NEW YORK | 102 Charlton Street | 210 FT | 21 FLOORS
Another day, another high rise.
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Project: 102 Charlton Street
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Lalezarian filed plans for a 21-story residential building at 102 Charlton Street this morning. New building applications call for 61 apartments spread across 59,323 square feet of residential space. Average units will measure 972 square feet, which could be condos or upscale rentals. The building is slightly larger than what’s typically allowed under city rules, and that means the developer is including below-market units in exchange for a floor area bonus.
The 210-foot-tall structure will have a lobby and recreation space on the ground floor, followed by two units each on the second through sixth floors. The seventh floor will hold three units, followed by four to five each on the eighth through 16th floors and full-floor units on the remaining five stories.
Besides the ground-floor recreation space, the project will also have a shared roof deck and bike storage in the cellar.
The prolific Ismael Levya Architects, based on West 37th Street, will be responsible for the design.
Demolition plans have already been filed to knock down the two late 19th century tenement buildings. They hold a mix of 32 rent-stabilized and market-rate apartments.
Renderings for the futuristic Solar Carve at 40-56 Tenth Avenue first surfaced three years ago, long before the city shot down a variance that would’ve allowed the developer to build bigger on a rather challenging site in Meatpacking. William Gottlieb Real Estate finally got approval for the office tower last year, and last week, they filed new building applications for the tower next to the High Line.
The plans don’t tell us much, but they do say the building will top out at 12 stories and 190 feet. It’ll host 116,205 square feet of commercial space, including two floors of retail topped by 10 floors of office space. The second floor will have a terrace, which will presumably be accessible for the office tenants above.
Jeanne Gang’s Studio/Gang Architects, based in Chicago, will still design the project. The shape of the building appears to have changed somewhat, but in general, it looks a bit more traditional and less wedge-shaped.
Rabsky Group doubled the number of apartments slated for its second Long Island City project, upping the unit count to 195 from 99, according to an amendment filed last week to a permit application. ODA New York also unveiled renderings for the rental project known as Crescent Street, located at 42-20 27th Street, near 42nd Road.
Rabsky, a prolific Williamsburg-based development firm led by the notoriously private Simon Dushinsky and partner Isaac Rabinowitz, filed demolition plans in July. The new building is expected to be complete by summer 2017.
Note to mods/admins: Could the older NYC thread in the compilations be archived? It is outdated and not maintained minus a random bump every two months.
Gary Barnett’s Extell Development is planning a new 18-story residential building just south of Central Park, according to a permit application filed with the city Thursday.
The new structure at 134 West 58th Street will house 41 residential units in just over 52,000 square feet of space.
Issac & Stern Architects is serving as the architect of record.
The units will be distributed like this: two apartments on the first floor, three each on the second through 12th floors and just one large unit apiece on the 13th through 18th floors. The building will also have a rooftop recreation space, the filing shows.
An LLC affiliated with Extell bought the 15-story, 121-unit rental building in 2008 for $39 million. All the residential space in the building spans about 60,000 square feet, meaning units there average about 502 square feet. Units at the new building will average 1,268 square feet.
Lightstone, the developer behind the controversial Gowanus Canal-hugging condos and the 199-unit Gantry Park Landing in Long Island City, has another Queens project in the works.
Located at the intersection of 30th Street and 39th Avenue on the murky Astoria-LIC border, the development will have 428 units when complete, and is spread out over 413,000 square feet. It will feature studios, one-bedroom, and two-bedroom apartments. The address for the building is listed as 30-02 39th Avenue, but it also has its alternate addresses as
30-07 40th Avenue, 30-17 40th Avenue, 39-02 31st Street, and 39-01 30th Street.
Lightstone isn't skimping on the amenities: Proposed perks include a rooftop club that's equipped with a heated outdoor pool, Bocce courts, a barbecue section, a 22,000-square-foot amenity room (with a library, work/study areas, game rooms, and an entertainment lounge), a spin room, a yoga studio, a golf simulator, and a basketball court. (Phew.) Construction work is set to finish in the summer of 2017.