in 2009. By then Broken Angel had been
mostly gutted, the majority of its superbly unique elements removed. Shortly
thereafter, in 2010, Cynthia lost her long battle with cancer. Arthur has been
in and out of the building ever since.

Many feel that Arthur has been unfairly treated by the city and its emissaries.
Arthur himself believes the Department of Buildings started the fire in order to
come in and condemn the building. In 2007, Brownstoner noted
“the intense level of scrutiny and apparent lack of straight dealing [Arthur and
Shahn] received from both DOB and the courts,” and Chris wrote: “The department
of Buildings and the City of New York should drop their campaign of harassment
and recognize that Brooklyn wants the building that Arthur Wood envisioned, not
another boring box of bricks. Why is our building under such scrutiny while
other buildings in NY have actually collapsed?”

And the fight to goes on. Says Shannon, “This type of structure belongs in New
York, in Brooklyn. We need places like this! Instead of tearing it down the city
should have worked with him to preserve it, make it safe to their standards,
sure, but make it better.” Shalin Sculpham, another friend of Arthur’s, told
the New York Daily News, “It’s one of the weirdest, most beautiful
buildings in New York—and his life’s work. And it’s being taken away.”

Now the city has given Arthur one more final notice, so barring another stay of
execution, March 30th, 2013 will be Arthur’s last day in his home of nearly
thirty years. Shannon says they chose to have a block party to give people a
chance to say farewell to Broken Angel, “to wish Arthur well and maybe sing him
a song or dance him a dance or do something to show their support of the
situation. They could bring all their favorite memories of the space, shake his
hand, share some cookies…” Chris has said that they would like to put together a
time capsule to hide in the building, so people can bring something small to
contribute to that. Ever hopeful, friends have put out an open call for (pro
bono) legal help (contact brokenangelbk@gmail.com to get
involved!), and a donation
page has been set up, in the hopes of raising $50,000 to keep on
fighting.
the Woods' stove
So this could really be the end of Broken Angel, but people have been saying that
for nearly a decade—if not longer. Arthur is old now, and tired, but he’s still
feisty, and he has support from many different corners. And after all, for
someone who created the miraculous Broken Angel out of salvaged bottles and
boards, would it be so unreasonable to hope for a few more years to keep
creating miracles within it?

***
Like this? Read about more historic buildings: Brooklyn
Lyceum, Brooklyn
Historical Society, Bushwick
Schoolhouse, Breuckelen
Distilling Co., South
Oxford Space, Trinity
Project