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  #1021  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2019, 5:47 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RobEss View Post
The problem with moving to New Jersey is that then you're in New Jersey.
I'm sure a portion of Chase's employees commute from Jersey as it is. But the problem for the city is that it doesn't want to lose business to anyone - be it Jersey or Kentucky. That's the real issue.
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  #1022  
Old Posted Apr 23, 2019, 10:16 PM
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  #1023  
Old Posted Apr 27, 2019, 4:56 AM
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http://a810-bisweb.nyc.gov/bisweb/Jo...ssdocnumber=01

Quote:
04/26/2019

HEREWITH FILING TEMPORARY LOADING DOCK AS SHOWN ON PLANS FILED HEREWITH
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  #1024  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2019, 4:51 PM
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For this tower to rise, the skyscraper gods require a building be sacrificed, as is often the case in New York. Any old building will do, size is irrelevant.



APRIL 29, 2019


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  #1025  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2019, 6:46 PM
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Mebbe silly question, but that's that tower rising by Bear Stearns?
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  #1026  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2019, 6:54 PM
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Mebbe silly question, but that's that tower rising by Bear Stearns?
In the background? That's One Vanderbilt.
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  #1027  
Old Posted May 4, 2019, 3:19 PM
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  #1028  
Old Posted May 6, 2019, 3:20 AM
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I posted this in the One vanderbilt thread. It's a good read on the midtown east rezoning, and how and why these new office towers are lining up to reshape the skyline.



https://www.crainsnewyork.com/featur...iness-district

The inside story of the city's elite business district


GREG DAVID
May 5, 2019


Quote:
The effort to keep Park Avenue the most prestigious business district in the city, if not the world, began April 20, 2010, at the Odeon restaurant in Tribeca.

Mary Ann Tighe, then chairwoman of the Real Estate Board of New York, met the powerful head of City Planning, Amanda Burden, for lunch. “What should
we be thinking about that we aren’t?” Burden asked.It was the kind of question Burden posed often, and Tighe was ready. The office buildings in the
heart of Midtown were uncompetitive, she replied, because tenants no longer wanted to be in structures built three-quarters of a century ago.
And zoning laws made it economically unfeasible to replace them

Almost exactly 10 years after that lunch, the developer SL Green will cut the ribbon on 1 Vanderbilt, a77-story, $3.3 billion tower across from Grand Central Terminal that is rapidly filling up with financial-services and law firms.By then JPMorgan Chase will be on the verge of the tallest teardown ever: the demolition of its 52-story headquarters on Park Avenue between East 47th and East 49th streets to make way for a 70-story tower for 15,000 employees. And a consortium of real estate firms and the Hyatt Corp. will be finishing their plan for a soaring tower—this one with offices, a hotel and retail—to replace the Donald Trump–built Grand Hyatt.

The three projects all stemmed from that lunch, which gave rise to one of the most tortured rezoning efforts in city history. The behind-the-scenes story of Midtown East spotlights how zoning happens in New York amid conflicting pressures from real estate interests, planners, politicians and communities. It is also the story of a determined effort by the Bloomberg administration that ended in a crushing defeat and how the de Blasio administration and city planners revived and delivered it.
Quote:
The saga also illustrates how important zoning is. In this case, it was crippling a crucial business district but, when updated, unleashed private-sector forces that could save it.The stakes were high. “East Midtown contributes 10% of our real estate tax base and contains our most prestigious corporate addresses: Fifth Avenue, Park Avenue, Madison Avenue, Lexington Avenue,” said Carl Weisbrod, who succeeded Burden at City Planning. “Its continued health is essential to the economy of the city.”
Quote:
It was news to Burden that Park Avenue was in trouble. For several days after her lunch with Tighe, she checked it out for herself. She focused on Vanderbilt, the five-block street on the west side of Grand Central, and saw old, undistinguished buildings and a pedestrian corridor that was far from inviting.

To find out if Tighe was right, she put Edith Hsu-Chen, the head of the Manhattan planning office, in charge of a team. Hsu-Chen would be the linchpin of the effort through two administrations.

Tighe shared data and analysis from the research unit at CBRE, where she was New York president. Hsu-Chen’s group dug into its own sources and quietly sounded out key property owners. Their conclusion matched Tighe’s: The buildings were too old, rents were declining, and vacancy rates were rising.

The problem was that the buildings along Park Avenue had all gone up before a 1961 downzoning. Any that were torn down could be replaced only by something smaller, so no one did anything.

