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  #1  
Old Posted Jan 2, 2007, 5:48 AM
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Smile NEW YORK | Silvercup West | 600 FT | 537 FT | 517 FT

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  #2  
Old Posted Jan 2, 2007, 6:00 AM
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Wow, I never saw all those sharp renderings before. These buildings will be fantastic!
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  #3  
Old Posted Jan 2, 2007, 6:26 AM
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Wow, I never saw all those sharp renderings before. These buildings will be fantastic!
Yeah, its looking better than ever. You can see from some of the renderings (though with no detail) the various residential projects going up on the riverfront in Queens.
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Old Posted Jan 2, 2007, 6:37 AM
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http://www.richardrogers.co.uk/rende...howParent=true

A look at the site...




The views of and accross the river will be great...

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  #5  
Old Posted Jan 2, 2007, 6:42 AM
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construction news
(older July article)

Details Unveiled for Studio Project

Silvercup Studios in the Long Island City district of Queens, the largest independent television and film production complex in the Northeast, will add an additional 2.2 million sq. ft. of space in a new location on the East River, pending New York City Council approval and a public hearing expected around Labor Day.

The $1 billion Silvercup West development will be located on 6 acres of abandoned land directly south of the Queensborough Bridge. It will consist of a 500-ft.-high commercial tower and two residential towers measuring 526 ft. and 588 ft. in height that together will contain 1,000 units. A base structure would link the residential towers and house eight soundstages, a catering facility for up to 8,000 people, and 100,000 sq. ft. of cultural space.

The owners picked London-based Richard Rogers Partnership - which also designed the new Jacob K. Javits Convention Center expansion on Manhattan's West Side and a master plan for an East River park esplanade - as architect for the development.

At a breakfast event about the project in Manhattan sponsored by the Building Trades Employers' Association and New York Construction, Silvercup CEO Alan Suna said the design incorporates aesthetic choices to blend the towers into the area, including how exoskeleton cross-bracing on the façades echoes the steel beams on the bridge.

The design places the site's "ugly" features, such as docking bays and three levels of parking for 1,400 cars, on the inside of the complex. In addition, the city's Department of Transportation agreed to move existing de-icing facilities that stand south of the site away from the waterfront in order to allow public access to the river.

The design calls for a public promenade, lined with 70,000 sq. ft. of retail on all sides, as well as open space north of the bridge. In a nod to the property's industrial past, the team will restore the 19th-Century Architectural Terra Cotta Co. office building on the site and install a kiln spire statue on the promenade.

Silvercup has already tapped Tishman Construction of New York as construction manager. Preliminary site work is scheduled to begin in early 2008, with completion expected in 2012. Construction of the new facilities at Silvercup West is expected to generate 2,000 construction jobs and 4,000 permanent jobs in the neighborhood.

The new studios will be the company's third location. Originally founded in 1983 on the site of the Silvercup Bakery, the company has two facilities in Queens with 400,000 sq. ft. of studios on 18 soundstages, offering space to TV shows such as HBO's "The Sopranos".

Suna said Silvercup has offered the cultural space in the planned base structure to Queens-based arts institutions such as the Isamu Noguchi Garden Museum and Socrates Sculpture Park.
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  #6  
Old Posted Jan 2, 2007, 7:04 AM
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Cool! At first I wasn't too impressed with this development. But the more I see it, the more I like it.

Go Queens!
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  #7  
Old Posted Jan 2, 2007, 7:34 AM
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2012? Man it's ridiculous how long it takes things to get built in this city.
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  #8  
Old Posted Jan 2, 2007, 7:45 AM
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2012? Man it's ridiculous how long it takes things to get built in this city.
Don't forget that the current site is occupied by a temporary power-plant that must still be decommisioned and demolished.
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  #9  
Old Posted Jan 2, 2007, 8:58 AM
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Wow, this is a sweet project. What else is planned nearby in Long Island City?
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  #10  
Old Posted Jan 2, 2007, 2:26 PM
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Wow, this is a sweet project. What else is planned nearby in Long Island City?
Not to get too off topic, but here's a sampling of the developments currently rising on the LIC waterfront...(Posted on curbed.com)




This view looking north shows the site of River East, look for the dredging on the shore, where two 30-story buildings are going to be built. Just north is the site of Silvercup West, the huge $1 billion development.




