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  #361  
Old Posted: Jul 11, 2012, 3:50 AM
sbarn sbarn is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Arawooho View Post
Oh hey, that's across the street from my house, you should have gone up for some snacks.
That's 260 west 26th st. 12 stories high residential. It just topped out a few weeks ago, this is the only render I know of via curbed
Ha, its right near mine as well. The design is pretty "meh", I hope it didn't replace anything too nice. Thanks for the update though!

Edit: Just looked on Google Maps and saw it replaced a parking lot. Good infill then...
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  #362  
Old Posted: Jul 12, 2012, 2:56 AM
sbarn sbarn is offline
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Work has restarted on Two Sutton Place North - One Sutton Place was completed in 2003 and its twin has sat dormant ever since. I believe the tower will have approximately 40 stories, and will be similar sized to its twin.

Ground, Hearts Break at Sutton Place North as View Dims


Source: Curbed via SkyscraperCity
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  #363  
Old Posted: Jul 12, 2012, 3:04 AM
sbarn sbarn is offline
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Also, a design was finally released in the NY Times a few weeks ago for a new condo tower on 77th and Broadway. Demolition is nearly complete, and construction should begin shortly.

Quote:


http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/01/re...ref=realestate

Another Pricey Rental Rises on the Upper West Side

By C. J. HUGHES

Published: June 29, 2012

TWO years ago, the opening of the Corner and the Aire proved there was a healthy appetite for spare-few-expenses rentals on the Upper West Side.

Now a new project is trying to replicate their successes. Developed by Friedland Properties and Rose Associates, a 20-story rental building is going up at Broadway and 77th Street. The building is now known as the Larstrand, though developers say that is just a working title.

What is settled is that the high-rise will have 181 units, from 480-square-foot studios to 1,700-square-foot three-bedrooms, said Robert A. Scaglion, a senior managing director of Rose Associates.

The $135 million project, which kicked off last summer, is not expected to be complete until the end of 2013, but developers have already chosen many finishes. Kitchens will have quartz counters, Bosch appliances and Bertazzoni ovens. Bathrooms will have Italian tile walls and floors, Kohler tubs, and under-floor radiant heat. Bath mirrors will be defoggable with the flick of a switch; a portion of mirror surface will have a television built in.

Rents for the three-bedrooms, which will be on the corners with views of Broadway, are expected to be $90 a square foot, Mr. Scaglion said, and one-bedrooms, which will average 700 square feet, could cost around $80 a square foot. That comes out to around $13,000 and $4,750 per month, respectively. (Twenty percent of the units will be offered below market rents for qualifying tenants.)

The average rent in May for a one-bedroom on the Upper West Side was $3,471 a month, or about $60 a square foot, according to MNS, a real estate brokerage.

To help justify these prices, and to compete with other buildings, the Larstrand developers are putting extra effort into the common areas. The 4,800-square-foot roof deck, for instance, will have an outdoor movie theater, which is something the Corner did not offer, Mr. Scaglion said. The theater could be the scene of movie-night parties, he added.

“The evolution of the high-end luxury building is that residents are now requiring special programming in these kinds of spaces,” said Mr. Scaglion, who also marketed and leased the Aire, at 200 West 67th Street. in addition, Rose handled the marketing for the Corner, at 200 West 72nd Street.

The L-shaped Larstrand site takes up the entire eastern side of Broadway between 77th and 78th Streets (the residential address is 227 West 77th Street). It will have 40,000 square feet of retail space on the ground floor, as well as two lower levels. Also on the site are two other buildings, which will be preserved and renovated. So far, CVS has leased a 9,800-square-foot store, a company spokesman said. The two-story buildings that used to line the block were home to a diner, a pizza place and a taekwondo school, as well as the popular Asian restaurant Ruby Foo’s, which closed its location there in 2009.

For Friedland, which did not respond to a request for an interview, No. 227 continues a recent push into residential development. The company, led by the brothers Lawrence and Melvin Friedland, owns more than 100 buildings on the East Coast, according to its Web site, including several in the area. But brokers said the firm had not built a major new one until the 22-story Melar went up at 250 West 93rd Street in 2007.

The Melar has 143 units, ranging in size from studios to three-bedrooms, though rents, at an average of $70 a square foot, are below what No. 227 plans to charge, Mr. Scaglion said, because the Melar is north of Broadway’s liveliest shopping district.

One factor working in the Larstrand’s favor is that it will come to market with little in the way of competition, since many development plans were deferred during the recession, said Andrew Barrocas, the chief executive of MNS. With limited inventory and strong demand, vacancy rates have fallen into the low single digits, so rental projects that open in the next two years are in a great position, he said. “I was blown away by what the rents ended up being for the Corner,” Mr. Barrocas said, “and I expect this building to do just as well.”
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  #364  
Old Posted: Jul 13, 2012, 3:54 PM
yankeesfan1000 yankeesfan1000 is offline
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Originally Posted by sbarn View Post
Mystery project on 37th Street, I think its a hotel. At least it respects the street wall, but it looks like they forgot to design windows:

Was this right off 8th Ave?

