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Thread: 57 Reade Street - 281 Broadway - 20 story tower (TriBeCa) - By SLCE

  1. #136

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    I really like this one in regard to the way that it surrounds that great old building on the corner lot. So many new buildings that I've seen go up in the city next to historic buildings leave an exposed wall or gap with the neighboring old building leaving the street looking unfinished. This one is great in that sense IMO. Nice work!

  2. #137

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    Was walking by this area today, there are two buildings on Broadway a block south of this being cleaned and renovated; both are very handsome pre-war buildings (253 and I believe 260 Broadway) between Murray and Warren street. The latter of the two looks absolutely magnificent now that the netting is gone and it is cleaned. I will try to snap a few pictures later this week.

    I think within 5-10 years or so, after the Gehry tower is completely filled and more buildings on Broadway are renovated and converted to apartments, the area around City Hall Park will get a lot livelier. It would be great to have better food options in the area for people like me living in the Financial District. Hopefully they will spill over into Fulton and John street which don't have much of anything right now in terms of cool retail.

  3. #138
    Disgruntled Optimist lofter1's Avatar
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    Those two buildings are the Postal Telegraph Company Building and the Home Life Insurance Company Building at 253-256 Broadway (actually built separately, but later joined and now considered one structure). The marble on the HLIC has been restored and is stunning, as is the copper pyramid up top.

    A good article on the two from the NY Times:

    A Long-Running Mismatch

    March 22, 2011

    FOR over a century, the Home Life and Postal Telegraph Buildings, next to each other at Broadway and Murray Street since 1894, have been locked in an irrevocable embrace, adjacent towers on the skyline around City Hall Park.

    Right now their marriage has been sundered, if only temporarily, as the lacy Home Life Building, at 256 Broadway, has vanished under construction netting, leaving the stolid Postal Telegraph Building at No. 253 without a date at the big dance. They were simultaneously designated landmarks in 1991, but not all landmarks are created equal.

    In 1892 two big companies bought land at Broadway and Murray Street, facing City Hall Park, the Postal Telegraph Company at the northwest corner, and the Home Life Insurance Company on the next plot to the north.

    The Postal Telegraph Company chose as architects George Edward Harding and William T. Gooch, strangely but officially known as George Edward Harding & Gooch, with several commercial structures to their credit. After a competition, Home Life selected the venerable Napoleon LeBrun & Sons, much better known at the time. Construction on both buildings ended in August 1894.

    The 12-story Postal Telegraph structure is of precise gray brick, with a deeply recessed entryway, attractive carving in terra cotta and unusual recessed loggias under a projecting cornice at the top floor. In an 1894 news account, The New-York Daily Tribune admired its innovative elevator call button, a more civilized approach, it said, than “shouting ‘up’ or ‘down.’ ”

    Home Life’s 16-story building is lighter, of marble treated in the Renaissance style, and almost civic in character, ending in a great pyramidal copper roof ...

    FULL ARTICLE

    ***

    How Home Life at 256 Broadway looked late Sunday afternoon, with the netting partially down ...











  4. #139
    In the long run... londonlawyer's Avatar
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    Magnificent.

  5. #140

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    Lofter, any idea if this is going to be residential or office?

  6. #141
    Disgruntled Optimist lofter1's Avatar
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    There are a lot of city offices there, including offices of the Mayor. It's managed by NYC Department of Citywide Administrative Services (DCAS):

    "The building is a cooperative, owned jointly with the City, which houses various offices on the upper floors. The basement and street levels are privately owned."

  7. #142
    Fearless Photog RoldanTTLB's Avatar
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    Haven't taken a photo of this in a while. DOn't know about the Broadway side, but the west-facing side is looking pretty wrapped up. This has come out much better than the renderings and is, I think, a nice in-fill building. It doesn't do anything interesting architecturally, but it also works hard not to stand out obnoxiously.


  8. #143
    Fearless Photog RoldanTTLB's Avatar
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    Banging stone at the base (nice match with the existing building this is propping up). Looking a little greener today than usual, but the glass is actually pretty dynamic depending on the weather. All in all, I like it, even if I can't afford $886k for a small, but reasonably well laid out one bedroom.













  9. #144
    In the long run... londonlawyer's Avatar
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    This is the first time I've seen the balconies. The building would have looked better without them.

  10. #145

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    Quote Originally Posted by Derek2k3 View Post

    Nice quirky building that might be next in line for redevelopment.
    Probably not happening soon, but something similar will eventually be built here.




    http://www.nyifund.com/experience/267broadway.php

    267 Broadway

    267 Broadway is currently a 5 story office building on a 50 feet by 116 feet lot. The building is centrally located across the street from City Hall and has accessibility to 12 different subway lines within a 2 block distance. There is 50 feet of retail frontage on Broadway.