Queens West in Long Island City is one happening construction site, with two big cranes now working on two of the new luxury highrises going up. This photo was sent to us by a tipster who lives on an upper floor of the Citylights building and who has a bird's eye view of all the goings on. (And, hopefully, some really good soundproofing.) All together, the project, which Rockrose Development is calling East Coast Long Island City, is going to have 7 buildings with 3,000 units and 120,000 square feet of retail when it's finished, sometime around January 2010.
















http://www.eastcoastlic.com/

A cool view of the New Look Long Island City (aka Queens West) has hit the web in the form of the East Coast Long Island City website, which is what Rockrose Development is calling the high rise city going up on the East River in Queens. The site includes an intricate flash animation with Coldplay-sounding music that makes you wonder if Chris Martin will be pictured happily diving off one of those balconies with magnificent East Side views. Rentals in the new 32-story tower at 4720 Center Boulevard start at $1,615 a month for a studio and run up to $5,730 for a penthouse. The site also includes an "interactive timeline" for your inner builder of construction through 2010. Move the slider to see Queens West as each of six more buildings goes up. Hard to navigate, but fun pointing and clicking if you're stuck inside on a nice Friday afternoon.




This is the luxe rental building currently under construction that will be ready for residents next year. (They build them fast in Queens West.) This building will include a garage for 900 cars, but, until it opens, it will be dog-eat-dog parking in formerly deserted LIC.




This is the new 20-story condo with 279 apartments that will break ground this December. Occupancy is scheduled for 2008. When all's said and done, there will be 3,000 apartments and 120,000 square feet of retail on 22 acres.





The is the new Avalon building, which is going up at lightening speed.
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  #11  
Old Posted Feb 1, 2007, 12:27 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NYguy View Post
Not to get too off topic, but here's a sampling of the developments currently rising on the LIC waterfront...(Posted on curbed.com)




This view looking north shows the site of River East, look for the dredging on the shore, where two 30-story buildings are going to be built. Just north is the site of Silvercup West, the huge $1 billion development.




Queens West in Long Island City is one happening construction site, with two big cranes now working on two of the new luxury highrises going up. This photo was sent to us by a tipster who lives on an upper floor of the Citylights building and who has a bird's eye view of all the goings on. (And, hopefully, some really good soundproofing.) All together, the project, which Rockrose Development is calling East Coast Long Island City, is going to have 7 buildings with 3,000 units and 120,000 square feet of retail when it's finished, sometime around January 2010.
















http://www.eastcoastlic.com/

A cool view of the New Look Long Island City (aka Queens West) has hit the web in the form of the East Coast Long Island City website, which is what Rockrose Development is calling the high rise city going up on the East River in Queens. The site includes an intricate flash animation with Coldplay-sounding music that makes you wonder if Chris Martin will be pictured happily diving off one of those balconies with magnificent East Side views. Rentals in the new 32-story tower at 4720 Center Boulevard start at $1,615 a month for a studio and run up to $5,730 for a penthouse. The site also includes an "interactive timeline" for your inner builder of construction through 2010. Move the slider to see Queens West as each of six more buildings goes up. Hard to navigate, but fun pointing and clicking if you're stuck inside on a nice Friday afternoon.




This is the luxe rental building currently under construction that will be ready for residents next year. (They build them fast in Queens West.) This building will include a garage for 900 cars, but, until it opens, it will be dog-eat-dog parking in formerly deserted LIC.




This is the new 20-story condo with 279 apartments that will break ground this December. Occupancy is scheduled for 2008. When all's said and done, there will be 3,000 apartments and 120,000 square feet of retail on 22 acres.