Tighe wanted new buildings to be allowed the same density as what they replaced. But to the planners, that violated the basic principles of zoning. Burden was most interested in Vanderbilt Avenue. Eventually her agency proposed a rezoning of the entire area, with new development rights—mostly created by the city—to permit taller, denser towers. Proceeds from the sale of air rights would pay for transit and other public improvements.
Quote:
Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced the initiative in an early 2012 speech. In the audience, Councilman Daniel Garodnick, who represented the area, was taken aback. “I had not heard about, been approached about or consulted about it,” he said.

The mayor’s aides began wooing Garodnick after the speech, but the breach of political protocol would hang over negotiations. And while the administration had rezoned much of the city, losing only one fight in 10 years, it didn’t take long for its Midtown plan to come under siege.
Quote:
Modeled on what the administration had done at Hudson Yards, the city would sell air rights for a fixed price, as could the religious institutions. The price would be periodically adjusted by an as-yet-unspecified panel.

Garodnick didn’t think much of the scheme. “Even a real estate novice like me would know that air rights would not be priced at the same level on 39th and Third and 57th and Park,” he recalled. Key players in real estate shared his view but didn’t make an issue of it, fearing that would endanger the entire plan.

Deputy Mayor of Economic Development Robert Steel, tasked with selling the proposal, called attention to the opportunities the city was missing.

“I take CEOs who are thinking about moving their companies to New York on a tour of the area and they can’t find any acceptable space,” he said at a Crain’s forum.

Steel also committed a blunder, accepting REBNY’s suggestion that hotels be allowed in the new buildings. That moved Peter Ward, the powerful head of the hotel workers union, to demand that any new hotels in the district get a special permit from the City Council—a de facto requirement that they be unionized. The administration and REBNY opposed that idea.
Quote:
Garodnick, who through council tradition ultimately would decide the measure’s fate, was not sold. The administration assumed it could win him over by offering further sweeteners for the community, as it had done with so many zoning changes. But Garodnick was running for council speaker, and upsetting the plan’s opponents would impair that effort.

Bill de Blasio had won the Democratic mayoral primary, was influencing the speaker’s race and was not inclined to see Bloomberg get a big win on his way out. In November 2013, on the night before the scheduled council vote, Burden and Hsu-Chen worked frantically to salvage a compromise—a narrower change for the Vanderbilt corridor. Steel blocked their attempts, and the administration withdrew the plan.Mayor-elect de Blasio announced he would restart the effort upon taking office. Garodnick was confident. “I was the local councilman,” he said, “and I knew that it was the right thing to do.”

But the setback caused casualties. SL Green’s One Vanderbilt was in limbo. An ambitious, long-delayed plan by David Levinson to take down and rebuild 425 Park Ave. also was paralyzed.

Indeed, the future of Park Avenue itself was again in doubt.Hsu-Chen was devastated. “We had all worked so hard on Midtown East,” she recalled. “It was a huge disappointment.” With City Hall changing hands, she thought it might be time to leave city planning.
Quote:
The rezoning of Midtown East was saved by Dolan and Weisbrod.

Shortly after taking office, de Blasio made a courtesy call to the cardinal at his residence. Prompted by his staff, Dolan made his pitch: The Archdiocese desperately needed to sell St. Patrick’s estimated 1.1 million square feet of air rights to pay for its renovation and other expenses. The mayor promised he would push a plan through within a year.

The mayor also unexpectedly named Weisbrod, who had worked on some of the city’s most important real estate issues since the 1980s, to lead City Planning. At the top of Weisbrod’s to-do list was meeting with Hsu-Chen. They had a rapport; she had been City Planning’s point person on a rezoning of Hudson Square when Weisbrod ran Trinity Church’s real estate portfolio.

“Let’s do East Midtown again. I know you want to,” Weisbrod said to her. Hsu- Chen signed on.

Weisbrod made two immediate changes. He proposed a steering committee with all the interested parties, chaired by Garodnick and Gale Brewer, the longtime West Side councilwoman who had just been elected Manhattan borough president. Brewer hadn’t paid much attention to the first attempt. But as borough president, she could help make or break the new effort.

Weisbrod also embraced Burden’s idea of starting with the Vanderbilt corridor to save the SL Green project and provide a template for the broader rezoning.
Quote:
De Blasio missed the deadline he promised Dolan, but in May 2015 the City Council approved the Vanderbilt corridor rezoning after SL Green agreed to make $220 million worth of improvements to Grand Central and do the work itself to sidestep the much-derided MTA construction process.

