11. 360 Tenth Avenue

Architect: SHoP Architects
Developer: McCourt Global
Numbers: 772 feet – 61 floors
Typology: Office
Status: 2024 (Proposed)

In 2014, McCourt Global, headed by Frank McCourt, previous owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers, proposed a 61-story tower at the side of Tenth Avenue and 30th Street, on a worthwhile yet generally empty parcel that settles between the High Line and the Hudson Yards and Manhattan West edifices. SHoP Architects thought of a striking pinnacle that begins as a “standard” glass box yet bends and changes at the top with galleries. Little advancement at the site has been heard in the previous years, yet whether the improvements gets worked as initially arranged, whatever ascents at the site will undoubtedly be a marquee venture at one of the most attractive areas accessible in the neighbourhood.

360 Tenth Avenue - Sheet1
360 Tenth Avenue ©www.cityrealty.com
360 Tenth Avenue - Sheet2
360 Tenth Avenue ©www.mccourt.com
360 Tenth Avenue - Sheet3
360 Tenth Avenue ©sherwoodequities.com

12. 520 West 41st Street

Architect: CetraRuddy Architecture
Developer: Silverstein Properties
Numbers: 758 feet – 52 floors (Office) / 723 feet – 57 floors (Condominium)
Typology: Office – Condominium
Status: 2023 (Site Preparation)

Around 2015, a rambling, full-block Mercedes-Benz deal at Eleventh Avenue and 41st Street, at the foot of the Lincoln Tunnel approach, cleared a path for an aspiring, mixed-use improvement led by Silverstein Properties. After a few beginnings, stops, and upgrades, the undertaking is at long last on target to push ahead, with development expected to start full steam. The most recent designs are of a high rise pair planned by CetraRuddy Architecture.

520 West 41st Street - Sheet1
520 West 41st Street ©newyorkyimby.com
520 West 41st Street - Sheet2
520 West 41st Street ©newyorkyimby.com
520 West 41st Street - Sheet3
520 West 41st Street ©newyorkyimby.com

13. Hudson Rise

Architect: Archilier Architects
Developer: Kuafu Properties
Numbers: 720 feet – 47 floors
Typology: Hotel, Condominium
Status: 2023 (Proposed)

Archilier Architects deconstruct the “standard” glass tower model with thorough mathematical projections at the base and upper segment, which would make particular character both at the ground and horizon levels, while giving a one of a kind encounter to its tenants through staggered patios and anticipating units. Developer Kuafu Properties intends to furnish the blended use working with 350 keyed hotel, appropriate for the Javits Convention Center over the road, and 27 townhouse condos.

Hudson Rise - Sheet1
Hudson Rise ©sirasdevelopment.com
Hudson Rise - Sheet2
Hudson Rise ©www.nynesting.com
Hudson Rise - Sheet3
Hudson Rise ©www.nynesting.com

14. The Eugene, 435 West 31st Street

Architect: Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill
Developer: Brookfield Property Partners
Numbers: 670 feet – 64 floors
Typology: Rental
Status: 2017 (Complete)

Marvelous views come into the scene from floor-to-roof windows and from the Hudson Club, a lounge with a private wine and dine area, gourmet specialist’s kitchen, game room, a fireplace, a piano, a pergola, and seating. What’s more, the 50,000-square-foot pleasantry suite incorporates a gymnasium with a two-story rock-climbing space and a full-size ball court, a golf simulator, arcade and pool rooms, a kids’ den, and a library, just as broad attendant services.

The Eugene, 435 West 31st Street - Sheet1
The Eugene ©www.wwglass.com
The Eugene, 435 West 31st Street - Sheet2
The Eugene © streeteasy.com
The Eugene, 435 West 31st Street - Sheet3
The Eugene © streeteasy.com

15. 601 West 29th Street

Architect: FXCollaborative
Developer: Douglaston Development
Numbers: 637 feet – 59 floors
Typology: Rental
Status: 2022 (Under Construction)

Renderings by FXCollaborative show an L-formed high rise that will highlight all encompassing perspectives in many ways, at any rate until future taller structures unavoidably cut a portion of the views. Details on the undertaking stay inadequate, yet records documented with the Department of Buildings call for amenities, for example, inhabitant lounges, specialized canine care, a sixth floor porch with an outside pool, and one more patio at the 40th floor nearby a lounge and a library. 9,496 square feet of ground-level retail will go far to vivifying the walkway at the fringe yet encouraging aspect of the city.

