Construction Update: 15 E 30
Looking up at the southwest corner from East 30th Street.
Facade installation continues at 15 E 30, a 51-story residential tower in NoMad from developers Fosun Group and JD Carlisle. Designed by Handel Architects, the 756-foot-tall tower will offer 180 residential condos. Concrete superstructure has surpassed the half way mark and curtain wall panels are going up on the lower residential floors.
Looking up at the south facade from East 30th Street.
Looking up at the northeast corner from Madison Avenue.
Looking up at the north facade from East 31st Street.
Northeast corner of the tower from Madison Avenue.
Architect: Handel Architects; Developers: Fosun Group and JD Carlisle; Program: Residential, Retail; Location: NoMad, New York, NY; Completion: 2019.
Construction Tour: The Amberly
Southwest corner from Jay Street.
Construction is wrapping up at 203 Jay Street, a 33-story mixed use tower in Downtown Brooklyn from architects Woods Bagot. The 355,000-square-foot project will offer retail and commercial office space in the eight-story podium and 270 residential rental units in the tower above.
A dynamic façade of metal panel and glass window wall units indicates interior uses, with transparency increasing at living and dining rooms and wider solid panels at bedrooms and bathrooms.
Public Plaza Gardens
Drop-off and turnaround driveway.
Residential Lobby
Amenities
Residential amenities are provided in the cellar, the 9th floor terrace, and at the 33rd floor, where panoramic views of Brooklyn and Manhattan will be the backdrop to the Overlook lounge and event space.
View towards Manhattan from the residential amenity terrace.
View towards the Lower East Side and the Brooklyn and Queens waterfront from the residential amenity terrace.
View towards Downtown Brooklyn from the residential amenity terrace.
Fitness center.
Model Residence - 2 Bedroom
Model Residence - 1 Bedroom
Model Residence - Studio
Architect: Woods Bagot; Landscape Architect: Scape; Developer: AmTrust Realty; Program: Residential, Retail; Location: Downtown Brooklyn, New York, NY; Completion: 2018.
Tour: 242 Broome Street
Looking east on Broome Street.
Construction has wrapped up at 242 Broome, a 14-story, 55-unit condo tower from developers Taconic Investment Partners, L+M Development Partners, and BFC Partners. The project is located on the corner of Broome and Ludlow Street, anchoring the western boundary of the new 9-building Essex Crossing mixed use development on the Lower East Side. SHoP Architects’ massing for the tower follows a typical podium and setback tower strategy, creating a sixth story outdoor terrace. The tower slopes inward at the southwest corner, opening up the terrace to more light and views.
Southwest corner from Broome Street.
Adjacent to the residential tower, the site will also feature a four-story, 17,735 square foot structure that will house the International Center of Photography’s museum and school.
Looking up at the west facade.
Installation has begun on the bronze-toned metal panel and glass curtain wall that clads the exterior. The design features faceted metal panels that frame the glass openings. At the podium, the metal panel spandrels covering the floor slabs create deep overhangs on the west facade as the form of the building torques at the southwest corner.
Looking up at the south facade.
Residential entry on Broome Street.
Condo units range from one-to-three-bedrooms, with 11 of the 55 units set aside under the city's affordable housing program. Residences will feature open concept kitchen and living spaces with typical ceiling heights of 10 feet in the living spaces.
Residential lobby.
Closeup of the lobby feature wall.
Architectural model in the residential lobby.
Residential elevator cab.
Amenities
Residents have access to a range of amenities including an entertainment lounge with kitchen, fitness center, children’s playroom, landscaped roof terrace, and residential storage.
Entertainment lounge.
Entertainment lounge.
Entertainment lounge.
Kitchen at the entertainment lounge.
Fitness center.
Penthouse B
The project includes three penthouse units, each with their own private outdoor terrace.
Living room.
Dining room.
Kitchen.
Stairs to private terrace.
Private terrace.
View southwest towards Lower Manhattan from the private terrace.
Private terrace.
View north towards the Lower East Side from the private terrace.