As 2017 began, Weisbrod announced the broader rezoning was ready for public review at the same time he said he would step down. The community boards voted against the plan, although without the brimstone that theybrought to Bloomberg’s. Brewer approved it.

A final hitch emerged when Brewer and Garodnick demanded an increase to 10,000 square feet in the privately owned public spaces to be required of new buildings. The planners thought it wrongheaded, but it went through. It later would be a stumbling block for JP Morgan Chase.

On Aug. 9, 2017, the City Council passed the rezoning.

Hsu-Chen was often asked during the struggle why she was so focused on Midtown East. “The public sector has put billions and billions of dollars into the infrastructure of the area,” she said. “Why should we walk away from more than a century of investment and let the business district decline?”
Quote:
The city acted too late for Levinson but just in time for SL Green. For JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon and a group led by the Hyatt Corp. and two local real estate firms, the rezoning was an opportunity.

Levinson took control of the Park Avenue block between East 55th and East 56th streets 16 years ago and later began exploring how to build a tower there.

Tighe was part of the effort, which is what brought her to the problem on Park Avenue.

But when the Bloomberg plan was rejected in 2013, Levinson could wait no longer. He used a loophole allowing for a new office building of the same 675,000 square feet that 425 Park Ave. had as long as he retained 25% of the structural steel. Tying the new and old steel together was quite a challenge and raised the cost, reportedly to about $1 billion. But his 47-story tower will be completed late next year with hedge fund Citadel as the anchor tenant—at a record-setting rent.
Quote:
Marc Holliday’s effort to remake Midtown East goes back even further. He and Andrew Mathias joined SL Green in 1998 and teamed with founder Stephen Green to remake the company: moving from Class B buildings south of Midtown’s core area to Class A buildings around Grand Central. Beginning in 2001, he began acquiring the East 42nd Street block bounded by Vanderbilt and Madison. The process took nine years.

Holliday, who became CEO in 2004, toyed with the idea of tearing down the buildings, but the allowed density was never enough to justify it. When he got wind of the rezoning idea, however, he threw himself into the effort.

“This area is New York’s most important submarket, with the greatest collection of Fortune 500 companies anywhere,” he said. “To make it work, the city needed something tangible to rally support around the rezoning and a project to make it real, not theoretical.”
Quote:
He did just that. He inked TD Bank as the anchor tenant, came up with a design and made it clear he would pay for transit upgrades. The defeat of the Bloomberg plan was a blow, but within months of de Blasio taking office, Weisbrod and Alicia Glen, Steel’s successor as deputy mayor, assured him they would push for his Vanderbilt project.

Today it is more than 70 stories and rising, eight weeks ahead of schedule and 57% leased, with more tenants in the pipeline. Its projected $1.1 billion
construction cost has been cut by more than $100 million.

Most important, SL Green is commanding top rents. Middle floors are going for $165 per square foot, and asking prices for the penthouse begin at $190.
New leases in revamped buildings along Park Avenue range from $80 to $120.

The $220 million SL Green committed for transit improvements is more than it would have cost to simply buy air rights. It doesn’t faze Holliday. “We own 15 million square feet in and around Grand Central,” he said. “The transit improvements are of value for all our holdings.”

Holliday expects to cut the ribbon on the 1.7 million-square-foot building Aug. 4, 2020. It will be the tangible payoff for all the work the rezoning required.
Quote:
It has become clear that the threat to the district was real. The shimmering, new Hudson Yards development on the Far West Side has lured from Midtown the world’s largest money manager, BlackRock, along with Wells Fargo and a series of top law firms led by Boies Schiller Flexner.

Five years ago J.P. Morgan also had its eyes on Hudson Yards, working up a $6.5 billion scheme to build two adjacent towers on the Far West Side. When
The New York Times reported that it was seeking more than $1 billion in concessions from the city and the state for the project, possibly in addition to the incentives it was entitled to, the political opposition was so intense that the bank quickly said it would remain on Park Avenue.

Now Dimon, known as a parsimonious CEO, has embraced the most expensive option possible for a new headquarters: He will relocate the 6,000 people who work at 270 Park Ave. into other locations, tear down the building and then construct a new one, 70 stories high, to accommodate 15,000 employees on the open floors so in demand by CEOs trying to reinvent their companies.
Quote:
The air rights he is buying will generate $40 million for transit and other improvements. As with all buildings in Midtown East, he won’t get a dime in tax breaks.