The is the new Avalon building, which is going up at lightening speed.
Another update on the LIC boom from curbed.com:

Long Island City From On High: Avalon Topped Off



We're going to lay on the Long Island City love extra thick today because a special Curbed correspondent with a killer view sent us the above shot of the Avalon Riverview North building being topped off. Seems like only yesterday it was a hole in the ground, although our correspondent writes that no such progress has been made on a promised library:

No visible progress has been made on the Parcel 8 Library swap that cost at least the top 6 floors of Citylights their view.

Thus, it would seem that some residents may be gazing on their new neighbor with something less than joy.
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“Office buildings are our factories – whether for tech, creative or traditional industries we must continue to grow our modern factories to create new jobs,” said United States Senator Chuck Schumer.
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  #12  
Old Posted Jan 2, 2007, 9:22 PM
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an impressive sampling to say the least, thanks NYGuy
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  #13  
Old Posted Jan 3, 2007, 6:20 AM
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an impressive sampling to say the least, thanks NYGuy
Yer welcome. In a couple of years, the transformation of the east river skyline will be as stunning as what went on in Jersey City, probably to a greater extent. The Williamsburgh waterfront in Brooklyn is undergoing similar developments.
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  #14  
Old Posted Jan 4, 2007, 10:34 PM
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Yer welcome. In a couple of years, the transformation of the east river skyline will be as stunning as what went on in Jersey City, probably to a greater extent. The Williamsburgh waterfront in Brooklyn is undergoing similar developments.
Yea I kno I'm so thrilled for all the new developments, New York City is always becoming more of a city, and its great to see the outer boroughs joining in. Now if we can get Staten Island and the Bronx to follow suit, wed rele be in business.
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  #15  
Old Posted Jan 4, 2007, 10:50 PM
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Yeah, it is great to see these developments in the other boroughs. Manhattan can't contain it all. The Atlantic Yards project in Brooklyn is a perfect example of what could be done (Long Island City has even larger open rail yards).
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  #16  
Old Posted Jan 7, 2007, 5:22 AM
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how many floors a week do the buildings at queens west rise.
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  #17  
Old Posted Jun 11, 2008, 11:46 AM
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http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/11/bu...wXip02HZF3n3zg

A Big New York City Movie Studio Is Getting Bigger



An architect’s rendering of the Kaufman Astoria Studios in Queens, after its expansion.


By JANE L. LEVERE
June 11, 2008


Kaufman Astoria Studios, one of New York City’s three largest movie studios, is moving ahead with a major expansion plan, nine years after it was announced.

The studio, in the Astoria section of Queens, will break ground this fall on a $20 million building, with an 18,000-square-foot soundstage and 22,000 square feet of support space, on a plot of land diagonally across 36th Street from its current building, which is between 34th and 35th Avenues.

Eventually, the studio intends to shut off 36th Street and erect a gate to create a studio lot — a compound with indoor and outdoor sets — and to construct a tower that would combine a hotel and office space directly behind the new soundstage.

Astoria Studios is not the only New York movie studio that is expanding: Two years ago, Silvercup Studios, in Long Island City, Queens, announced that it would build a $1 billion complex on the East River waterfront, south of the Queensboro Bridge. It is to have eight new soundstages, production and support space, two towers with 1,000 apartments, an office tower and stores.

Construction has been delayed, however, by problems involving the removal of generators, owned by the New York Power Authority, on the site. Stuart Match Suna, Silvercup Studios’ president, said he hoped this matter would be resolved in time for work to begin next year.


The newest of the big three studios, the four-year-old Steiner Studios, is renovating a 289,000-square-foot building adjacent to its current soundstages in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, for use as production and office space. It also announced last November that it had joined forces with the Navy Yard to transform a 20-acre segment of the yard into a media and entertainment center that would also contain a studio lot.

All the development is intended to take advantage of tax incentives offered by the city and state governments.

