Former home of Quentin Crisp, English ranconteur

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About

The East Village has long been a magnet for eccentrics, artists, and those who defy easy labels. Among its narrow streets and unassuming facades lies the former home of Quentin Crisp, the razor-witted English raconteur who turned his life into performance art. This isn’t a museum or a plaque-heavy monument—just a residential building where Crisp lived for 25 years, his presence still lingering in the neighborhood’s lore like a well-placed epigram.

At 46 E 3rd St, New York, NY 10003, the building blends into the block’s patchwork of tenements and bodegas, a quiet nod to a man who was anything but quiet. Crisp’s legacy—part memoirist, part cultural provocateur—clings to the address, a pilgrimage site for fans of his unapologetic wit and defiance of norms. Historical landmarks rarely come with such a sharp, personal edge. No tours, no gift shops, just the satisfaction of standing where one of the 20th century’s most distinctive voices once held court.

There’s no number to call for details—this one’s purely for the curious. But if you’re tracing Crisp’s footsteps through the Village, the map pin drops you right at the stoop. A quick stop, maybe a photo, then back into the chaos of a city that Crisp both adored and skewered in equal measure.

Technical Info

Machine ID /g/11x1r75l0b
Feature ID 0x89c259006a81143b:0x3d65295a111359ea
Created 24 May 2026
Updated 07 Jul 2026

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