Quote:
Originally Posted by pico44
Isn't Hines also involved in 56 Leonard and the Bryant Park development? If Hines is developing, the architecture is going to be great.
|
Hines is good. Not all of their towers are great. I haven't seen them do anything horrible, at least not in Manhattan. They are only advisers on 1 Vanderbilt. I'm more excited that SHoP is involved.
Quote:
Originally Posted by chris08876
Could be that the 3 billion figure is a typo? IDK, it just seems way too high.
|
You're all getting to hung up on the costs for some reason. It could be $3B, it could be $1B. That just tells you that it would be a very expensive building. That fact that SHoP is involved should tell you more about potential height. As we discussed earlier, they are working on at least 3 supertall developments in Manhattan.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ILNY
I was making point about the cost of 360 10th ave tower, which as Crawford stated may even be a supertall. It will not cost $3bln or even $2bln, that was my point.
|
You also stated that the $3B was a reference to the investment in the Hudson Yards area
Quote:
This makes me ask the question, what will be so special about this 61 floor Hudson Spire tower to cost $3.3bln or about as much as two 432 Park Ave towers or Hudson Yards two tower+mall complex? I just don't see it.
|
I would like to see what you
have seen, because I haven't seen the tower, and would love to see even a preliminary rendering. But how do you even know how much all of those other towers costs? How are you so certain? The Goldman Sachs is a $2B building. The Freedom Tower at $4B, but that's basically a building within a building.
The only reason we know the cost of the "spire" tower in the first place is because costs had to be reported to the NYCIDA. If you go back and look at that thread, you'll see it was reported as such. As far as the breakdown, if it's not posted there, I'll post it.