Chase would not comment for this story, but Dimon has told others that putting all his people in one building without giving up the transportation advantages of the current site will generate profits that will more than pay for the building. With a management overhaul in recent weeks designed to groom someone to succeed him in five years, it is possible that the new headquarters will be his gift to the next CEO.

Chase has already worked through one major obstacle: The rezoning’s language on privately owned public spaces requires a park smack in the middle of its tower. All the key players have agreed to a zoning change allowing the amenity to instead be located on Madison Avenue, but other difficulties could come up despite strong city support for the plan.
Quote:
A new tower planned for the site of the Grand Hyatt New York, Donald Trump’s original claim to fame, will take even longer. The rezoning piqued the interest of the Hyatt Corp., which was facing the prospect that it would have to renovate the 1,300-room hotel in the near future even though its corporate strategy was to sell off its real estate while maintaining management contracts.

It also was enticing to MSD Partners and TF Cornerstone, which had become partners with Argent Ventures in the air rights available from Grand Central. One Vanderbilt’s strong leasing at high rents made the economics attractive too.

With the same direct access to Grand Central that One Vanderbilt will have, the Hyatt location had been on some people’s lists of potential development sites. But the subway station cuts diagonally under the hotel, and the building’s columns run through it, making construction of a new edifice akin to open-heart surgery.

The plan, which was publicly revealed in February and now includes RXR Realty, faces daunting impediments in addition to the construction challenges.

The real estate firms must ink a final deal with Hyatt; decide on the right mix of office, hotel and retail and how to mass the building; and reach an agreement with the MTA that includes transit improvements, especially at the overcrowded subway station. They will need to meet other requirements of the Midtown East zoning as well.

The project’s cost will almost certainly be in the $3 billion territory of One Vanderbilt.
Quote:
Another development in the rezoned area is a 1,500-foot spire that Harry Macklowe is building across from St. Patrick’s Cathedral, though it cannot be attributed to the zoning change because he was already entitled to buy air rights directly from the church.

But other landlords have been compelled by the rezoning to act, according to
real estate brokers.

Pricey renovations of Midtown East office buildings are underway at 237 Park Ave., 277 Park Ave., 280 Park Ave., 399 Park Ave. and 390 Madison Ave. The Stahl Organization is spending $100 million on 277 Park Ave., and Cushman, its leasing agent, has inked deals with Chase and another major financial services firm.

“Since One Vanderbilt and 270 Park [Levinson’s building] got underway, there has been a significant flurry of activity,” says Mark Boisi, executive vice chairman at Cushman. He says the activity is the strongest since the 1960s.

Boisi should know. His father headed the real estate operation of the New York Central Railroad and was instrumental in using air rights to transform Park Avenue from residential to office buildings.

However, those buildings still have the intrusive columns and low ceilings that are out of favor. As the Chase and Hyatt examples show, taking advantage of the Midtown East rezoning is a Herculean task. Only one or two more such projects are likely to be undertaken in the next decade.

Most owners will instead hope that the unparalleled location and transportation—together with the cachet restored by the new buildings—will
outweigh the turnoff of archaic space.
Quote:
Brewer said the rezoning has given developers certainty while producing hundreds of millions of dollars for public improvements. Garodnick asserted that the bottom line has been exactly what was promised.

“If the goal was to inspire growth, attract new development and replace older, less competitive buildings with new Class A office space, this is already a great success,” he said. “And after only a year and a half.”
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  #1029  
Old Posted May 7, 2019, 12:13 PM
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Any Pics

so has no one seen the renders of the tower yet?
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  #1030  
Old Posted May 7, 2019, 12:43 PM
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"Most important, SL Green is commanding top rents. Middle floors are going for $165 per square foot, and asking prices for the penthouse begin at $190."

A bit off topic and correct me if I'm wrong, but at 1 Vandy, it costs between $650-$750 per month for the 4 sq ft of space required to keep a copy machine.
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  #1031  
Old Posted May 7, 2019, 12:50 PM
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Its within market rate. Actually, its cheap compared to Hong Kong or San Francisco per sq/ft.
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  #1032  
Old Posted May 7, 2019, 3:36 PM
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Originally Posted by Skyguy_7 View Post
"Most important, SL Green is commanding top rents. Middle floors are going for $165 per square foot, and asking prices for the penthouse begin at $190."

A bit off topic and correct me if I'm wrong, but at 1 Vandy, it costs between $650-$750 per month for the 4 sq ft of space required to keep a copy machine.

