This tall, half-timbered house retains its original fishscale roof tiles. Repeated details create a cohesive appearance. This was one of many houses featured in a Hopper House display on Nyack residences and businesses that were in existence from...
On Cedar Hill Avenue, near Depot Place, is one of the few remaining factory buildings in Nyack. The first floor has been modernized, but the corner of the second floor retains some Victorian detailing. The building was once a sewing machine...
This tiny salt box house retains many of its original elements: narrow clapboards, shutters, tiny windows on the second story. It is a very early nineteenth century Nyack house.
Another of the several mansard-roofed house on Prospect Street, #46 retains its double brackets and hooded third-story windows. It's a pleasant corner house with a wraparound porch.
This Second Empire house is in excellent condition. It was built before 1884 and retains some distinctive features, such as the scalloped hood over the entry and the tower over the central dormer. Gone, however, are the iron cresting, finials, and...
The Nyack Center was formerly the First Presbyterian Church, one of Nyack's earliest religious groups. The white clapboard building still retains many architectural elements of its former days but it is now used for performances, meetings, child...