    The property is positioned in close proximity to the Freedom Tower and other large scale commercial and residential developments. These developments will further strengthen the commercial and residential demand for space within the area.

    This would be an ideal site for a mixed use development, commercial or a hotel property. The Building is currently zoned as C5-3 and has a land size of approximately 5,000 Square Feet.

    Roe Development is planning to construct a 21 story mixed use or commercial property on the site totaling over 80,000 square feet.

    LOCATION
    267 Broadway
    New York, NY

    PROJECT TYPE
    Commercial / Retail

    SIZE
    80,000 SF / 21 Stories

  11. #146
    NYC Aficionado from Oz Merry's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by londonlawyer View Post
    This is the first time I've seen the balconies. The building would have looked better without them.
    And what's the point of them, anyway? They're too narrow to do anything with .

  12. #147
    In the long run... londonlawyer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Derek2k3 View Post
    Nice quirky building that might be next in line for redevelopment.
    This site aparently will be developed.



    267 Broadway
    267 Broadway is currently a 5 story office building on a 50 feet by 116 feet lot. The building is centrally located across the street from City Hall and has accessibility to 12 different subway lines within a 2 block distance. There is 50 feet of retail frontage on Broadway.

    The property is positioned in close proximity to the Freedom Tower and other large scale commercial and residential developments. These developments will further strengthen the commercial and residential demand for space within the area.

    This would be an ideal site for a mixed use development, commercial or a hotel property. The Building is currently zoned as C5-3 and has a land size of approximately 5,000 Square Feet.

    Roe Development is planning to construct a 21 story mixed use or commercial property on the site totaling over 80,000 square feet.

    LOCATION
    267 Broadway
    New York, NY

    PROJECT TYPE
    Commercial / Retail

    SIZE
    80,000 SF / 21 Stories

  13. #148

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    Already posted.

  14. #149
    Disgruntled Optimist lofter1's Avatar
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    Judge Sets Date to Resurrect Landmark

    TRIBECA TRIB
    BY CARL GLASSMAN
    POSTED DEC. 30

    CARL GLASSMAN/TRIBECA TRIB
    In October, Cora Cohen returned to her loft at 287 Broadway,
    where she lived and worked for 35 years.

    Shuttered for more than four years, the stunning 1872 cast iron landmark building at 287 Broadway must reopen. Judge’s orders. Still, it could be almost another year before its dusty lofts and storefronts see life again.

    Randall Co., the building’s landlord and a real estate arm of the Gindi family, owners of Century 21 department store, has until next November to do what is necessary to lift its vacate order.

    The date was set recently through negotiations between lawyers for Ran*dall and artist Cora Cohen, 67, a 35-year tenant who was forced out of her loft when the city vacated the building in November 2007.

    The Department of Buildings had determined that 287 Broa*way was leaning and in danger of collapse, the result of excavation for a residential tower next door.

    But practically from the beginning, lawyers for the artist have been in court with the owners, accusing them of impeding the work needed to make the building safe.

    For more than a year, 287 Broadway has been tied to the new building, apparently out of danger, and the owners have yet to make it habitable.

    CARL GLASSMAN/TRIBECA TRIB
    The city says the owner must remove the bracing, near the entrance
    to her loft and in the stairwell, before its vacate order can be lifted.

    In September, an appellate judge upheld a decision in landlord-tenant court that compelled Randall Co. to do whatever was needed to get the vacate order lifted. Still, they said they needed more time and back into court they went. In November, a judge issued the timetable.

    “I think it’s a logical, very concrete schedule,” said Cohen’s lawyer, Arlene Boop, adding that negotiating with the owner made more sense than going through what could have been several days of hearings.

    Kenneth Dubow, who heads the Gindi family’s real estate company, did not return a call for comment.

    Beginning this month, Randall Co. is required to file plans for lifting the vacate order, then continue to meet deadlines set by the court along the way.

    “These are very clear time frames. They have the ring of a reasonably good new day,” said Boop.

    Wooden bracing, from when the building was leaning, remains in the stairwells of the top two floors.

    By all accounts, the building is now stable and the bracing in not needed. According to the DOB, it is that bracing, which blocks legal egress, that stands between the owners and the lifting of the vacate order.

    “The building’s engineer needs to sub*mit a report to this department showing that the building has been properly stabilized and egress has been restored,” Ryan Fitzgibbon, a DOB spokeswoman, told the Trib back in October.

    But Cohen, who was rent-protected by the city’s Loft Law and paying about $1,100 for her top-floor loft, said she has become so weary of delays that she could hardly feel good about the enforceable schedule.

    “I’ll believe it when I see it,” Co*hen said. “Their M.O. has always been to just not do things rather than to do them. That’s the way they were about maintenance and that’s the way they were about everything.”

  15. #150
    In the long run... londonlawyer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Merry View Post
    And what's the point of them, anyway? They're too narrow to do anything with .
    I agree.

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