601 West 29th Street - Sheet1
601 West 29th Street © www.greyco.com
601 West 29th Street - Sheet2
601 West 29th Street © www.cityrealty.com
601 West 29th Street - Sheet3
601 West 29th Street © www.cityrealty.com

16. 541-545 West 37th Street

Architect: CetraRuddy Architecture
Developer: Chetrit Group
Numbers: 622 feet – 48 floors
Typology: Hotel, Residential
Status: 2022 (Proposed)

In 2017, Joseph Chetrit, through his Chetrit Group, proposed a 480-story, 622-foot-tall venture at an amazed, mid-block site extending from west 37th to West 38th roads. CetraRuddy Architects delivered a unique pinnacle with moving planes and segments that reacts to the strange part as adequately as it tends to the shifting needs of the proposed 421-room lodging and the 135 condos above.

541-545 West 37th Street - Sheet1
541-545 West 37th Street ©www.buzzbuzzhome.com
541-545 West 37th Street - Sheet2
541-545 West 37th Street ©www.buzzbuzzhome.com
541-545 West 37th Street - Sheet3
541-545 West 37th Street ©www.buzzbuzzhome.com

17. 555TEN, 555 Tenth Avenue

Architect: SLCE
Developer: Extell Development
Numbers: 612 feet – 56 floors
Typology: Rental
Status: 2016 (Complete)

555Ten is a 56-story, SLCE-planned rental skyscraper with studio to 3-room units that element soundproofed, twofold paned, floor-to-roof windows, hardwood floors and Bosch washer/dryers. The suite known as 555PLAY incorporates a two-lane bowling alley, an arcade and a children’s den. ‘Give Me a Break’ is the on location pet spa that offers preparing, play gatherings and visiting vet administrations. The housetop clubroom accompanies a lounge, cabanas, and a sundeck with an open air pool.

555TEN, 555 Tenth Avenue - Sheet1
555TEN ©www.cityrealty.com
555TEN, 555 Tenth Avenue - Sheet2
555TEN ©www.cityrealty.com
555TEN, 555 Tenth Avenue - Sheet3
555TEN ©www.cityrealty.com

18. 99 Hudson Boulevard

Architect: Henning Larsen Architect
Developer: Tishman Speyer
Numbers: Approx. 600 feet – 44 floors
Typology: Office
Status: 2024 (Proposed)

While significant office towers include a lot of Hudson Boulevard’s south end, the structures along Manhattan’s most current avenue become progressively private toward the north, at the upper 30’s roads. Tishman Speyer’s 44-story office tower proposed at 99 Hudson Boulevard vows to resist that pattern with 1.5 million square feet of business space, including non stop walkway dynamic quality to a zone that is generally molding into a room network. As of now accessible plans stay conditional, and the last plan is probably going to vary from the renderings delivered up until this point.

99 Hudson Boulevard - Sheet1
99 Hudson Boulevard ©newyorkyimby.com
99 Hudson Boulevard - Sheet2
99 Hudson Boulevard ©newyorkyimby.com
99 Hudson Boulevard - Sheet3
99 Hudson Boulevard ©newyorkyimby.com

19. 555 West 38th Street

Architect: Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects
Developer: Rockrose Development
Numbers: 570 feet – 52 floors\
Typology: Rental
Status: 2022 (Site Preparation)

This 52-story, 591-unit rental arranged at 555 West 38th Street, which would neglect the low-ascent green rooftop at the Jacob Javits Convention Center and save clear sightlines of the Hudson River, regardless of the number of high rises close by. The lopsidedly massed assembling is planned by Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects, with SLCE appended as the designer of record, and will offer luxuries, for example, inhabitant lounges and an open 33rd-floor outside deck at the structure’s misfortune.

20. 495 11th Avenue

Developers: Radson Development, Kingspoint Heights Development
Numbers: 560 feet – 49 floors
Typology: Rental
Status: 2023 (Proposed)

Class A workplaces, extravagance condominiums, and very good quality rentals have come to characterize the Hudson Yards horizon, yet a 49-story building proposed by Radson Development and Kingspoint Heights Development looks to reclassify the form with a blended use structure with common offices and affordable housing.

495 11th Avenue
495 11th Avenue ©www.wsj.com
1 2 3 4 5
Author

Sana, an architecture undergrad at Jamia Millia, is a staunch believer that the world owes it's beauty to architects. The ever-expanding concrete jungle is aesthetics, from the thoughts of an architect behind it. Foodie by nature Sana loves traveling, music; and an empty canvas is all that makes up an ideal day for her. She can binge-watch documentaries in sweatpants nights down. She aspires to live a life less ordinary.