67 East 11th Street, famously known as The Cast Iron Building, is a prominent cooperative residence situated in Manhattan’s lively Greenwich Village. Built in 1868, the structure originally housed the James McCreery Dry Goods Store. Its striking cast-iron façade, adorned with Corinthian columns and expansive arched windows, is a hallmark of 19th-century architectural design. In 1973, the structure was converted into one of New York City’s first major residential cooperatives in a cast-iron building, a trendsetting example of adaptive reuse. This set a precedent for similar residential conversions in cast-iron buildings across neighborhoods like SoHo and Tribeca, helping catalyze the movement to preserve industrial-era architecture.