[1] Built between 1912 and 1913, this historic structure is a twelve-story, reinforced concrete building with 295,360 square feet of floor space.
The company subsequently hired local architect Leroy Berman Rothschild to place Belber's own stamp on the building.
In its architecture as well as its integration of manufacturing, office work, and retail functions, the Belber Building represented a "landmark of twentieth century commerce and industry."
Belber vacated the property in 1947 and Robert Hall Clothes took over the building in order to use it for production.
In 1983, a developer acquired the building for a conversion to office space; however, those plans did not materialize.