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Construction Update: 15 East 30th Street

15 E 30 rising in NoMad.

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 three quarters mark and curtain wall panels are going up on the lower residential floors.

15 E 30 (foreground) and 400 Park Avenue South (background).

Facade installation at the northwest corner of the tower.

Looking up at the southwest corner from East 30th Street.

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.

Architect: Handel Architects; Developers: Fosun Group and JD Carlisle; Program: Residential, Retail; Location: NoMad, New York, NY; Completion: 2020.

 
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Construction Update: 25 Park Row

Looking up at the northeast corner of 1 Beekman (left) and 25 Park Row (right).


Facade installation continues at L+M Development Partners Inc. and The Family Behind J&R Music World's 25 Park Row, a 50 story residential condo tower. The tower is part of a multi-building development that replaces the J&R Music and Computer World megastore. Designed by COOKFOX Architects, the tower is clad in limestone colored panels that are likely concrete. When completed, the tower will offer 110 residential condo units with views out onto City Hall Park from large windows.

Looking up at the north facade.

Northwest corner of the tower.

North facade.

View west towards historic and present day iconic architecture from an upper floor.

View east from an upper floor.

View north towards Midtown from an upper floor.

North facade detail.

Looking up at the north facade from a private loggia.

A private loggia on the north facade.

View north towards City Hall Park from a private loggia.

Detail of a private loggia.

View west towards the World Trade Center from a private loggia.

Northwest corner of the tower rising in the Financial District.

Architect: COOKFOX Architects; Developers: L+M Development Partners and 23 Park Row Associates; Program: Residential Condominiums, Commercial; Location: Financial District, New York, NY; Completion: 2019.

 
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Construction Update: Hudson Yards

Construction is nearing completion at Hudson Yards' first phase at the eastern rail yards. When complete, the 28-acre site will be the largest private real estate development in the history of the United States, and the city's largest since Rockefeller Center in the 1930's.

30 Hudson Yards

Designed by KPF, 30 Hudson Yards is a 92-story, 1,287-foot office tower at the northeastern corner of the rail yards. When finished, the development’s second office tower will house Time Warner Inc. and feature an open-air observation deck. 

Southwest corner of 30 Hudson Yards.

The observation deck at 30 Hudson Yards.

Northeast corner of 30 Hudson Yards.

15 Hudson Yards

Designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Rockwell Group, 15 Hudson Yards is the development’s first residential tower. The 70-story tower will offer both condo and rental units. Sales for the 285 one- to four-bedroom condo units are underway. 

South facade of 15 Hudson Yards from 11th Avenue.

The Shed’s connection to 15 Hudson Yards.

Northwest corner of 15 Hudson Yards from 11th Avenue.

The Shed

Designed by the Rockwell Group and Diller Scofidio and Renfro, The Shed is a 200,000-square-foot structure for performance, visual and multi-disciplinary art. The project is composed of a six-story fixed building and a telescoping outer shell that can expand to the adjoining plaza to provide an additional hall for events. Panels of fritted ETFE cushions clad the steel structure of the telescoping outer shell. ETFE is lighter, more energy efficient, and more economical than glass, which allows for a lighter and more efficient structural system.

Detail of the ETFE facade of The Shed.

The Vessel

Thomas Heatherwick's Vessel is readying for it’s spring opening at the Hudson Yards' future Public Square and Gardens. The $200 million dollar sculpture stands 150 feet tall and is constructed of 154 Italian-made stair modules, totaling 2,500 steps and 80 landings. Each stair module is constructed of a structural painted steel frame with an underside clad in polished copper-colored steel. The sculpture will serve as the centerpiece of the five acre Public Square and Gardens, designed by Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects.

The Vessel.

35 Hudson Yards

Designed by SOM, 35 Hudson Yards is a 72-story mixed-use tower that will be Hudson Yards' tallest residential building. The 1.1 million square-foot tower will include 137 private residences, an Equinox branded luxury hotel, an Equinox fitness club and spa, first-class office space, and ground-floor retail. Limestone and glass clad the exterior of the tower.