View south from the private terrace.
Master bedroom.
Master bathroom.
Secondary bedroom.
Architect: SHoP Architects (Design Architect), SLCE Architects (Architect of Record); Developers: Delancey Street Associates (Taconic Investment Partners LLC, L+M Development Partners, BFC Partners, Goldman Sachs); Program: Residential, Retail; Location: Essex Crossing, Lower East Side, New York, NY; Completion: 2018.
Construction Update: Inspir Carnegie Hill
West facade from 2nd Avenue.
Superstructure has surpassed the half way mark at Maplewood Senior Living’s Inspir Carnegie Hill on the Upper East Side. Designed by Handel Architects, the 23-story assisted living residential tower features a board formed concrete exterior with bronze framed window wall.
West facade from 2nd Avenue.
Close-up of the board formed concrete superstructure and window wall.
Architect and Interiors: Handel Architects; Developer: Maplewood Senior Living; Program: Assisted Living Residential; Location: Carnegie Hill, New York, NY; Completion: 2019.
Construction Tour: 543 West 122nd Street - The Vandewater
East facade from West 122nd Street.
Superstructure is topping out at Savanna’s 33-story residential condo tower adjacent to the Jewish Theological Seminary’s Morningside Heights campus. Designed by INC Architecture and Design, the tower will offer 183 units ranging in size from one-to-four bedrooms. Residential amenities will include a Wright Fit gym and outdoor spaces designed by Michael Van Valkenburgh.
Looking up at the southeast corner from West 122nd Street.
Southwest corner from West 122nd Street.
Looking up at the north facade.
View south towards the Columbia University campus and Midtown from an upper floor.
View south towards Midtown from an upper floor.
View east towards East Harlem from an upper floor.
View northwest towards Columbia University’s Manhattanville expansion campus and Harlem from an upper floor.
Architect: INC Architecture and Design; Landscape Architect: Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates; Developer: Savanna; Program: Residential; Location: Morningside Heights; Completion: 2019.
Construction Tour: 200 East 59th Street
Looking up at the northwest corner.
Exterior construction is wrapping up at Macklowe Properties’ 200 East 59th Street residential condo tower in Midtown East. Designed by CetraRuddy Architecture with Macklowe Properties, the 35-story tower features floor-to-ceiling window wall and continuous wraparound terraces at each residential floor, offering outdoor space for all units. Perimeter columns are pushed to the edge of the terraces, allowing for column free interiors.
Closeup of the northwest corner.
Northwest corner.
Closeup of the northwest corner.
Residential lobby.
Penthouse Views
Penthouse terrace at the northwest corner.
View to the northwest towards Central Park from the penthouse terrace.
View to the east from the penthouse terrace.
Penthouse terrace at the north facade.
Penthouse terrace at the west facade.
View to the north towards the Upper East Side from the penthouse terrace.
View to the south towards Midtown from the penthouse terrace.
Architect: CetraRuddy Architecture; Developer: Macklowe Properties; Program: Residential, Retail; Location: Midtown East, New York, NY; Completion: 2019.
Construction Update: Columbia University Manhattanville Campus
Southeast corner of the University Forum from Broadway.
Construction continues at Columbia University's new Manhattanville campus. When fully completed, the campus will occupy more than 17 acres in the Manhattanville neighborhood, a few blocks north of the main campus. Renzo Piano Building Workshop, led by Pritzker Prize winner Renzo Piano, has worked with SOM on the master plan for the campus and led the design of the three phase one buildings now completed.
University Forum and Academic Conference Center
Construction has wrapped up at the University Forum and Academic Conference Center, the third Renzo Piano designed building in Columbia University's master plan for the Manhattanville campus. Located south of the Jerome L. Greene Science Center, the Forum houses a 400-seat auditorium and state-of-the-art seminar and meeting rooms inside a five-story structure. The steel structure is clad with precast concrete panels and glass.
Northeast corner of the University Forum.
