View Poll Results: Do you like the final design of Beekman Place?

Voters
175. You may not vote on this poll
  • Yes

    150 85.71%
  • No

    25 14.29%
Page 250 of 339 FirstFirst ... 150200240246247248249250251252253254260300 ... LastLast
Results 3,736 to 3,750 of 5071

Thread: 8 Spruce Street - Beekman Tower - by Frank Gehry

  1. #3736

    Default


  2. #3737
    Banned Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    Park Slope, Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    8,114
    Blog Entries
    4

    Default Today from Fulton Landing...

    1.


    2.

  3. #3738

    Default

    ^beautiful

    Beekman Tower to celebrate topping out ceremony

    http://therealdeal.net/newyork/artic...e-in-brief--16

    Beekman Tower to celebrate topping out ceremony
    As pigs fly, so does a 10-ton bucket of concrete, marking the successful completion of a Gehry-Ratner project. Lower Manhattan's 76-story, 1.1 million-square-foot Beekman Tower will celebrate its topping out ceremony on Spruce Street between Nassau and Gold streets Thursday. The project, designed by starchitect Frank Gehry and developed by Forest City Ratner Companies CEO Bruce Ratner, is reportedly the $700 million success story between the two industry celebs, whose plan to work together on the controversial Atlantic Yards development earlier this year fell through. When it opens, the Beekman Tower will include a K-8th grade public school and a 175-car parking garage. TRD






    Forest City goes one for two with Gehry
    As Atlantic Yards stalls, Beekman Tower skyscraper sprouts

    November 01, 2009 12:00AM

    http://therealdeal.com/newyork/artic...two-with-gehry


    By C.J. Hughes
    Frank Gehry For the megadeveloper Forest City Ratner Companies, the last few months can be seen as a tale of two projects.

    The worst of times seems to have taken hold at Atlantic Yards, the proposed 22-acre development of apartments, offices and a basketball arena in Brooklyn. In June, Forest City dumped architect Frank Gehry, whose eye-catching designs helped generate much of the project's initial excitement.

    And last month, the Empire State Development Corporation, the state authority backing the project, had to face the state's Court of Appeals in a case about the legality of its eminent-domain actions after being sued by a community group.

    But in Manhattan, after a rocky start, it seems to be the best of times -- or at least somewhat more favorable ones, for Beekman Tower at 8 Spruce Street in the Financial District.

    The 76-story rental tower will be the tallest residential building in New York. Unlike at Atlantic Yards, Gehry's design (his first residential project in New York) is getting built, despite its stumbles.

    In fact, the building, which looms large two blocks east of City Hall, is going up fast. In the middle of last month, 80 percent of its windows were in place.

    Beekman Tower, which is reportedly costing about $700 million to build, had a challenging spring.

    Forest City had halted construction and threatened to cut the building's height in half, but then in March, as The Real Deal reported, it closed on a key $680 million construction loan, from a consortium of lenders led by Eurohypo AG.

    The firm also struck an unusual deal with its unions to save labor costs. And earlier, acknowledging new economic realities, the developer switched the Beekman from condos to rentals, as it did with Atlantic Yards.

    It remains to be seen if the roughly 900-unit building, which will reportedly open in winter 2011, will hurt itself by oversaturating the Financial District with luxury units, which have sprouted up there in massive numbers in recent years.

    As it is, the Financial District saw a 48 percent plunge in rental activity from the third quarter of 2008 to 2009, according to StreetEasy, the real estate data company. Rents in the neighborhood dropped 21 percent during that same time.

    Still, relatively speaking, Beekman is no Atlantic Yards, said Gary Malin, the president of Citi Habitats, which has been in discussions with Forest City to be the exclusive broker for the building. (Citi Habitats currently represents Forest City's 354-unit 80 DeKalb Avenue in Brooklyn, a new apartment building where leasing is slated to begin this month.)

    "It's something beautiful and different," said Malin, who downplayed any dampening effect the glass-and-stainless-steel tower will have on the market. "I know it sounds like a lot," he added, "but when you consider a city of our size, is 900 units that enormous?"

    Forest City did not return calls for comment.

    Gehry's imprimatur -- which is visible in the grooved metal ridges, resembling bicycle chains, that twist up the facade -- will be a strong selling point, said Jim Stuckey, the new dean of NYU's Schack Institute of Real Estate, who worked for Forest City from 1994 to 2007, and did some preliminary planning for the Beekman.

    "I think people will pay extra to live in this building," Stuckey said, estimating the premium at 15 percent.

    What's less clear is if residents will want to live on Spruce and Nassau streets in a corner of the Financial District that's still lacking a variety of retail and nightlife, despite having added a few high-end conversions in recent years, like 150 Nassau Street, a granite-trimmed Beaux Arts office building turned condo next door.

    Nassau Street itself features a hat and shoe store, while Beekman Street -- which the building backs onto and which it is named for -- has chain restaurants, plus the eponymous Beekman, a wood-faced Irish restaurant. (Another Beekman, the Beekman Tower Hotel, is in Turtle Bay, in an Art Deco high-rise.)

    The sidewalks of Spruce Street, meanwhile, are often dotted with students from nearby Pace University, and skateboarders headed under the Brooklyn Bridge.

    Still, the Beekman's upper floors should command breathtaking views. The building will surpass the Trump World Tower by the United Nations as the city's tallest residential building.

    With Atlantic Yards, much of the debate regarding eminent domain revolves around what public benefits, if any, are offered by its arena, which is to be the new home of the New Jersey Nets. With the Beekman, though, Forest City appears to have neutralized potential criticisms over height by creating community facilities.