Costs more at 425 Park...


https://therealdeal.com/2019/01/08/w...5-park-delays/

Quote:
Citadel is now adding 124,000 square feet to its previous 211,400-square foot lease, according to the New York Post.

Part of Citadel’s earlier lease at the $1 billion, 47-story tower included the top two floors of the building, which reportedly went for a record $300 per square foot.

One Vanderbilt is an upper market tower in an upper market city. It's still not the most expensive office market in the world.



https://www.nreionline.com/office/hu...es-rivers-edge

Hudson Yards Asking Top Dollar for Offices at River's Edge
Asking office rents for properties in the Hudson Yards neighborhood have jumped 40 percent in a year, according to CBRE.



Bloomberg
Mar 12, 2019


Quote:
Hudson Yards, one of Manhattan’s more inaccessible office locations, is quickly becoming its most expensive as its developers rewrite real estate’s most-enduring axiom.

“It used to be location, location, location; today it’s called place, place, place,” said Thomas Birnbaum, president of NYC Realty Advisors. Developers Related Cos. and Oxford Properties Group “have tried to create a place where you can go to your fitness club, you can go have coffee, you can do co-working, you can sit outside in the sunshine in the park.”
Quote:
Like many major office developments, tenants who signed early got the best deals. Average asking rents in Hudson Yards held at about $85 a square foot through the second quarter of 2018, according to CBRE. That’s about in line with midtown. Then growth began to accelerate, jumping to $126.02 a square foot in the third quarter, or roughly double the average rent in downtown Manhattan.

Now that the bargains have disappeared at Hudson Yards, tenants that are still in the market for space may be more willing to look elsewhere in the city or stay put, Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Jeffrey Langbaum said.

“Rents have actually increased over there to the point where it’s no longer a pricing advantage to lease space in Hudson Yards versus elsewhere in the city,” Langbaum said. “There are definitely data points that are showing a willingness of people to stay in core Midtown.”
Quote:
JPMorgan rebuild

JPMorgan Chase & Co., which considered a move to Hudson Yards, opted instead to tear down and rebuild its existing headquarters on Park Avenue in Midtown. Carlyle Group LP recently expanded its 15-year lease at One Vanderbilt, the 1,401-foot office tower that SL Green Realty Corp. is building. Both projects fell under the 2017 rezoning of Midtown East, which allowed developers to construct new, taller skyscrapers in exchange for upgrades to public spaces and transit.

Carlyle and JPMorgan are both adjacent to Grand Central Terminal, with five subway lines and commuter trains to northeast suburbs. By comparison, the World Trade Center site downtown has a dozen subway lines close by, plus Path trains to New Jersey.
Quote:
Wherever companies locate, the emphasis is still on state-of-the-art space, said Mike Slattery, a senior research analyst at CBRE.

“Tenants who are interested in large blocks of space now have this new product to tour, whereas 10 years ago, it was really more of a game of musical chairs,” Slattery said. “It’s very clear that tenants in Manhattan are looking for new or like-new opportunities.”

Rent growth at Hudson Yards is already plateauing, especially as competition increases. In the area, developments are planned by Brookfield Properties, Tishman Speyer, and by Boston Properties Inc. in partnership with Moinian Group. The average asking rent in the neighborhood had fallen to $118.38 as of Feb. 1.
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  #1033  
Old Posted May 8, 2019, 8:20 PM
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https://therealdeal.com/2019/05/08/c...-headquarters/

City Council approves new JPMorgan headquarters
Bank’s massive new project is the first to take advantage of the Midtown East rezoning


By Eddie Small
May 08, 2019


Quote:
The City Council approved the massive new headquarters for JPMorgan on Wednesday, the first project to take advantage of New York’s Midtown East rezoning.

The bank has already started demolition work on the existing 52-story building, and it expects to start construction on the new building in 2021. The new headquarters will include 10,000 square feet of public open space along the base of the tower, which the bank increased from the previously planned 7,000 square feet following pushback from the community.