15 Hudson Yards (left) and 35 Hudson Yards (right).

55 Hudson Yards

Designed by Kohn Pedersen Fox with Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates, 55 Hudson Yards is a 51-story, 780-foot tower at the corner of 11th Avenue and West 34th Street. The tower's massing features a tenth floor setback that affords an outdoor terrace with views of the larger development as well as Hudson Park and the High Line. On the exterior, the curtain wall features black metal mullion caps that create a grid of chamfered rectangles.

Looking up at the west facade of 55 Hudson Yards.

West facade of 55 Hudson Yards.

The Vessel (left) and 15 Hudson Yards (right).

Architects: KPF (10 Hudson Yards, 30 Hudson Yards, 55 Hudson Yards, Retail), Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Rockwell Group (15 Hudson Yards, The Shed), Ismael Leyva Architects (15 Hudson Yards - Architect of Record), KRJDA (55 Hudson Yards); Developers: Related Companies, Oxford Properties Group; Program: Office, Retail; Location: Hudson Yards, New York, NY; Completion: 2016 (10 Hudson Yards), 2019 (15 Hudson Yards, 30 Hudson Yards, 35 Hudson Yards, 55 Hudson Yards, Retail, Public Square).

 
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Construction Update: Columbia University Business School

Looking north towards the Business School site.

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. James Corner Field Operations are designing a central open space. Steel superstructure has surpassed the halfway mark on the west building, with steel set to rise soon on the east building.

Southeast corner of the Business School’s west building.

Southeast corner of the Business School’s west building.

Southwest corner of the Business School’s west building.

West facade of the Business School’s west building.

Northeast corner of the Business School’s west building.

Looking west towards the Business School site.

Southeast corner of the Business School’s west building.

Southeast corner of the Business School’s west building.

Looking northeast towards the Manhattanville campus, including the Business School (left), the Lenfest Center for the Arts (right), and the Jerome L. Greene Science Center (far right).

Southwest corner of the Business School’s west building.

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).

 
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Construction Update: 500 West 18th Street - One High Line

West facades from the Hudson River.

Superstructure continues to rise at the east tower of HFZ Capital Group's The Eleventh, a mixed use development at 76 11th Avenue. Designed by the Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG), the development consists of two twisting towers atop an 85 foot podium adjacent to the High Line. The 36-story west tower rises 400 feet and will consist of residential units and supporting amenities. A 26-story east tower, whose superstructure has reached the three quarters mark, will eventually rise 300 feet and consist of a mixture of residential units on the upper floors and a Six Senses hotel on the lower floors.


West facades from the Hudson River.

Looking south towards the west tower.

Southeast corner of the east tower.

East facade of the east tower.

View of the east tower rising above the High Line.

Looking up at the east (right) and west (left) towers.

Southwest corner of the west tower (foreground) and the east tower (background).

Looking up at the west facade of the west tower.

Looking up at the north facade of the west tower.

Northeast corner of the towers.

Architect: Bjarke Ingels Group (Design Architect), Woods Bagot (Architect of Record); Developer: HFZ Capital Group; Program: Residential; Location: Chelsea, New York, NY; Completion: 2019.

 
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Construction Update: 180 Broome Street

North facade from Delancey Street.

Superstructure is nearing the half way mark at 180 Broome Street, part of the nine-building Essex Crossing development on the Lower East Side from a joint venture of L+M Development Partners, BFC Partners, and Taconic Investment Partners, and Goldman Sachs. Designed by Handel Architects, the 26-story mixed-use tower will offer 10,000 square feet of ground floor retail, 175,000 square feet of office space on floors two through five, and a tower with 263 rentals. Facade installation has also begun on the second floor.

Northwest corner from Delancey Street.

Facade detail.

Southeast corner from Clinton Street.

Southwest corner from Clinton Street.

West facade.

Southwest corner.

Architect: Handel Architects; Developers: Delancey Street Associates (Taconic Investment Partners LLC, L+M Development Partners, BFC Partners, Goldman Sachs); Program: Residential, Office, Retail; Location: Essex Crossing, Lower East Side, New York, NY; Completion: 2019.

 
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Construction Update: 90 Morton

Northwest corner from Greenwich Street and Morton Street.