There's another mystery project in Midtown between Broadway and 8th Ave on 50th St, across the street from Paramount Plaza. It looked between 8-12 stories up.

Lastly, the Saint Vincent's Hospital redevelopment has started. There have been workers on site for a couple of months.


http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2012/0...ents_plans.php
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  #365  
Old Posted: Jul 16, 2012, 12:43 AM
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Was this right off 8th Ave?
Yeah I think it was between 8th and 9th Aves.

Here's an update on 451 Lexington:



Source: East Millinocket @WNY
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  #366  
Old Posted: Jul 18, 2012, 2:44 AM
sbarn sbarn is offline
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There was a great photo update on Curbed the other day about 400 Park Ave South, with more details about the design:











All photos courtesy of Curbed.
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  #367  
Old Posted: Jul 18, 2012, 3:00 AM
sbarn sbarn is offline
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Photo update from Curbed, showing 120 West 57th Street (the Willow Hotel) one continuing to rise. I think the glass will either make or break this building.

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  #368  
Old Posted: Jul 18, 2012, 3:22 AM
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I had a work-related visit to the Lower East Side on Monday. I was able to snap a few shots of some construction in the area (and beyond).

Looks like the infamously stalled ghost building of the LES has resumed construction. This one sat as an empty concrete shell for over 3 years.


In the foreground there are a few projects that I'm unfamiliar with... and beyond the WTC complex.


Close up of the WTC.
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  #369  
Old Posted: Jul 23, 2012, 3:50 AM
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Photo update on the Willow Hotel (120 W 57th). Despite its poorly placed setback, it really is shaping out to be a pretty good looking tower. Apparently black vertical struts will be added to the facade to accentuate its verticality. Could be interesting. Too bad the other hotel developers in the city couldn't learn a thing or two from this project. Anyway, to the photos:


Source: Wired New York

Close up of the new windows:

Source: Wired New York
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  #370  
Old Posted: Aug 3, 2012, 5:07 AM
untitledreality untitledreality is offline
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Originally Posted by sbarn View Post
I think the glass will either make or break this building.
Knowing the kind of work that Roman and Williams produces I doubt you should be worrying about the finishes.
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  #371  
Old Posted: Aug 8, 2012, 4:02 AM
sbarn sbarn is offline
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Here's an update on some smaller projects:

The Warren Lofts (Tribeca)


Construction update, with the Trade Towers looming behind.


Mystery Project (Broadway & Worth Street, Tribeca), anyone got renderings?


Close up.


SoHo Infill (Broadway & Howard Street, SoHo). I can't tell but this one may be stalled. There was no activity on the site during the middle of the day.


Close up on the rendering.
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  #372  
Old Posted: Aug 11, 2012, 4:03 AM
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Quote:
New York Times


56 Leonard St.
Recent picture of the 56 Leonard St site I snapped. Not much activity here... yet.
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  #373  
Old Posted: Aug 11, 2012, 4:08 AM
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Update on a smaller residential project going up on Canal and Greenwich in Tribeca:


(my photo)
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  #374  
Old Posted: Aug 16, 2012, 6:46 PM
Duck From NY Duck From NY is offline
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Originally Posted by sbarn View Post
Update on a smaller residential project going up on Canal and Greenwich in Tribeca:


(my photo)
Bleh, faux-brick panels make these buildings look like they were built by Staten Island developers.
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  #375  
Old Posted: Aug 17, 2012, 12:30 AM
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Pfff, we here in Houston would be thrilled to have such a project as infill downtown.
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  #376  
Old Posted: Aug 17, 2012, 2:57 AM
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Bleh, faux-brick panels make these buildings look like they were built by Staten Island developers.
Faux brick panels? Where on this building are faux brick panels? Those are clearly hand layed bricks as the very top is clearly yet to be finished. If you are talking about those horizontal seems, those are expansion joints, now a nearly universally practiced masonry construction technique.
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  #377  
Old Posted: Aug 17, 2012, 5:37 AM
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Yeah, that's pretty normal. The color of the elastomer could perhaps be a little darker, but the brick will actually expand slightly over time and make the joint less conspicuous.
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  #378  
Old Posted: Aug 17, 2012, 5:45 PM
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Originally Posted by Busy Bee View Post
Faux brick panels? Where on this building are faux brick panels? Those are clearly hand layed bricks as the very top is clearly yet to be finished. If you are talking about those horizontal seems, those are expansion joints, now a nearly universally practiced masonry construction technique.
Ah O.K., my mistake. I guess I'm also used to more-weathered bricks.
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  #379  
Old Posted: Aug 18, 2012, 5:12 PM
yankeesfan1000 yankeesfan1000 is offline
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Anyone have any idea what's going on on 14th and 10th right underneath the Highline, where that gas station used to be? And what's going on at another used to be gas station site on 12th St and 8th Ave right across the street from Jackson Square?
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  #380  
Old Posted: Aug 19, 2012, 3:51 AM
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Originally Posted by Duck From NY View Post
Bleh, faux-brick panels make these buildings look like they were built by Staten Island developers.
Yeah they're definitely real bricks, and they don't look too bad in person. But overall the building is less exciting than others that have gone up in the neighborhood.
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