Hendler Creamery
Hendler Creamery | |
Hendler Creamery in 2011 | |
| Location | 1100 E. Baltimore St. & 1107 E. Fayette St., Baltimore, Maryland |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 39°17′28″N 76°36′8″W / 39.29111°N 76.60222°W |
| Area | 1.5 acres (0.61 ha) |
| Built | 1892 |
| Architect | Jackson C. Gott |
| Architectural style | Romanesque, Early Commercial |
| NRHP reference No. | 07001032 |
| Added to NRHP | December 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.