La Marqueta (formerly Park Avenue Market)
About This Listing
Place Details
- Borough: Manhattan
- Neighborhood: East Harlem
- Categories: Market, Shopping
Place Matters Profile
La Marqueta is an enclosed marketplace in East Harlem that has long served this neighborhood’s diverse and changing population–from the Italian immigrants of the 1930s to the primarily Latino residents of today. Over the years it has been both a much-needed inexpensive shopping spot and an important social gathering place.
Originally called the Park Avenue Market, La Marqueta was established by Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia in 1936. Created as a way to regulate and control the many pushcarts that plied the streets of East Harlem, the market was designed to give permanent homes to 450 pushcart vendors in a series of five simple glass and steel structures underneath the New York Central Railroad. Residents of East Harlem quickly adopted the market as an essential resource–just four years after it was established the market was serving 25,000 patrons a day. Its success also helped LaGuardia establish other similar enclosed markets around the city.
Soon after the creation of the market, a large number of immigrants from Puerto Rico began moving into East Harlem, which had previously been a primarily Italian-American and Jewish neighborhood. It was at this time that the market became known as La Marqueta, although it still retained many of its original Jewish and Italian vendors. These vendors adapted to changing times by learning Spanish and adding new types of produce suited to Caribbean cooking. As the years past, in addition to neighborhood residents, the market also attracted Caribbean immigrants from around the city as well as Africans, many of whom worked at the United Nations.
For many years the market was also the center of neighborhood life, a place to exchange news and gossip as well as obtain job leads. “Maybe culturally that is something we carried from the old country to the new country, ” says Felipe Colon, a longtime East Harlem resident and proprietor of La Fagon Café. “There were hardly any Puerto Rican merchants in La Marqueta,” Colon adds, “but yet that used to be a social meeting place, especially Saturdays. We used to go there, see people from the hometown and…find out who would be coming over from Puerto Rico, who got married, who gave birth, who was baptized, everything–our social life.”
La Marqueta thrived until the 1970s, when many businesses moved to Lexington or Third Avenues, the new heart of commerce in the neighborhood. A fire in 1977 destroyed one of the market’s buildings and the others began a period of deterioration. Repeated efforts at revitalization and renovation begun in the 1980s failed to change the fortunes of the market, which dwindled to only 12 merchants by 1992. As of 2004, only one of the five market buildings remains open with only eight active vendors, although the building has been renovated and remodeled. Despite its dramatic decline, several long-time vendors remain and many loyal customers who have not lived in East Harlem in years return regularly to shop at La Marqueta.
Nominations
Maritza Acosta (Cooper Union)
East Harlem’s market in the late 60s, named La Marqueta (The Market) by the Puerto Rican immigrants. Located underneath the deafening railroad on Park between 110th and 116th Streets, the stalls in the market were bustling in business. Every specialty of Puerto Rican foods was sold here: cilantro, sofrito, adobo. La Marqueta’s sellers and buyers shout prices and orders in Spanish, crack bones with meat cleavers, cut meat, scribble prices on paper and make their exchange. La Marqueta trembles and roars early Saturday mornings in the midst of East Harlem’s Caribbean culture.
Celia Ramirez
It was originated started by Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia and serviced over 25,000 people a day. This is what started all the other markets around the city. Not only is it a place that helps to bring people in the area to one place, but it is a place where we can keep tradition and culture growing to help others to learn. It’s a place where we can still come together as “human” people and not have to deal with cold non caring machines. La Marqueta would help to keep some of the economy in East Harlem.
