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  #921  
Old Posted Sep 17, 2013, 9:11 PM
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I am surprised that Earth Cam or some other live camera has not been set up. This is an engineering marvel and would be nice to see documented. Maybe Mega Engineering on Discovery will do a piece on this project.
     
     
  #922  
Old Posted Sep 18, 2013, 5:42 PM
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It's ALIVE!!! The raising has begun!!!


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Originally Posted by j-biz View Post
A view of the first launch girder looking strapped in and ready to go. This is from last night but the status is still the same this morning. One of my coworkers has a view out the window near the construction site and I've asked him to alert me if he sees any stirring.


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  #923  
Old Posted Sep 18, 2013, 7:10 PM
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The beast rumbles... quietly. It's lifting imperceptibly slow. Not sure what I expected, though.


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  #924  
Old Posted Sep 18, 2013, 7:55 PM
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( September 16, 2013 )


View from below, (and the grungy windows of NJT)


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  #925  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2013, 2:53 PM
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Ta Da!


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  #926  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2013, 6:33 PM
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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.
     
     
  #927  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2013, 5:20 PM
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Second part ready to be lifted.

     
     
  #928  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2013, 1:48 PM
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A review, sort of...


http://therealdeal.com/issues_articl...-meets-modern/

Medieval meets modern
Manhattan West, SOM’s newest office behemoth, recalls the famed Two Towers of Bologna


October 01, 2013
By James Gardner


Quote:
Recent architecture in New York City has tended to vacillate between the staid and the iconic. Half of the buildings of note in Manhattan aspire to be the sort of tame comfort fare that New Yorkers have been steadily served since the dawn of the post-war era. (With all the requisite updates, of course.) The other half seek, and sometimes find, a gimmick that sets them apart. Examples of both are provided by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, the venerable and dependable firm that once defined the cutting edge of the Modernist movement, and that was responsible for seemingly half of everything built in Manhattan from around 1950 to 1975.

SOM’s design of Manhattan West — a 5.4 million-square-foot office, residential and hotel development planned for Ninth Avenue between 31st and 33rd streets — is an example of the latter, given the idiosyncratic way in which the project’s two structures interact.

Here, the developers have been given leave to revise the Manhattan grid to their liking: with the Related Companies’ Hudson Yards development also in the works, the mile from the eastern edge of Madison Square Garden all the way to the Hudson River will ultimately constitute a sequence of superblocks. For most of its existence, this part of Manhattan has been a throwaway zone, into which few locals (and fewer tourists) ventured.

The two new buildings — the 2.2-million-square-foot North Tower and the 3.2-million-square-foot South Tower — that will make up Manhattan West are intended to face the western façade of the Farley Post Office Building and will be separated by Dyer Avenue from 450 West 33rd Street, that blunted Brutalist pyramid, designed in 1970, which until recently housed the Daily News.
I'm sure this is a reference to the earlier 2-tower scheme.


Quote:
The massive new development, which will provide a foretaste of the development of Hudson Yards, is being undertaken by Brookfield Office Properties. The firm has just begun construction of a 120,000-square-foot deck that will be situated over the Amtrak rail yards and will serve as the foundation for the towers that will rise above it. That deck is due to be complete in 2014. (Brookfield has said it will not start construction on the towers until it locks in an anchor tenant.)

At more than 60 stories each, the North and South Towers — which will be separated by an outdoor landscaped plaza — will be very similar (though not identical) in shape, size and function. Each of the two office towers will be covered in floor-to-ceiling glass.

Bruce Mosler, chairman of global brokerage at Cushman & Wakefield, which is marketing the space for Brookfield, had previously told The Real Deal that his firm has largely finalized the design of the North Tower, but that the order in which the towers would be built would depend on the needs of the anchor tenants.

The towers themselves resemble nothing so much as the famous Two Towers of Bologna — the Torre degli Asinelli and the Torre Garisenda. And like those medieval towers, their more contemporary counterparts promise to exert an equally powerful sense of personality, conveyed by the genial and ingenious trick of seeming to sheer off, at irregular angles, a few feet from the sides of the towers.

The irregularity of the buildings’ resulting shapes is, of course, a response to the Deconstructivist style of recent years. A similar irregularity occurs in the trapezoidal footprint of 7 World Trade Center, which was also designed by SOM, and which is similarly conceived as a pale, curtain-walled tower. But the feel of the two projects could not be more different. Seven World Trade Center reads as the rationalist, symmetrical structure that one usually associates with SOM, and especially with its principal architect, David Childs. (One thinks of the Freedom Tower or the Worldwide Plaza.) By contrast, the towers that are planned for Manhattan West have a self-effacing humility to them, and each subtly promises to project its unique personality.

The interaction between the two suggests that of Vladimir and Estragon in Samuel Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot.” They seem alternately to shuffle along or to stand loitering, as though with their hands in their pockets, given the wayward massing of the curtain walls. If 7 World Trade Center is an instance of heroic neo-Modernism, the two towers of Manhattan West imply a very different and welcome anti-heroism.

The entire project looks very promising, invoking the Deconstructivist idiom responsibly to achieve a unique identity, but not at the cost of harmony or functionality. The renderings suggest the buildings will have a clear, slight bluish hue. More detailed renderings of the base, however, suggest that the curtain-walled skin of the buildings will be clearer and more traditional.

