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  #41  
Old Posted Oct 17, 2014, 2:10 PM
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Just imagine sitting on one of those upper floors in the evening, a glass of wine and looking out and seeing the Woolworth Building all lit up right there or the Civic buildings. Ugh its such a NY dream. Love it.
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  #42  
Old Posted Oct 22, 2014, 6:46 PM
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A review on the place: http://www.cityrealty.com/nyc/financ...n-street/56311

I hope when its done, it's as pretty as the renders.
     
     
  #43  
Old Posted Nov 10, 2014, 6:40 PM
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Some new renders









Quote:
One month after launching sales, a quarter of the Beekman Residence’s 68 condos are under contract, for an average price of $2,200 per square foot. “It’s unheard of,” Douglas Elliman’s Fredrik Eklund, who is marketing the historic conversion with John Gomes, told The Real Deal. “Obviously, it’s a big milestone for a 51-story building like this.” Allen Gross’ GB Lodging and GFI Development bought 5 Beekman Street, a landmark property formerly known as Temple Court, for $64 million in 2012. They are converting the property, as well as an adjacent property at 115 Nassau Street, into a 350,000-square-foot development that will include the Beekman Hotel and a conjoining 51-story condo tower. The new tower is comprised of the Beekman Residences, starting on the 17th floor, with the 287-room Beekman Hotel at the base. Condo sales launched in September, and construction is currently at the 20th floor level. The condos under contract are a mix of one-, two- and three-bedroom units, according to Eklund. The majority of the units sold are on lower floors, as units on the top floors are yet to be released. Additional units are being put on the market each week, he said. Overall, the development has 20 one-bedrooms starting at $1.2 million, 39 two-bedrooms from $2.95 million and eight three-bedrooms starting at $3.7 million. Apartments will measure 700 to 3,550 square feet, and will include two full-floor penthouses on the 50th and 51st floors that will measure 3,550 square feet. Pricing for the penthouses hasn’t been disclosed. The 287-room hotel, which will include restaurants from chefs Keith McNally and Tom Colicchio, will be operated by the Thompson Hotels, and is set to be complete in 2015. - See more at: http://therealdeal.com/blog/2014/11/....soM3Xl2W.dpuf
     
     
  #44  
Old Posted Nov 11, 2014, 11:30 PM
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this one is overdue for an update
as seen from from broadway

     
     
  #45  
Old Posted Nov 12, 2014, 1:09 AM
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I must say, I take great satisfaction in seeing a blank, lot-line wall get covered this fast.
     
     
  #46  
Old Posted Dec 12, 2014, 10:27 PM
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http://www.nydailynews.com/life-styl...icle-1.2042451

Civic Center spotlight: Pricey apartments are on the rise around City Hall Park


BY KATHERINE CLARKE
December 12, 2014


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  #47  
Old Posted Dec 16, 2014, 8:51 PM
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They might have some company in the future


A rendering of 1 Beekman Street (Credit: Pei Cobb Freed & Partners) and Glauco Lolli-Ghetti

Quote:
Glauco Lolli-Ghetti’s Urban Muse bought 1 Beekman Street on the border of Tribeca and the Financial District for $52 million, according to property records filed with the city today.

This is the first trade of the development site in more than 40 years. Two low-rise buildings, together totaling roughly 25,000 square feet, currently occupy the location, also known as 33-34 Park Row.

The so-called “Pearl on the Park” site can hold between 73,000 and 87,300 buildable square feet, according to the listing with Massey Knakal Realty Services’ James Nelson and Will Suarez.

When the site first hit the market, Pei Cobb Freed & Partners Architects created a concept rendering for the site, envisioning a glassy tower in the middle of the booming residential market. Condos in the area sell for $3,000 per square foot. When the site hit the market, brokers estimated it would fetch about $50 million. Sharonarn Associates is the seller.

The site could hold a minimum of 48,500 square feet of residential space, or 52,200 square feet if 5,000 square feet of recreation space were created, according to the listing. The site also holds up to 14,550 buildable square feet that can be used for retail or commercial space. If the site receives a plaza bonus, it could allow for a project of up to 87,300 square feet. - See more at: http://therealdeal.com/blog/2014/12/....3zP1Y2lO.dpuf
Here is another rendering from the Massey Knakal website. Both are simply for visualization purposes and highly likely not final!