Other massive projects being planned for Midtown East include a 1,450-foot tower at 350 Park Avenue from Vornado Realty Trust and Rudin Management and a 1,500-foot tower at 14 East 52nd Street from Harry Macklowe.
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  #1034  
Old Posted May 8, 2019, 11:50 PM
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This is wonderful news for this area, can’t wait for the renderings and all towers together including Vandi
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  #1035  
Old Posted May 8, 2019, 11:54 PM
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I have a feeling that the supertall boom we are going through now is barely the beginning
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  #1036  
Old Posted May 9, 2019, 12:27 AM
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Very excited to see all of this action in east midtown...

https://commercialobserver.com/2019/...q-at-270-park/

City Council Approves Rezoning for New JP Morgan Chase HQ at 270 Park


BY REBECCA BAIRD-REMBA
MAY 8, 2019


Quote:
In order to build its planned tower, the bank paid $208 million last December for roughly 667,000 square feet of air rights from Grand Central Terminal’s owners, TF Cornerstone and MSD Capital, according to public records. Under the rules of the Midtown East rezoning, developers who purchase air rights from landmarks in the district must pay into the public realm improvement fund, which will help pay for street upgrades and subway improvements in the East 40s and East 50s.

Consequently, Chase made a $42 million contribution to the fund that will help pay for repairs to Metro North, widening streets and creating a new entrance on 48th Street.
Quote:
“JPMorgan’s plans for 270 Park Avenue exceed the vision for East Midtown Rezoning,” said Council Member Keith Powers, who represents the area. “This development sets a precedent for what is possible for Midtown.”

Despite preservationists and architecture lovers’ vocal opposition, the current, 1.3-million-square-foot high-rise at 270 Park will be painstakingly dismantled by hand in the world’s largest voluntary demolition. The new Chase headquarters is expected to span 2.5 million square feet and generate 6,000 union construction jobs, both in the demolition and new construction.

Work will start on the new building in January 2021.
Quote:
There’s no doubt about it, the Greater East Midtown plan is off to an incredible start,” said Marisa Lago, director of the Department of City Planning, in a statement. “With the City Council’s approval of this first project, we’ll see significant investments in New York City’s premier central business district—investments in public transportation, in streets and in sidewalks—by one of the world’s largest banks, which is also one of the City’s largest employers.”
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  #1037  
Old Posted May 9, 2019, 1:02 AM
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Did you see this sentence in the article or link above.



" will be painstakingly dismantled by hand "

Quite a task. I wonder how many workers will be part of the demo process.
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  #1038  
Old Posted May 9, 2019, 2:00 AM
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Originally Posted by chris08876 View Post
Did you see this sentence in the article or link above.



" will be painstakingly dismantled by hand "

Quite a task. I wonder how many workers will be part of the demo process.

Yeah, plus I remember this from the permit:






By the end of next year, this will be down.



Not sure what modifications were made to the plaza...








https://rew-online.com/2019/05/city-...-midtown-east/

City approves JP Morgan headquarters in new Midtown East


by REW
May 8, 2019


Quote:
JPMorgan is expected to welcome back 14,000 jobs to its new headquarters upon the project’s completion, serving as the area’s largest employer.

Demolition of the existing building has started and construction of the new building is projected to begin in January 2021. The project is expected to create 6,000 union construction jobs.

“Today’s City Council vote is a critical step in making the new JPMorgan Chase headquarters at 270 Park Avenue a reality. On behalf of our company, I’d like to thank the policy makers and public officials involved in the process for their constructive engagement throughout this process,” said Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase & Co.

“City Council Member Powers has been a strong advocate to get to an outcome that is best for our company, the community and the City. I’d also like to thank the Speaker and the committee chairs on their leadership on this important issue. The vote today validates Chase’s commitment to New York City as our global headquarters and helps to ensure midtown remains a world class destination for business and New Yorkers.”
Quote:
“The signing of this text amendment represents a big win for New York City,” said Gary LaBarbera, President of the Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York. “We look forward to working on the visionary JPMorgan project, which will be built entirely by union hands and create even more middle-class careers for the hardworking men and women in New York.”

“We are happy to support JPMorgan Chase’s project to build a state-of-the-art, energy efficient tower in the heart of Manhattan,” said Kyle Bragg, Secretary Treasurer of 32BJ SEIU, the largest property service union in the country with 80,000 members in New York. “The projects will bring much-needed good jobs into the community while allowing 32BJ members to build their green building skills.”
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Last edited by NYguy; May 9, 2019 at 2:43 AM.
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  #1039  
Old Posted May 10, 2019, 2:28 AM
matt19215 matt19215 is offline
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Does the approval give an estimate to the height of the building? We keep hearing 1400/1500 some even saying 1600 with a crown
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  #1040  
Old Posted May 10, 2019, 3:44 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by matt19215 View Post
Does the approval give an estimate to the height of the building?
If it did I can assure you it would have been shared already

Quote:
We keep hearing 1400/1500 some even saying 1600 with a crown
It will likely be in this ballpark, yes
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