Hendler Creamery

Hendler Creamery
Hendler Creamery in 2011
Location1100 E. Baltimore St. & 1107 E. Fayette St., Baltimore, Maryland
Coordinates39°17′28″N 76°36′8″W / 39.29111°N 76.60222°W / 39.29111; -76.60222
Area1.5 acres (0.61 ha)
Built1892
ArchitectJackson C. Gott
Architectural styleRomanesque, Early Commercial
NRHP reference No.07001032
Added to NRHPDecember 20, 2007

Hendler Creamery was an industrial complex in Jonestown, Baltimore, Maryland. It is historically significant in three areas: transportation, performing arts, and industry. It was originally a cable-car powerhouse that lasted only six years; after cable cars were replaced by overhead electric street cars around the turn of the century, the building became a theater; and finally a popular ice cream factory that lasted for many decades as a notable part of Baltimore culture and heritage.

The building, deemed structurally sound in 2007, was purchased in 2012 by a local developer who promised to renovate it. Instead nothing happened. Indeed the roof was intentionally removed exposing the interior to the elements, necessitating the building's complete demolition a few years later. The property was stripped of historic valuables and then fully demolished, in September 2024, to make way for a privately owned "park". The building was a case study in the phenomenon known as demolition by neglect.