    That's largely because the tower's orange-brick base will include a wing for the adjacent New York Downtown Hospital. It will also house a new public school -- the Spruce Street School, for kindergarten to fifth grade -- in a neighborhood that sorely needs one, said Michael Levine, director of planning for Manhattan Community Board 1.

    In addition, Forest City is building a narrow park, lined with benches and trees, that will connect Spruce and Beekman streets on the building's north side, Levine added.

    Indeed, while lawsuits continue to dog Atlantic Yards, the Beekman's neighbors seem relieved that a project that did not have to contribute to the community, because it was as-of-right, did so anyway -- even if some are disappointed that the school's opening has been pushed back a year. "We're grateful they gave us amenities," Levine said. "We wish every developer would do that."
    Last edited by Derek2k3; November 17th, 2009 at 08:04 PM.

  4. #3739
    Kings County Loyal BrooklynLove's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Brooklyn, planet Earth
    Posts
    2,750

    Default

    It appears as if there are some slight setbacks in this current story.

  5. #3740
    Senior Member DKNY617's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Astoria, Queens
    Posts
    424

    Default


  6. #3741
    Forum Veteran TREPYE's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    1,820

    Default

    Topping out Thurs...

    I guess that means no crown....

    Just flat up top, like that miserable wall.

    I was really hoping that that was why the south wall was flat to allow the funds to give the tower to have a proper finish and make its mark on the skyline with some distniction.

  7. #3742

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by BrooklynLove View Post
    It appears as if there are some slight setbacks in this current story.
    Pun intended?

    This tower is so dramatic close up and in person. My neck was still sore on Sunday from looking up. If someone was renting time in a lazy-boy to gaze up at it, I would have been a customer.

  8. #3743
    Disgruntled Optimist lofter1's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    NYC - Downtown
    Posts
    31,506

    Default

    True or False?

    Quote Originally Posted by Derek2k3 View Post

    ... In the middle of last month, 80 percent of its windows were in place.

    ... Gehry's imprimatur -- which is visible in the grooved metal ridges, resembling bicycle chains, that twist up the facade -- will be a strong selling point ...

    ... Forest City is building a narrow park, lined with benches and trees, that will connect Spruce and Beekman streets on the building's north side ...

  9. #3744

    Default

    The window count is bad enough, but "bicycle chains"? -Jim Stuckey

    C.J. Hughes
    Last edited by 195Broadway; November 18th, 2009 at 11:13 AM.

  10. #3745

    Default 77

    Frank Gehry's 76-Story Dick Joke Tops Off


    Can it really be that Frank Gehry's 76-story Beekman Tower (well, 77, but apartments go up to 76) has reached its highest point? Evidence supports that claim. Oh, and there's this totally amazing e-mail we just received:
    You missed Frank F’n Gehry this morning at the Beekman Tower topping off ceremony. The most classic one liner ever.
    Bruce Ratner is giving his speech praising unions. Blah blah blah. Then he calls up the "great" Gehry to say a few words...
    Frank gets up to the mic and pauses...
    He looks up to the sky and the 76-story building for about 3 seconds...
    Looks at everyone and says...
    “NO VIAGRA”
    You'll never look at the rippling steel the same way. Speaking of, check out this very cool Flickr photo from an apparent Beekman insider. Is the undulation getting anyone other than Gehry hot?

  11. #3746
    Senior Member treebeard's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    38 park row nyc
    Posts
    103

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by lofter1 View Post
    True or False?
    all false good point(s) terrible excuse for journalism

  12. #3747

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by TREPYE View Post
    Topping out Thurs...

    I guess that means no crown....
    Topping off ceremonies have nothing to do with building crowns.

    A topping off ceremony is ususally reserved for the highest piece of structural steel. It is NOT for the "top" of a building. There are topping off ceremonies for buildings that are 100 feet or more short of their "top".

    Now I am not saying that this building will have a crown. I am just saying that it is not the "top" of the building. There will be undoubtedly be mechanical space and the like, and the building will get slightly taller.

  13. #3748
    Forum Veteran MidtownGuy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    East Midtown
    Posts
    6,792

    Default

    A shame that it just sort of stops. Something up there to mark the crown would have been nice, with an illumination of some sort. I love the building, but the flat south wall and the lack of an interesting feature at the top make it fall short of a masterpiece.

  14. #3749

    Default

    I agree. No doubt Ratner is culpable.

  15. #3750

    Default I'm just saying

    there was one more crane section on the ground as of last night.

    but I'm just saying..

Similar Threads

  1. Barclay Tower @ 10 Barclay Street - by Costas Kondylis
    By Derek2k3 in forum New York Skyscrapers and Architecture
    Replies: 623
    Last Post: August 10th, 2012, 02:51 PM
  2. New York Times Tower - 620 Eighth Avenue @ W. 41st Street - by Renzo Piano
    By noharmony in forum New York Skyscrapers and Architecture
    Replies: 3232
    Last Post: September 30th, 2011, 11:18 PM
  3. 165 Charles Street @ West Street - by Richard Meier
    By ASchwarz in forum New York Skyscrapers and Architecture
    Replies: 104
    Last Post: June 8th, 2010, 05:36 PM
  4. Canceled: Downtown Guggenheim - by Frank Gehry
    By NYguy in forum New York Skyscrapers and Architecture
    Replies: 33
    Last Post: June 23rd, 2009, 11:09 AM
  5. Director's Guild of America Tower -110 West 57th Street
    By londonlawyer in forum New York Real Estate
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: July 18th, 2003, 11:37 AM

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  


Wired New York on Google+ - Facebook - Twitter - Meetup -

Edward's photos on Flickr - Wired New York on Flickr - In Queens - In Red Hook - Bryant Park - SQL Backup Software