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  #441  
Old Posted Dec 8, 2019, 5:39 AM
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  #442  
Old Posted Dec 22, 2019, 3:43 AM
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Barney Greengrass Barney Greengrass is offline
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Happened to be in Jersey City a couple days ago, I really like how this turned out even though I'm no fan of parking podiums.



A couple of bonus shots from the JC waterfront:



     
     
  #443  
Old Posted Jan 4, 2020, 4:27 PM
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  #444  
Old Posted Jan 13, 2020, 10:19 AM
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Credit: JC_Heights
     
     
  #445  
Old Posted Jan 23, 2020, 7:55 AM
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The great state of New Jersey, gives their tallest edifice, to the NYC water-
front . . 99 Hudson's form is cool enough, it bolsters the western riverbank's
skyline nicely . . But pre-construction renderings of Jersey's proposed tallest,
promised a much more stately-looking tower than what we're ending up with
. . In the rendering the building & the crown, especially from the west, looked
more uniformly defined & distinguished . . In reality, the disappearance of the
rising stone halfway up . . with the ordinary glassy crown (from the west
especially), vacuously vanishing into the day sky (in most light), makes for a
cheesy, less than remarkable, state pinnacle . . Hopefully there may still be
some rich refinement to be added . .

the worst of it, is a profane horizontal line formed by the stone's cut-off
point in the back . . that's of course the side of the building facing America . .
the line cuts clear across all the vertical planes of the western facade, in a
fleabag gesture that just looks like a sad misadventure, where the builders
ran out of money . . the cut off points could've been staggered . . rising up
towards the center . . or some such . . Better yet, all that beautiful stone
glorifying the lower parking garage section, should've been added instead,
somewhere up top on Jersey's tallest . . I mean dudes, get a grip . .
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  #446  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2020, 5:53 PM
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  #447  
Old Posted Jan 26, 2020, 1:55 AM
jayden jayden is offline
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It turned out great.
     
     
  #448  
Old Posted Feb 6, 2020, 4:25 PM
PeterQM PeterQM is offline
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CityRealty article

Checking in at 99 Hudson, New Jersey's tallest

By Vitali Ogorodnikov

February 4, 2020

https://www.cityrealty.com/nyc/marke...dos-850k/40701


https://ds4.cityrealty.com/img/310e2...b14+1004++0+60
Image credits (unless specified otherwise): Perkins+Will

Over the past few decades, the Jersey City waterfront has transformed almost beyond recognition. Derelict docks, empty lots and crumbling industrial buildings made way for a glittering skyline and streets bustling with office workers, pedestrians, and nightlife. The crown jewel of the new skyline nears completion at 99 Hudson Street, a 79-story tower that now reigns as the tallest building in all of New Jersey.

The 889-foot-tall skyscraper competes with luxury residential towers across the river in Manhattan in more than height. The building stands a block away from the Exchange Place station of the PATH train, which puts Manhattan’s Financial District within a one-stop ride - a shorter commute than even most of Downtown Brooklyn can boast. Moreover, the building’s amenity package goes toe-to-toe with contenders from the Empire State.

Apartments come with wide-plank oak flooring, a popular finish in latest luxe condos across the NYC, as are floor-to-ceiling windows and in-unit washer/dryers. Kitchens come with lacquered Italian cabinetry and Quartz counters and islands, while the bathrooms are decked out in ceramic Statuario flooring and walls, which extends to walk-in showers with rainwater shower heads.

The salient feature of the 65,000-square-foot amenity package is a massive roof deck atop the building base at the foot of the tower. The centerpiece, an 80-by-50-foot swimming pool, is surrounded by landscaping, cabanas, outdoor grilling and dining stations, and a dog run. Interior features include a game room, a children’s playroom, a bar-equipped screening room, a business center, a demonstration kitchen, a golf simulator, and the Hudson Club Room, complete with a lounge, dining space, and library.


https://ds1.cityrealty.com/img/21a07...1874+736++0+60


https://ds2.cityrealty.com/img/0ae1e...eb37+736++0+60


https://ds3.cityrealty.com/img/72313...cbcd+736++0+60


https://ds4.cityrealty.com/img/fefb5...8287+736++0+60

Architect Ming Wu, who spoke to CityRealty about the building in 2018, points out that one of his favorite amenities is a public rather than a private one - the 15,000 square feet of retail at the ground level, which will further animate Jersey City’s ever-more-thriving Downtown. One by one, remaining parking lots, which split asunder existing buildings and create swathes of inhospitable sidewalk, make way for vibrant urban developments such as 99 Hudson.

