The Divine Lorraine Outside

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On April 14th, my roommate and I were talking about the local neighborhoods and the history behind the area. Tim brought up a historical hotel located at
699 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA 19123 (2.6 miles from my house in Fishtown.)

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When we arrived, it was late at night. The building has been abandoned since 1999. The building wasn’t guarded by any fences. People born in Philadelphia often regard their unlawful trespassing into The Divine Lorraine as a rite of passage

According to Philadelphia Weekly’s article “One woman’s big dream to reinvent the Divine Lorraine—and Philly’s art scene,” “there are 1,390 Instagram posts tagged #divinelorraine; 488 tagged #divinelorrainehotel—most images are taken in a style of photography called “ruin porn”: (which are) images of abandoned or decomposed places that are sort of beautiful in their own way. That’s largely what the Divine Lorraine has become: a luxury apartment turned progressive-minded hotel turned architectural zombie standing ten stories above many of the apartment buildings in the lower end of North Philly where Fairmount Avenue meets Broad Street.”

Here are a few examples of Ruin Porn taken inside the Divine Lorraine-

Divinen Lorraine Ruin Porn 1

 

 

 

 

 

 

the divine lorraine ruin porn 2

 

 

 

 

 

Rhttp://www.philadelphiaweekly.com/news-and-opinion/covead more: er-story/Divine-Lorraine-254435611.html#ixzz3XhfWa35B

Early History-

Both the location of the building and the architecture itself reflect the changes that were occurring rapidly in the city of Philadelphia and in the country at the time. North Philadelphia of the 1880s attracted many of the city’s nouveau-riche, those individuals who became wealthy as a result of the industrial revolution. The Lorraine was a place of luxurious living, providing apartments with new amenities such as electricity. In addition, the building boasted its own staff, eliminating the need for residents to have private servants. There was also a central kitchen from which meals were delivered to residents.

The Lorraine Apartments were also an architectural feat. Prior to this period, the majority of Philadelphia’s buildings were low rise, generally being no more than three or four stories tall. Not only were construction materials and techniques not capable of supporting taller buildings, but the inconvenience of the many flights of stairs to get to higher floors in the absence of an elevator was significant.

The Lorraine, at ten stories tall, was one of the first high-rise apartment buildings in the city. The building’s architect, Willis G. Hale, also designed an earlier high-rise apartment building at 22nd and Chestnut Streets, which stood from 1889 until its demolition in 1945. Hale designed many other buildings around the city, but quickly fell out of favor at the turn of the century when most patrons rejected his highly stylized Victorian designs for the sleeker style of modern skyscrapers, and most of his landmarks had been torn down after the Great Depression.

Father Divine and the Universal Peace Mission Movement

In 1948, the building was sold to Father Divine (Reverend Major Jealous Divine) for $485,000. Father Divine was the leader of the Universal Peace Mission Movement. After purchasing the building, Father Divine renamed it the Divine Lorraine Hotel. His hotel was the first of its class in Philadelphia, or indeed in the United States, to be fully racially integrated.The Divine Lorraine was open to all races and religions, men and women who were willing to follow the rules of the movement. Among others, the rules included no smoking, no drinking, no profanity, and no undue mixing of the sexes, with men and women residing on different floors of the building. Additionally, guests and residents were expected to uphold a certain level of modesty, meaning that women were expected to wear long skirts – pants were not allowed. Believing that all people were equal in the sight of God, Father Divine was involved in many social welfare activities as well. For example, after purchasing the hotel, several parts of it were transformed for public use. The 10th-floor auditorium was converted to a place of worship. The movement also opened the kitchen on the first floor as a public dining room where persons from the community were able to purchase and eat low-cost meals for 25 cents.

The Divine Lorraine received a historical marker from the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission in 1994 and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002 as a site significant in terms of both architectural and civil rights history.

Abandonment

The building was closed in 1999 and sold in 2000 by the International Peace Mission. In May 2006 it was resold to Lorraine Hotel LP. to be converted into apartments. Development never come to fruition but furnishings were sold while floors, paneling, and other architectural items were removed by salvage companies.As of 2015 the building remains a hollow shell, covered with graffiti, with windows boarded up or open to the weather.

The Universal Peace Mission Movement still exists in the form of a network of independent churches, businesses, and religious orders. Its followers operated another hotel, the Divine Tracy in West Philadelphia, but the building also was sold. It is now The Axis Apartments.

The property was transferred to developer Eric Blumenfeld in October 2012 at the city’s monthly Sheriff’s sale. He was the sole bidder for the empty hotel at 699 N. Broad Street. Blumenfeld gained control of the site in a two-step process: first, for an undisclosed price, he paid an outstanding note on the property from the New York-based Amalgamated Bank. Then he paid off city taxes and other liens. The value of both the mortgage and liens was $8,054,104.39.”- Wikipedia.

I found a really great video of a drone flying of the the abandoned “Divine Lorraine.”

Click here to view the embedded video.