Construction is nearing completion at Brack Capital Real Estate’s 90 Morton, a 12-story residential building in the West Village. The original 8-story structure was built in 1912 and last served as the home of the Hort family printing press from 1972 to 2007. Gottesman Szmelcman Architecture is now leading the renovation of the building which involves the conversion into residential use, including a four story addition atop the original structure. Original elements of the building’s past life, including high ceilings, cast iron columns, and concrete beams have been preserved and feature prominently in the residences. When completed the building will offer 35 residences ranging from two to five bedrooms.

Northeast corner.

Southwest corner from Greenwich Street.

Sales Gallery

Amenity pool under construction.

Penthouse Addition

Model Residence

Architect: Gottesman Szmelcman Architecture; Interiors: Leroy Street Studio; Developer: Brack Capital Real Estate; Program: Residential; Location: West Village, New York, NY; Completion: 2019.

 
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Construction Update: 420 Kent Avenue

West facade from the East River.

Construction is nearing completion at Spitzer Enterprises' 420 Kent, the three-tower, 857-unit residential development on the South Williamsburg waterfront. Designed by ODA New York, the massing for each of the 22-story towers breaks down a simple rectangular extrusion into a collection of shifting boxes. Along with adding visual interest, the massing strategy also increases the number of corner units in each tower and adds outdoor terraces atop the shifting boxes.

Southwest corner from the East River.

Each of the three towers are clad in floor-to-ceiling glass to allow for expansive apartment views of the Manhattan skyline, Brooklyn, and the nearby Williamsburg Bridge.

Southwest corner from the East River.

When completed, the project will offer a range of amenities including a sunken courtyard, private park, two rooftop pools, a community garden, and individual roof terraces. While construction wraps up on the towers, 400 feet of public waterfront access has already opened to the public.

Facade detail.

Looking south along Kent Avenue.

Southeast corner.

Southwest corner from the waterfront park.

West facade at the East River waterfront.

West facade at the East River waterfront.

Architect: ODA New York; Developer: Spitzer Enterprises; Program: Residential; Location: Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY; Completion: 2019.

 
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Construction Update: 1 South 1st Street / 10 Grand Street

Domino Sugar development with 327 Kent (right) and 1 South First (left).

Facade installation continues at 1 South First (formerly 260 Kent), the second residential tower of the Domino Sugar master plan. Designed by COOKFOX Architects, the 42-story tower is located at the northern boundary of Domino Park. Along with 330 residential rental units, the mixed-use building will also contain 22-commercial floors with 150,000 square feet of office space and 13,000 square feet of retail. Superstructure has reached the 28th floor, surpassing the halfway height mark.

West facade from the East River.

COOKFOX was inspired by the molecular structure of sugar crystals for the design of the precast concrete panels that clad the exterior. The molds for the panels were 3D printed using the same BIM model developed for the design and documentation of the building.

Southwest corner from River Street.

Closeup of the facade panels

Looking up at the west facade.

Northwest corner from Grand Ferry Park.

Northwest corner from River Street.

Northeast corner from Grand Street.

Looking up at the east facade.

Southeast corner from Kent Avenue.

Architect: COOKFOX Architects; Developer: Two Trees Management; Location: Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY; Completion: Late 2019.

 
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Construction Update: 25 Kent Avenue

Northwest corner from Kent Avenue.

Construction is wrapping up at 25 Kent, an eight-story office building in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn, from developers Rubenstein Partners and Heritage Equity Partners. The 500,000-square-foot project occupies a full block with a massing design that features a north and south bar centrally connected. Both bars step back on their north and south street facing facade to allow for rooftop terraces on each floor. The facade will feature brick and punched window on the north and south of both bars with a glass curtain wall on the east and west. Design of the project is led by Gensler, with concept design by Hollwich Kushner.

Looking up at the west facade.

Southwest corner from Wythe Avenue.

East facade from Wythe Avenue.

Northeast corner from Wythe Avenue.

North facade closeup of 25 Kent (right) and the William Vale (left).

Architect: Gensler (Design and Executive Architect), Hollwich Kushner (Concept Design); Structural Engineer: Desimone; Mechanical Engineer: Cosentini; Developers: Rubenstein Partners, Heritage Equity Partners; Program: Office, Retail; Location: Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY; Completion: 2019.

 
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