     
     
  #48  
Old Posted Dec 18, 2014, 3:33 AM
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Does this building not have a diagram? I didn't see one, just curious.
     
     
  #49  
Old Posted Dec 23, 2014, 8:09 PM
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  #50  
Old Posted Dec 28, 2014, 8:33 PM
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Inside the accidental preservation of Temple Court



Quote:
The mysterious and long-abandoned building at 5 Beekman Street is currently being transformed into a hotel and residences. But the original Temple Court building’s stunning architecture was almost lost. Here’s a look at the building’s accidental preservation, via New York Magazine.

When it was built in the 19th century, the 10-story terra-cotta and brick building qualified as a skyscraper. The tower was famous for its atrium that extended through all nine stories, topped by a large pyramidal skylight.

And that stunning atrium would have almost surely have been lost, if it hadn’t been walled off in the 1940s due to a change in fired code. The renovated building in set to open in 2015.

- See more at: http://www.llnyc.com/24524-inside-th....iavhMKwF.dpuf
Here is an interesting video that shows you inside

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czGuPUXGzoE

If you are interested in the history of the building, you can read this nice New York Magazine article
http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer...eet-video.html


A 1892 sketch of the building

Last edited by sparkling; Dec 28, 2014 at 8:44 PM.
     
     
  #51  
Old Posted Feb 5, 2015, 4:15 PM
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Beekman penthouse hits market for $4,300 a foot

February 05, 2015
E.B. Solomont



From left: Fredrik Eklund and a rendering of the penthouse (Credit: Williams New York)

Quote:
A full-floor penthouse at the Beekman Residences hit the market today, asking $15.25 million, or nearly $4,300 per square foot.

The 3,550-square-foot unit, on the 50th floor, has 16-foot ceilings, a fireplace and 360-degree views. Developed by Allen Gross’ GB Lodging and GFI Development, the Beekman Residences launched sales in October. Fredrik Eklund and John Gomes of Douglas Elliman are marketing the property.

“The bar is being raised Downtown like never before,” said Steven Hurwitz, executive vice president for GFI. A second penthouse, on the top floor of the 51-story building, has not yet launched.

Currently, one-third of the Beekman’s 68 units are in contract, including a 1,624-square-foot condo on the 49th floor that sold for $4.5 million, or $2,800 per square foot. The blended average sales price for the building is close to $2,250 per square foot.

Construction has reached the building’s 30th floor. The hotel is set to open in late 2015, and the condo portion is slated to debut in early 2016.

GB Lodging and GFI bought 5 Beekman Street, a landmark property formerly known as Temple Court, for $64 million in 2012. They are converting the property, as well as an adjacent property at 115 Nassau Street, into a 350,000-square-foot development that will include the Beekman Hotel and a conjoining 51-story condo tower. The Beekman Residences start on the 17 floor, with the 287-room hotel at the base of the tower.

Overall, the development has 20 one-bedrooms starting at $1.2 million, 39 two-bedrooms from $2.95 million and eight three-bedrooms starting at $3.7 million. Residents in the Beekman’s upper floors – 42 through 51 – will also get what developers have dubbed the Beekman Black Card, which will give them access to hotel services and amenities, including two restaurants, a lounge and event space. Cardholders will also be able to charge services and meals at the hotel restaurant to their house account, which will start off with a $10,000 face value.

“It’s just a way to make our ‘top of the house’ buyers feel a little extra special,” he said. The hotel, to be operated by Thompson Hotels, will include restaurants from chefs Keith McNally and Tom Colicchio. McNally and Colicchio are giving Lower Manhattan a stamp of approval, Hurwitz said: “Those guys are trendsetters.” - See more at: http://therealdeal.com/blog/2015/02/....REKYymBr.dpuf
     
     
  #52  
Old Posted Mar 5, 2015, 9:02 PM
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  #53  
Old Posted Mar 13, 2015, 1:34 PM
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The new rise of Manhattan’s Financial District

Adam Bonislawski
March 11, 2015

Quote:
GFI Development’s Steven Hurwitz has a simple metric for measuring the emergence of Manhattan’s Financial District as a residential neighborhood:
The speed of foot traffic.