To lure film production away from other states and Canada, the New York State Legislature four years ago approved a 10 percent tax credit on certain production costs, primarily for blue-collar technicians and crew members, and a 5 percent credit from New York City. These tax breaks — which are applied toward state and city income taxes — were sweetened in April, when the Legislature tripled the state tax incentive to 30 percent.

George S. Kaufman, a developer of New York City office and showroom space, has leased Astoria Studios, which dates to the 1920s silent-picture era, from the city government since 1982. A 10-minute subway ride from Manhattan, the studio’s original 300,000-square-foot building holds six soundstages, a recording studio and 50,000 square feet of office space.

The neighborhood around the original studio building has many related buildings, including a 63,000-square-foot loft building, at 35th Avenue between 37th and 38th Streets, that Mr. Kaufman converted to offices five years ago. Directly across 35th Avenue is a multiplex theater.

Other buildings in the neighborhood also have links to the creative arts. The Museum of the Moving Image, across 36th Street from the original studio building, is undergoing a $65 million renovation and expansion.

In addition, the Frank Sinatra School of the Arts, a high school established in 2001, will move next January into a new building on 35th Avenue between 35th and 36th Streets, on land also previously leased by Astoria Studios.

Astoria Studios announced plans to build a new soundstage and support space in 1999, but Hal G. Rosenbluth, its president, said it had delayed going forward because “as 9/11 happened, some of our financing came into question.” He added: “Production tax credits later came into play, and the city was able to resurrect some of the financing that was set earlier.”

Mr. Kaufman said Astoria Studios would embark on the public review process required to “demap” 36th Street, in order to create a studio lot, once construction begins on the new soundstage in the fall. He estimated the lot would cost about $2 million.

Later, he would like to construct the new hotel and office building behind the new soundstage. The tower is expected to be as big as 150,000 square feet and 18 stories high; this is now in the planning stage.

Government officials and film industry observers generally laud Astoria Studios’ expansion plans. In the last month, the studio announced that it would be used for two new television series: ABC’s “Life on Mars,” about a time-traveling detective, and HBO’s “Last of the Ninth,” a police drama. A remake of “The Taking of Pelham One Two Three,” originally made in 1974, is currently being produced there.

“There is a growing competitive awareness that the space you are offering for TV and film production needs to be upgraded in quantity and upgraded in quality,” said Rosemary Scanlon, associate professor of economics at the Real Estate Institute of New York University and former chief economist of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.

Ms. Scanlon estimates that television and film production is responsible for $6.6 billion of the total $21.2 billion generated by the arts in New York’s economy.

She said Astoria Studios’ plans for mixed-use development could “help offset the risk of putting investment in soundstages.” She said: “Once you build the facility, then it’s a marketing process. Studio space is like inventory; you have to market it every time it becomes vacant.”

Pat Swinney Kaufman, executive director of the New York State Governor’s Office for Motion Picture and Television Development, said the film industry “can absolutely absorb” the expansions by the three movie studios. (Ms. Kaufman is not related to George S. Kaufman.)

Michael N. Gianaris, a Democratic state assemblyman from Queens, predicted the new development would be “an integral part of the continued success of Long Island City and Astoria. It’s an area of the city growing by leaps and bounds; many of us believe it will be the next big business district for the city.”
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  #18  
Old Posted Jan 3, 2007, 7:02 AM
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I am loving those renederings. This is one of those projects I am really excited about. Shame I have to wait too long before anything starts.
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  #19  
Old Posted Jan 3, 2007, 7:25 AM
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I am loving those renederings. This is one of those projects I am really excited about. Shame I have to wait too long before anything starts.
Yeah, but just think how fast last year went by. Next year we will have so much going on, I'm not sure we could take the excitement...
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  #20  
Old Posted Jan 3, 2007, 8:09 PM
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thanks nyguy for the updates. oh and it is interesting that most of the big projects will be finished in 2012. NWTC,first phase of hudson yards,silvercup ect...
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