The floor plates promise to provide a staggered ascent along a horizontal axis throughout the building, relieved by steel girders, which draw the eye vertically. The base of the building will reveal a central core, flanked by a series of pillars around the edges in a way that recalls the conservative office tower typology with which SOM is most often associated, and that derives ultimately from the famed Seagram Building.

The design is comparable, with its two dominant towers, to SOM’s Time Warner Center, except that it’s more syncopated and less symmetrical than the Columbus Circle complex. In addition, its two towers will exert a greater autonomy from one another and from their common base.

With the ever accelerating pace of development in this part of the borough, we must wonder how much of Manhattan West will be visible from the rest of the city, especially when Hudson Yards is completed. Still, if the buildings live up to the promise of the renderings, the city will be better off.
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  #929  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2013, 2:45 PM
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Why belabor us with a review of the renders without first releaasing the renders, Chrissakes???
That's just stupid.
     
     
  #930  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2013, 3:36 PM
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"Waiting for Godot"!!!!! LOL
     
     
  #931  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2013, 3:51 PM
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Stupid of TRD to review it at this point.
     
     
  #932  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2013, 4:32 PM
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^^^^
They probably couldn't post them yet because Brookfield wants to save the big reveal for a press conference and made them sign NDAs in exchange for being shown the renderings. They are just driving up the hype for these the towers right now and it sure is working.
     
     
  #933  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2013, 5:18 PM
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He's basing his review on what we've already seen.


Quote:
SOM’s newest office behemoth, recalls the famed Two Towers of Bologna


http://www.goldenassay.com/2012/05/1...rs-of-bologna/



http://mannequinmitchy.blogspot.com/...mobologna.html



http://blog.thaumatography.net/2010/...rs-in-bologna/



Towers of Bologna, New York style...














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NEW YORK is Back!

“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.
     
     
  #934  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2013, 7:04 PM
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The piece review now seems all the more bereft of intelligence than I previously suggested.
So let me get this as straight as I think I'm getting it.
Essentially, two of the three proposed towers in this complex are what we've been seeing all along.
They might as well not have bothered writing it and wasting our time hoping for a somewhat more involved design.
     
     
  #935  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2013, 8:10 PM
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I really don't understand why he chose to review it at this stage. Had it been written a couple of years ago, he would be right on.
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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.
     
     
  #936  
Old Posted Oct 3, 2013, 1:38 AM
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Quote:
Brookfield Office Properties And Broadway Partners Appoint Cushman & Wakefield Exclusive Leasing Agent For 450 West 33rd Street

CityBizList
October 2, 2013

Office building to be reintroduced as part of the 7-million-sf Manhattan West campus

Cushman & Wakefield announced today that Brookfield Office Properties Inc. (NYSE: BPO) and co-owners Broadway Partners have appointed the global real estate services firm as exclusive leasing agent for 450 West 33rd Street, a 1.7-million-square-foot office building located directly adjacent to Brookfield’s Manhattan West development site. The owners are planning a substantial overhaul of the building and will integrate it as a component of Brookfield’s 7 million-square-foot Manhattan West campus.

“Manhattan West will serve as the connector between the Midtown central business district and north Chelsea, providing direct pedestrian access between Penn Station, Highline Park and the Hudson River,” said Jerry Larkin, senior vice president of Leasing at Brookfield Office Properties. “450 West 33rd St. compliments the new development at Manhattan West, giving potential tenants flexibility in how they utilize their overall space envelope.”

450 West 33rd Street, a 16-story office building which has 400,000 square feet of available space, features 125,000-square-foot floor plates with 16-foot slab-to-slab heights, which will appeal to technology, media, design, creative and fashion tenants. Only 12 buildings in Manhattan offer floor plates of over 100,000 square feet.

The Manhattan West development is the gateway to the new 33-acre, 30-million-square-foot Hudson Yards neighborhood, which is bounded by West 42nd and 43rd Streets, 7th and 8th Avenues, West 28th and 30th Street, and Hudson River Park. The neighborhood is larger than the Rockefeller Center site and exceeds the size of the entire Dallas Central Business District. Most recently, L’Oreal USA, the world’s leading beauty company, committed to the area, joining Coach, Inc. and SAP.

The Manhattan West campus, when completed, will consist of over 7 million square feet of class A office, retail and mixed-use space. In addition, a 1.5-acre public plaza designed by Field Operations, the same landscape consultant as the Highline Park, will transect the site.
http://newyork.citybizlist.com/artic...ield-exclusive
     
     
  #937  
Old Posted Oct 3, 2013, 1:27 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ILNY View Post
Second part ready to be lifted.

It looks like the second launcher beam will be lifted today! Hopefully, very exciting times coming soon.
     
     
  #938  
Old Posted Oct 3, 2013, 2:33 PM
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Quote:
The Manhattan West campus, when completed, will consist of over 7 million square feet of class A office, retail and mixed-use space. In addition, a 1.5-acre public plaza designed by Field Operations, the same landscape consultant as the Highline Park, will transect the site.

Another World Trade Center in the making. Right next to - another World Trade Center in the making.
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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.
     
     
  #939  
Old Posted Oct 3, 2013, 2:49 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NYguy View Post
Another World Trade Center in the making. Right next to - another World Trade Center in the making.
How many sqft is the WTC compared to this?
     
     
  #940  
Old Posted Oct 3, 2013, 5:53 PM
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The fancy single-use Italian crane is one step closer to completion


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