People walking briskly down the street are likely in the area for work, Hurwitz explains, rushing off to a meeting or appointment. Those taking it slow, on the other hand, are probably locals, out for an evening stroll or to meet friends at a restaurant or bar nearby.

One of the world’s most significant business hubs, the Financial District has never lacked for the first crowd.

It’s the arrival of the second that has the real estate world talking.
From the rise of One World Trade Center to the rebuild of the Fulton Street subway station to the restaurants and retail going in at the renovated Brookfield Place, FiDi has seen more than $30 billion in public and private investment over the last decade.

“That has really changed the bedrock of Lower Manhattan,” Hurwitz says. And this shift, he notes, has primed the area for an influx of residential developments.

Architect Thomas Juul-Hansen is designing the residences at The Beekman, which will include prime Manhattan views, a media room and restaurants by chefs Keith McNally and Tom Colicchio

Quote:
Among the most impressive new developments is GFI and GB Lodging’s The Beekman, a 68-unit condo tower (prices from $1.6 million to $15.3 million) attached to a 287-room Thompson Hotel at 5 Beekman St. A month after coming to market in October of last year, the project had a quarter of its units under contract.

It wasn’t always this way. Despite high-profile condo developments like 15 Broad Street and 20 Pine, a decade ago “you had to educate every buyer about the neighborhood — what was down here, what it was like,” says Douglas Elliman broker David Wanamaker.

Today “FiDi is a neighborhood people are asking about as opposed to having to be told about,” Wanamaker says. “People see the new developments and they walk in and say, ‘You know what, this is actually a great neighborhood.’ ”

The toy-and game-filled playroom at 50 West Street is helping the building lure young families.

Quote:
In addition to The Beekman, new area condos include Time Equities’ 50 West Street, a 191-unit condo tower (prices from $1.8 million to $22.6 million) designed by architect Helmut Jahn; Silverstein Properties’ 30 Park Place, a Robert A.M. Stern-designed condo-hotel project featuring 157 apartments (prices from $2.6 million to $60 million) atop a 189-room Four Seasons Hotel; and a 125 Greenwich, 128-apartment Rafael Vinoly-designed tower forthcoming from developers Michael Shvo and Bizzi & Partners.
That’s not to mention Howard Hughes Corporation’s South Street Seaport redevelopment plans, which could include a 500-foot-tall residential tower. Or the ongoing condo conversion of the upper levels of the Woolworth Building, where prices for the development’s 34 units will run from $3.4 million to $110 million for a seven-floor penthouse.
With prices per square foot in the $2,500 to $3,000 range, these projects are establishing new benchmarks for FiDi real estate, notes Carole Armstrong de Sorel, an agent with DJK Residential.

Nonetheless, the neighborhood still offers value, says Douglas Elliman broker Rob Gross. Indeed, according to numbers from appraiser Jonathan Miller, average price per square foot for FiDi condos and co-ops was $1,224 in 2014, less than the overall Manhattan average of $1,297, and well below the average in prime downtown neighborhoods like SoHo where prices average north of $1,600 per square foot.

“The Financial District, especially on the western side, is a really good short term play,” Gross says, noting that the retail center Brookfield Place will eventually comprise a corridor of shops and amenities including Hermes, Saks Fifth Avenue — along with restaurants from chefs Jose Garces and Joel Robuchon.

That corridor will also more tightly link FiDi to its ritzy northern neighbor TriBeCa.

A sunny conservatory at the Four Seasons Private Residences Downtown at 30 Park Place.

Silverstein Properties head Larry Silverstein also cites the TriBeCa connection.

Right now, Silverstein’s company is working on the World Trade Center and 30 Park Place “[TriBeCa] has become one of the fastest growing and wealthiest neighborhoods in the entire city.”

And this, he says, has in turn helped spark FiDi’s residential development.
“You’re going to have an amazing concentration of high net worth individuals and amenities coming in,” Gross adds.

