NEW YORK | 425 Park Ave | 860 FT | 42 FLOORS
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...FTForthStories
Planning New York's Next Iconic Building . By ELIOT BROWN http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/i...0422202221.jpg Nearly a half century after much of Park Avenue's high-end corridor of office buildings were built, developer L&L Holding Co. is advancing plans for a new tower. Aiming to create an iconic, eye-catching building in the place of a 1950s-built boxy tower at 425 Park Ave., L&L last week reached out to 11 top architectural firms to join a competition to design a new tower. The list included Norman Foster, Richard Rogers and Jean Nouvel, each of whom have won architecture's top Pritzker Prize. L&L Holding Co. has asked 11 top architects to submit designs for a new tower at 425 Park Ave. "We want to work with the best architectural minds out there, because we have some very important things to achieve and to deal with," says David Levinson, L&L's chief executive. Mr. Levinson says he hopes to begin demolition work in 2015 and to finish the new building two years later. The price tag on the project is expected to be about $750 million, he says. The bold plan to knock down the bulk of the existing building and to put a new one in its place reflects Mr. Levinson's faith in the value of the site. Currently the building is mostly leased with tenants including the white-shoe law firm Kaye Scholer. But Mr. Levinson is planning to vacate the building on the bet that he'll be able to substantially boost rents once he replaces it with a modern, attractive design. While older, unremarkable buildings similar to the current 425 Park Ave. tend to fetch annual rents in the $50-to-$70 per square foot range, top architectural icons the Seagram Building at 375 Park Ave. easily win tenants paying over $100 a foot. The plan still faces high hurdles. For starters, Mr. Levinson needs to attract financing for the project at a time that the Manhattan office market shows some signs of weakness due to the downturn and the contraction of the financial services industry. Mr. Levinson believes great architecture will enable him to attract tenants and financing. He hopes the building's design will be achieve the same distinction as the Seagram Building or the Lever House at 390 Park Ave., both of which are considered modernist icons. Vishaan Chakrabarti, a former city planning official and director of Columbia University's Center for Urban Real Estate, is directing the competition for L&L. "We think it could be a jewel, and given where it sits, a crown jewel," Mr. Chakrabarti says. Park Avenue has been largely static for at least four decades. The bulk of the office towers were erected in the 1950s and 1960s on platforms over rail tracks leading into Grand Central Terminal. Most of the towers were built with a boxy design that creates a relatively uniform feel for the wide boulevard. The most recent large office building to be constructed was 499 Park, at 59th St., built in 1980, although it doesn't take up the full block. Complicating the redevelopment for 425 Park and other buildings on Park Avenue is a quirk of the city's zoning code that would force Mr. Levinson to build a smaller tower if he demolished the existing building in its entirety. To avoid this, Mr. Levinson plans to leave in place the steel skeleton for the bottom 25% of the building, the minimum required. The Bloomberg administration has told landlords it is considering boosting the development rights for office building owners in parts of eastern Midtown. But that plan would likely take at least another year and a half before it would be finalized, and Mr. Levinson has said he needs to begin planning now under the current rules. L&L partnered with Lehman Brothers in 2006 to buy the long term lease on 425 Park. Lehman still has a stake in the building, although it is looking to exit all its real estate investments over the next few years. Write to Eliot Brown at eliot.brown@wsj.com |
This has the potential to be a very innovative and creative project.
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How bazaar. Leave 25% of the original building to skirt city zoning? I'd say more but I'm watching MadMen.
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P.S.: More good news is that this will displace, Kaye Scholer, a very high-end lawfirm that will be seeking several hundred thousand square feet of space! |
Wow, very interesting - I look forward to following this over the next few years.
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I agree. This should be very impressive.
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Awesome. This will be the start of what the new zoning will create. The East Side will keep up with the West.
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Wow They will demolish a large building ... I hope they can make a very modern building and super high. Still going very close to the 432 Park Place. It seems that Bloomberg's dream will come true. Just a pity that this will be demolished in 2015 and be built later (if the world does not end at the end of this year).
EDIT: I was reading this part: "Complicating the redevelopment for 425 Park and other buildings on Park Avenue is a quirk of the city's zoning code that would force Mr. Levinson to build a smaller tower if he demolished the existing building in its entirety. To avoid this, Mr. Levinson plans to leave in place the steel skeleton for the bottom 25% of the building, the minimum required. The Bloomberg administration has told landlords it is considering boosting the development rights for office building owners in parts of eastern Midtown. But that plan would likely take at least another year and a half before it would be finalized, and Mr. Levinson has said he needs to begin planning now under the current rules. " And... It's a shame that Mr. Levinson will not wait for the upzoning to build something higher, since the rezoning it will take to be done, and the company wants to start planning early on this project. But let's see, a lot can change. |
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This is always exciting. Can't wait to see what the various minds come up with. |
http://therealdeal.com/blog/2012/04/...-avenue-tower/
L&L seeks architect for new Park Avenue tower http://therealdeal.com/wp-content/up...04/425park.jpg April 23, 2012 Quote:
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How much could be tall this iconic tower?
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Anyway guys it would be impressive to see buildings as tall as the roof height of the Sears Tower in Chicago rise in Midtown. Exciting news for Midtown, but not for the Empire State Building. |
This building will be more about design, and less about height. It will be an office tower, so that also takes a lot of height speculation off the table. It will be taller than the existing tower, but I don't expect it to challenge 432 Park in height.
http://artinfo.com/news/story/801187...ion-skyscraper Zaha Hadid for Park Avenue? She and 10 Starchitects Compete to Design a $750-Million Skyscraper http://artinfo.com/sites/default/fil...425_promo1.png by Kelly Chan April 23, 2012 Quote:
d.guija http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3283/3...10e459b6_b.jpg |
This tower has great massing. All what it needs is a reclad with limestone. Would be a shame to demolish it.
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Remember when developers and financiers used expressions like "for the enjoyment of the city..." et cetera, et cetera? Interior designers may cringe, but for me the privately held interiors of a commercial building are the back of the painting. |
Wow this could be as tall as 432 Park Ave? That's impressive.
@Roadcruiser1, the ESB has owned Midtown for 80 years, its time for new iconic towers to dominate. |
:previous: Agreed. It's time for a new age in the New York skyline.
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http://img153.imageshack.us/img153/3...sal1925oj3.jpg But I'll be content with whatever idea they pick. Park Avenue has the potential to become another grand canyon of skyscrapers. |
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http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/25/re...-levinson.html The 30-Minute Interview David W. Levinson April 24, 2012 Quote:
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If they have to wait for 2015 for the tenants to clear out, it seems like they would be able to take advantage of the rezoning.
On they other hand, they might be planning on buying out the leases. |
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