Electric Circus, 23 St. Marks Place.
These three buildings were constructed as separate row houses in the 1830s. At their completion, they would have looked much like their neighbor across the street, the Daniel Le Roy House at 20 St. Marks Place.
In the 1870s nos. 19 and 21 became the headquarters of the Arion Society, a German music club, reflecting the new immigrant community in the neighborhood. In the late 1880s, all three were purchased by brewery magnate George Erhet, who turned them into Arlington Hall, a venue of community halls and ballrooms. In 1920, the properties were purchased by the Polish National Home, Polski Dom Narodwy, and served in a similar function for the Polish community.
In the 1950's a nightclub called "The Dom" opened in the basement level. Advertised as "a groovy get-together place of the neighborhood cats and chicks who dig dancing and Polish food at Avenue A prices," the Dom enjoyed patrons such as Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, and other Beats. In 1966, Andy Warhol rented the upper level as a psychedelic performance space. Their house band: Velvet Underground. By then the Dom was losing popularity.
In its final hurrah, the basement became a nightclub once again, boasting the "chic bohemian" Electric Circus. Famously, a bomb was set off on the dance floor in 1970, which injured dozens of patrons. The nightclub was never able to return to its heyday of the 1950s and 1960s, and it closed in 1971.