31. Henry Hall, 515 West 38th Street
Architect: BKSK Architects
Developer: Imperial Companies
Numbers: 361 feet – 31 floors
Typology: Rental
Status: 2017 (Complete)
BKSK Architects planned the structure in the way of a pre-war space, with an outside of warm red brick, wide gridded windows, tall ceilings, and a verbalized crown that inspires exemplary Gotham. Homes at Henry Hall come in studio to two-room designs with insides by Ken Fulk. A comfortable, fence planted rooftop deck faces toward the Hudson River, making an ideal roost for watching sunsets. Other luxuries incorporate 24-hour attendants, a private lounge area, a library, and a wellness place with crafted programs.
32. 455W37, 455 West 37th Street
Architect: Handel Architects
Developer: Rockrose Development Corporation
Numbers: 295 feet – 23 floors
Typology: Rental
Status: 2008 (Complete)
455W37, Rockrose Development and Handel Architects’ 23-story skyscraper at Tenth Avenue and West 37th Street, remains at the eastern edge of Hudson Yards, where new high rises blend with pre-war structures, making a “lived-in” streetscape that is uncommon for the area. The concierge rental offers sunlit units with galleries and one end to the other, floor-to-ceiling windows. Building comforts incorporate keen regular regions decked out in wood and stone boards, a wellness community, a pantry, parking for vehicles and bikes, and a comfortable rooftop deck with wood decking, concealed feasting regions and greenery.
33. The Pendry, 440 West 34th Street
Architect: Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill
Developer: Brookfield Property Partners
Numbers: 281 feet – 21 floors
Typology: Hotel
Status: 2020 (Under Construction)
The 281-foot-tall tower called 4 Manhattan West, ascents well underneath the high rises of the two its parent complex and the Hudson Yards pinnacles toward the west, yet the mid-block, concealed structure just might be the sleekest of all. The mark bit of regarded architecture firm SOM, the organizers of One World Trade Center, is tangible at the fresh, intelligent, top notch glass envelope that swells into undulating waves at its 33rd Street facade, which makes for a magnificent view from the road, and on the contrary side, which faces the future public promenade and retail line at the focal point of the complex. The 164 hotel rooms will additionally expand the client blend at Manhattan West, which likewise offers a great many square feet of office space and several rental condos, adding to a lively, nonstop locale.
34. 460 West 34th Street
Architect: Parker & Shaffer / MdeAS (renovation)
Developer: SL Green Realty Corp.
Numbers: 278 feet – 19 floors
Typology: Office
Status: 1927 (Complete)
In 1927, architects Parker and Shaffer raised a bulky, 19-story, business space, the tallest cement outlined structure in the city at that point. After ninety years, the monumental structure winds up encompassed by a lot bigger docks every which way, including the gigantic Hudson Yards and Manhattan West edifices, both over the road. Architect SL Green has exploited this random new development by redesigning the space into best in class office space with 13.5-foot ceilings, new normal regions (hall, nursery, retail, and rooftop deck), and updated mechanical frameworks (counting HVAC and elevators).
35. Five Manhattan West, 450 West 33rd Street
Architect: Davis Brody Bond / Rex Architects
Developer: Brookfield Property Partners
Numbers: 262 feet – 17 floors
Typology: Office
Status: 2017 (Complete)
In 2017, the peculiar structure was consolidated into the new Manhattan West Complex and got a genuinely necessary makeover by Rex Architecture with an all-glass veneer of undulating chevrons and best in class tech overhauls. The structure’s ceilings and ideal place opposite the Shops at Hudson Yards and a street or two away from the future Moynihan Station have pulled in occupants that incorporate Amazon, JPMorgan Chase, and IHS Markit. Entire Foods, Peloton and the Manhattan Easts Market Hall list among the structure’s retailers.
36. Covenant House, 460 West 41st Street
Architect: FXCollaborative
Developer: Covenant House
Numbers: 136 feet – 9 floors
Typology: Community facility
Status: 2022 (Under Construction)
In 2015, Covenant House, a NGO that covers and offers assistance to youth encountering vagrancy, have reported designs to redevelop their office on West 41st Street, alongside a significant part of the remainder of the square among Dyer and Tenth roads. The arrangement incorporated another private network office for the association itself, just as another private pinnacle, retail, and extra network space. Right now, plans for the more prominent office stay open to question, yet development has as of late begun the advancement’s center part – a nine-story structure with 60 dwelling units and related occupant administrations.
37. The Lewis, 411 West 35th Street
Architect: Davis Brody Bond / Rex Architects
Developer: Brookfield Property Partners
Numbers: 262 feet – 17 floors
Typology: Office
Status: 2017 (Complete)
The Lewis at 411 West 35th Street stands simply off Ninth Avenue, where blasting Hudson Yards meets the energetic, to a great extent pre-war Garment District, situating the 12-story rental inside simple reach of both one of the city’s most settled neighborhoods and its most recent and most sweltering partner. An expansive street and green square toward the west imply that west-bound units get adequate daylight even on the lower floors consistently. Living arrangements highlight wide board oak floors, high ceilings, ample wardrobes, sun oriented shades, soundproof windows, washers/dryers, kitchens with Italian cabinetry and dark Caesarstone counters, and washrooms with recessed lighting, glass-walled showers, and profound splashing tubs.
38. Morgan North Post Office, 401 West 29th Street
Developer: Tishman Speyer
Numbers: 111 feet – 10 floors
Typology: Office
Status: 1933 / 2021 (Renovation)
For nearly a century, the Far West Side held two of Manhattan’s biggest postal offices. Today, the James A Farley Post Office, a 1912 McKim, Mead and White milestone, is being changed over into the Moynihan Train Hall add-on for Penn Station. A square toward the southwest, the less vainglorious yet still impressive Morgan North office is going to go through its very own transformation. Tishman Speyer plans to retrofit the 10-story, full-block pre-war behemoth into cutting edge workplaces with 17-foot ceilings, covered with a 2.5-section of land green rooftop.
39. Skylight House, 411 Ninth Avenue
Architect: HTO Architect
Developer: James Papaioannou
Numbers: 102 feet – 7 floors
Typology: Rental
Status: 2017 (Complete)
The upsurge of high rise advancement in Hudson Yards gets an inundation of more modest ventures, especially where the area meets setup neighborhoods. 7-story Skylight House ascends over the road from One Manhattan West, successfully progressing the scale from the supertall office pinnacle to low-ascent, pre-war apartments nearby. The new office complex’s enormous court permits Skylight House occupants to appreciate unhampered daylight and perspectives from essentially every window, even those in restrooms. McKim, Mead and White’s Farley Post Office over the road, which is right now being changed into the Moynihan Station, comes into fantastic view from every one of the 12 condos.
40. Moynihan Station
Architect: McKim, Mead & White / Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (Renovation)
Developers: Amtrak, ESD Corp.
Typology: Train Station
Status: 1913 / 2021 (Under renovation)
Gigantic improvement like that in progress at Hudson Yards requires suitable methods for moving huge quantities of individuals all through the area. The 7 train augmentation to 34th Street enough serves MTA-based commuters, however more is expected to represent various commuters based outside the Five Boroughs. The Moynihan Train Hall venture expects to do precisely that by changing over the James A. Farley Post Office Building into an extension for Penn Station, the busiest train station in North America. The mail center structure was inherited in 1913 by the architecture firm McKim, Mean and White as an excellent Neoclassical companion to the late and extraordinary Pennsylvania Station.