Harley Baldwin

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Harley Baldwin
Property developer, art dealer
Known forParticipating in the high end business development of Aspen, Colorado; a partner in the development of Bridgemarket in Manhattan
PartnerRichard Edwards

Harley Baldwin (April 17, 1945 – January 23, 2005) was an American

developer and art dealer who divided his time between residences in Aspen, Colorado, and New York City. He was best known for his successes in the former community, where the upscale boutiques and exclusive nightclub that opened in two historic buildings he renovated eventually lent the ski-resort community the nickname "Glitter Gulch"[verification needed
]. While this was controversial in a community that had long prided itself on its lack of pretension, he was generally seen positively in Aspen

Early life

Born in Chicago to an Air Force colonel in 1945, he grew up a military brat on bases all over the United States. He earned a degree in international relations from Syracuse University and initially worked in New York City as a welfare caseworker and promotions director for Show magazine. After a year, still under a draft deferment,[1] he left the city and drove west with a family fortune of $1,200. At a turn in the road he decided to go to Aspen.[2]

Career

Soon after arriving in Aspen, he rented a

subdivided it into Ruedi Shores.[1]

In 1971, he persuaded

Also that year, Baldwin married Lee Webster. The following year, 1972, feeling local opposition to some of his other projects was too great to overcome,[2] he and Webster moved to New York to pursue opportunities there. They maintained their properties and residence in Aspen, and continued to look after those investments. The couple divorced in 1977.[3]

In New York, he was primarily involved in developing Bridgemarket, a food store under the Manhattan approach to the

Queensboro Bridge. The process took longer than Baldwin anticipated, and during it the plans were changed considerably from Baldwin's original vision. It finally opened in 1999, with other developers involved.[6]

His apartment in

Back in Aspen in 1988, he bought the Brand's neighbor, the Collins Block, another historic building from the city's boom years. He used them to join with other developers to effect a transformation of Aspen's image. Where a funeral parlor[verification needed] and hardware store had once been, luxury boutiques like Louis Vuitton, Dior and Bulgari are now located. In the basement of the Collins he opened the Caribou Club, a members-only nightspot. The second floor of the Brand was given over to high-end hotel and apartment space. Similarly, he renovated the upper floor of the Collins into a 6,000-square-foot (560 m2) penthouse for himself and his companion Richard Edwards that Architectural Digest featured in 1996.[2]

The emergence of the Caribou and the boutiques disturbed some Aspenites,[1] who saw it as a challenge to the egalitarian mentality that had long predominated locally despite the area's many rich and famous residents.[3] The buildings were referred to as "Glitter Gulch", a nickname later applied to Aspen itself[verification needed] . Baldwin saw it as inevitable and logical. "Aspen is for the most successful people in the world." he said in a 2001 Vanity Fair article. "It so happens that they like to wear Gucci. Where's the problem?" George Hamilton, a friend, defended him as "what Aspen is all about ... He understands classic good taste and at the same time is irreverent about it."[2]

He started more businesses, bringing the total he owned in Aspen to 12. One sold silver belt buckles he had designed himself. The other was an art gallery,[2] a conscious attempt on his part to raise the cultural profile of his adopted hometown, already known in the classical music community for the annual Aspen Music Festival and School, to which he contributed money and sat on the board.[1] Very quickly, the Baldwin Gallery, in the Brand's South Galena Street frontage, had the effect he had hoped, selling work by internationally prominent contemporary artists like Jennifer Bartlett and Ross Bleckner.

Death

In 2004 Baldwin became ill with

Memorial Sloan–Kettering Cancer Center.[3]

See also

References