Product Knowledge

Single-Hung vs Double-Hung in Pre-War Buildings

Why pre-war NYC buildings often have single-hung originals, why double-hung is usually the right replacement, and when single-hung still makes sense.

By Kenemax Team May 18, 2026 5 min read

In an NYC pre-war apartment, the question that comes up on almost every window replacement consultation is the same one: should the replacements be single-hung or double-hung? The right answer is almost always double-hung — but the question is worth taking seriously, because there are buildings and apartments where single-hung is the better choice.

Quick Definitions

Both single-hung and double-hung windows have two sashes — the upper sash and the lower sash — stacked vertically with glass in each. The difference is which sash actually moves:

Most modern double-hung windows also tilt — meaning each sash pivots inward at the top so you can clean both sides of the glass from inside the apartment. Single-hung windows generally don’t offer this.

Why Pre-War Buildings Had Single-Hung Originals

In the era when most NYC pre-war buildings were built (roughly 1900–1940), single-hung wood windows were the manufacturing standard. The mechanism was simpler, the parts were cheaper, and the buildings were primarily heated with steam — meaning fresh-air ventilation came from opening any window, not from a specific operational pattern.

Single-hung wood windows from this era used counterweights and ropes inside hollow jamb pockets to balance the lower sash. The upper sash was fixed because moving both required twice as many counterweights and ropes, which made the window heavier, more expensive, and more failure-prone.

Why Double-Hung Is the Modern Default

Today, the manufacturing economics have flipped. Double-hung windows aren’t meaningfully more expensive than single-hung, and they deliver several advantages that matter to a modern NYC apartment dweller:

Ventilation flexibility

Opening the top sash lets warm air escape (warm air rises). Opening the bottom sash lets cooler outdoor air in. Opening both halfway creates a natural convection loop that ventilates a room without needing fans or AC. In a stuffy NYC apartment, that’s a real comfort advantage in shoulder seasons.

Tilt-in cleaning

This one matters more than people realize. If your apartment is above the second floor, cleaning the outside of your windows means either hanging out of them (dangerous), hiring a window cleaner (expensive), or living with dirty exterior glass (depressing). Tilt-in double-hung lets you clean both sides from inside in under a minute per window.

Resale and rental value

NYC buyers and tenants increasingly notice modern window operation. Double-hung tilt-in is the expected standard in renovated pre-war units. Single-hung in a renovated apartment reads as cheap.

Cost Differences

For most product lines we specify, the price difference between a single-hung and a double-hung is 5–10% — meaningful on a building-wide project, less meaningful on a single-apartment replacement. For most homeowners replacing fewer than 10 windows, the cost difference is small enough that double-hung is almost always the right call.

LPC Implications

If your building is LPC-designated (Landmarks Preservation Commission), the type of window the LPC will approve depends on what was there originally:

This is one of the few cases where a homeowner can’t freely choose between single and double. The LPC has the final word in designated buildings.

When Single-Hung Still Makes Sense

Outside of LPC requirements, there are still a few cases where single-hung is the right choice:

What We Recommend

For almost every residential NYC pre-war replacement that’s not subject to LPC single-hung matching, we specify double-hung with tilt-in operation. The cost premium is small, the comfort and resale benefits are real, and the cleaning convenience alone earns the difference back over the life of the windows.

If you want to see and operate both types side-by-side before deciding, we keep samples at our Manhattan office and bring them to the site survey on request.

Have a project where this matters?

Tell us about your building and we’ll come back with the specifics — scope, timeline, and what the application or compliance path looks like for your specific case.

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