“Three years from now it will be completely transformed.”

Gross recently steered clients Matt Motley and Paul Marchetti to a two-bedroom unit at 88 Greenwich St. Previously renting in Midtown East, the couple looked at nearly 40 different apartments in Chelsea, the West Village and TriBeCa before settling in FiDi.

Though Marchetti worked in the neighborhood, the pair were reluctant to move there. But, Motley says, “as I got in there and looked around, the perception and reputation just didn’t match.”

“Everything we heard was, ‘Oh, it empties out after dark, everyone is completely gone,’ ” Marchetti adds. “But we’ve found it to be quite the contrary.” Motley does, note, however, that better grocery stores would be nice.

“Ten years ago, you would be there at night, and it would just shut down,” says The Marketing Directors’ Jackie Urgo, who is handling sales at 50 West. “That’s just not the case anymore. You see people with baby strollers walking around. There are new shops, new restaurants.”

Perhaps most notably, iconic chef Nobu Matsuhisa’s Nobu will move to FiDi in 2017. Additionally, restaurants from Tom Colicchio and Keith McNally are slated to open at The Beekman this fall.

And developer Prodigy Network is building a pair of extended stay hotels in the neighborhood at 17 John St. and 84 William St., both of which, says CEO Rodrigo Niño, will feature restaurants from “very famous,” very trendy restaurateurs.

“The neighborhood is really coming into its own,” Wanamaker says.
“People don’t see it as a B option the way they did four or five years ago.”
     
     
  #54  
Old Posted Mar 13, 2015, 3:44 PM
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I love the shit out of this precious little tower. It looks like a blend of Chicago's John Hancock and NYC class.
     
     
  #55  
Old Posted Mar 26, 2015, 5:49 PM
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March 12, 2015











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  #56  
Old Posted Mar 30, 2015, 9:13 PM
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Construction Update: 5 Beekman Nears Topping Out







Quote:
Gerner Kronick + Valcarcal is the architect and GFI Capital/GB Lodging are the developers. The new tower will eventually total 47 floors and 700 feet, with two parapets included to echo the adjacent Temple Court Building, which is being converted into a hotel. The tower has been dubbed ‘The Beekman’ and will have 68 condominiums in total, while the hotel portion of the project will have 287 rooms.

Glass has also risen around much of what’s already been built, offering a decent idea of what the final product will look like. While the building will be over 700 feet tall, its prominence will be muted by 8 Spruce Street just a block away, which will still tower over its new neighbor by nearly 200 feet.

While 57th Street certainly has the tallest new residential towers in New York, the Financial District comes a close second, and its new buildings are even more numerous. Besides 5 Beekman, 30 Park Place (937′), 56 Leonard (821′), and 50 West Street (783′) are also under construction, and the neighborhood’s first supertalls are possible at 125 Greenwich (a tentative 1,356′) and 80 South Street, which was recently in the news as a potential contender for the city’s tallest building.
===========================
http://www.yimbynews.com/2015/03/con...pping-out.html
     
     
  #57  
Old Posted Mar 31, 2015, 6:07 AM
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Dead serious, if I could have my choice of an apartment of any building in NYC, I'm pretty sure this would be it. I love the glass, I love the detailing, I love the interiors and the restoration of the old building, and I love the location.
     
     
  #58  
Old Posted Mar 31, 2015, 1:26 PM
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Hopefully that hideous Pace University building will be demolished and redeveloped in the coming years. That site would be perfect for a new tower.
     
     
  #59  
Old Posted Mar 31, 2015, 2:03 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Downburst View Post
Dead serious, if I could have my choice of an apartment of any building in NYC, I'm pretty sure this would be it. I love the glass, I love the detailing, I love the interiors and the restoration of the old building, and I love the location.
There is the possibility that the buildings on Park Row would be demolished and the site redeveloped so views may be compromised but otherwise it is a decent building.
And @Crawford, I do not like the Pace University eyesore either. Much rather prefer the old New York Tribune building or something new instead but 1 Pace Plaza is there to stay for the time being.
     
     
  #60  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2015, 4:38 AM
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