Columbia Business School
Construction is ongoing at the new home for the Columbia Business School, The Ronald O. Perelman Center for Business Innovation and the Henry R. Kravis Building located on a site to the north of the first phase buildings. The program includes two building by Diller Scofidio + Renfro with FXCollaborative and associate architects AARRIS ATEPA Architects, both looking onto a central open space designed by James Corner Field Operations.
Looking northeast towards the Business School (left), the Center for the Art (right), and the Science Center (far right).
Western edge of the Business School site.
Looking southeast towards the Business School (foreground), the Center for the Art (left), and the Science Center (far left).
Architects: Renzo Piano Building Workshop with Davis Brody Bond LLP (Science Center and Center for the Arts), RPBW with Dattner Architects (Academic Conference Center), Diller Scofidio + Renfro with FXCollaborative and AARRIS ATEPA Architects (Business School), SOM (Master Plan); Landscape Architect: James Corner Field Operations; Program: Education; Location: Manhattanville, New York, NY; Completion: 2017 (Science Center and Center for the Arts), 2018 (Academic Conference Center), 2021 (Business School).
Tour: 650 Fifth Avenue - Nike Flagship Store
Nike’s new six-story flagship store, House of Innovation 000, has opened at the corner of 5th Avenue and East 52nd Street in Midtown. The façade is clad in slumped glass with a strong diagonal pattern that matches the angle of the brand’s famous swoosh logo. Retail concepts inside the flagship store include a Sneaker Bar, two maker’s studios, a Sneaker Lab, a Nike Expert Studio, and a Speed Shop at the below grade floor that will use local data to stock and restock shelves based on what is popular with buyers at this particular location.
Architects: Nike Global Retail Design and CallisonRTKL; Facade Consultant: Heintges Consulting Architects & Engineers, Mode Lab; Client: Nike; Location: Midtown, New York, NY; Completion: 2018.
Construction Update: 300 Lafayette
Construction scaffolding is coming down at Related Companies and LargaVista Companies’ 300 Lafayette, a seven-story office and retail building that replaces a former gas station in SoHo. Designed by COOKFOX Architects, the façade features terracotta, limestone, and glass cladding with large terrace and balcony spaces throughout.
Architect: COOKFOX Architects; Developer: Related Companies, LargaVista Companies; Program: Office, Retail; Location: SoHo, New York, NY; Completion: 2019.
Construction Tour: Manhattan West
Looking west towards One Manhattan West.
Curtain wall installation is nearing completion at Brookfield Properties' One Manhattan West, part of the six building mixed use mega-development adjacent to the new Hudson Yards neighborhood. Designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill (SOM), the 67-story tower will offer 2.1 million square feet of office space when it opens in 2019.
Northeast corner of One Manhattan West.
Looking up at the southeast facade of One Manhattan West (right), The Eugene at 401 West 31st Street (left), and 10 Hudson Yards (center).
A slightly smaller 62-story office tower at Two Manhattan West, also designed by SOM, will follow in 2021 on an adjacent site to the south.
Future site of Two Manhattan West.
Looking up at the southeast facade of One Manhattan West.
Looking up at the northeast corner of One Manhattan West.
Inside the future lobby at One Manhattan West.
Mechanical floor of One Manhattan West.
View north towards Midtown from the top of One Manhattan West.
View northeast towards Midtown from the top of One Manhattan West.
View of Midtown East.
View east from the top of One Manhattan West, with a view to the new Moynihan Station under construction.
View south towards Lower Manhattan from the top of One Manhattan West.
View north towards Midtown from an office floor.
View west towards Hudson Yards from an office floor.
Architects: REX (Five Manhattan West), SLCE (401 West 31st Street [Architect of Record], SOM (401 West 31st Street [Design Architect], One and Two Manhattan West, Master Plan Architect); Landscape Architects: James Corner Field Operations; Developer: Brookfield; Program: Office, Residential, Retail; Location: Hudson Yards District, New York, NY; Completion: 2017 (Five Manhattan West, 401 West 31st Street); 2020 (One and Two Manhattan West).