At the skyline level, the angled pillar makes an effective skyline pairing with the slightly-shorter 30 Hudson Street (formerly known as the Goldman Sachs Tower), which reigned as the tallest building in New Jersey since 2004. In a 2016 feature for 6sqft, CityRealty’s resident architecture critic Carter Horsley compared the former bank tower to the Rock of Gibraltar for its prominent position at the foot of the skyline. 99 Hudson stands nearly equally prominently, situated just a block away from the Hudson River waterfront. Only a handful of squat office buildings separate the tower from the water, so even most of the lower-level units open onto unobstructed panoramas of the Manhattan skyline.

The building’s chevron form faces Manhattan to maximize direct skyline views of the Big Apple. However, dramatic views also open in other directions, particularly from the building’s unobstructed upper half, with a viewshed of 35 miles from the top floors. To the east, beyond the Manhattan skyline, the views penetrate across the harbor past Brooklyn and Queens all the way to Long Island and the Atlantic Ocean. To the south, the view overlooks clear across all of Staten Island and further across the Raritan Bay to the Jersey Shore and central Jersey. In the opposite direction, the panorama stretches along the Palisades up the Hudson River valley. To the west, New Jersey’s urban tapestry stretches for miles and runs up against the rolling ridges of the Appalachian Highlands towards the setting sun.

The architects reconcile the solid feel of a stone-clad building with in-demand floor-to-ceiling windows by using alternating strips of limestone and glass. Most of the base is clad in limestone, massed in a simplified classical manner. According to architect Wu, such classicist references were meant to “convey a sense of reserve and dignity in regards to the architectural expression” in a manner that responds not only to nearby pre-war buildings, but also to stone-clad buildings around the greater New York area as a whole. Art Deco-flaired, alternating bands of limestone and glass in the midsection make way for an all-glass facade at the top, maximizing window coverage for maximum sunlight and views.


https://ds3.cityrealty.com/img/caef3...a389+736++0+60

It is natural to draw parallels between 99 Hudson and the Brooklyn Point in Brooklyn and the Skyline Tower in Queens, two recently-topped-out “tallest” condo towers in two satellite "downtowns" that symbolizes their respective areas’ resurgence. But whether we are talking about Jersey City, Brooklyn, or Queens, the message is clear: luxury sky-scraping living has definitively spread beyond the confines of the isle of Manhattan.

Link to full article with more images and info on interiors, pricing, etc.
     
     
  #449  
Old Posted Feb 8, 2020, 5:33 PM
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  #450  
Old Posted Feb 13, 2020, 4:44 AM
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  #451  
Old Posted Mar 5, 2020, 1:06 AM
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Credit: cygnus10x
     
     
  #452  
Old Posted Mar 17, 2020, 4:34 AM
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ChiTownWonder ChiTownWonder is offline
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wow that crown is sad... This is my first time seeing the tower and I thought it was unfinished. too bad too because the limestone looks so great at the base and in the vertical stripes. the crown could have made this an elegant modern take on art deco. If i were a billionaire id buy this building and finish the top satisfactorily because it does the city no justice.
     
     
  #453  
Old Posted Mar 17, 2020, 1:50 PM
BXFrank BXFrank is offline
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The top looks bad from the back angle only, the side facing NYC looks spectacular
     
     
  #454  
Old Posted Mar 30, 2020, 5:50 PM
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  #455  
Old Posted Mar 30, 2020, 7:25 PM
Hamilton Hamilton is offline
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Really nice, C.! Here's a screenshot. You can see 25 Columbus being built in front of 99 Hudson:

     
     
  #456  
Old Posted Apr 9, 2020, 3:54 PM
Oron Zchut Oron Zchut is offline
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From over the past few weeks












     
     
  #457  
Old Posted Apr 9, 2020, 6:01 PM
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Jonovision Jonovision is online now
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I find the transition from stone to glass really awkward. It is too abrupt. I wish they had pulled some more glass down or more stone up and let it have more of a fade or at least given it a proper transition instead of just a quick change in material.
     
     
  #458  
Old Posted Apr 9, 2020, 7:13 PM
mrnyc mrnyc is offline
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its definitely a bizarre cost cutter move. at least ny doesn't have to look at that side.
     
     
  #459  
Old Posted Apr 9, 2020, 7:55 PM
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The limestone just stops, why? As I was scrolling through the pictures I was thinking it was unfinished but it's not. Very odd tower.
     
     
  #460  
Old Posted Apr 9, 2020, 8:45 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jonovision View Post
I find the transition from stone to glass really awkward. It is too abrupt. I wish they had pulled some more glass down or more stone up and let it have more of a fade or at least given it a proper transition instead of just a quick change in material.
Yeah. It's an odd one. I wonder if it was a value engineering design change during construction. That limestone is expensive after all.
     
     
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