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Hakimian said 75 Wall Street's small floor plates and tall ceilings made the building seem "as if it was built to be converted". [25] The building was rezoned for residential and commercial use. [29] Over three years, the Hakimian Organization converted 75 Wall Street into a mixed-use structure with condominiums on its upper floors and a hotel ...
Opened in 1931, the hotel is 44 stories tall and contains 426 Art Deco–style rooms and 101 suites, as well as 147 condominium residences. [2] It features a distinctive red neon rooftop sign. JW Marriott Essex House New York is a member of Historic Hotels of America, the official program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. [3]
75 Livingston Street, also known as the Court Chambers Building, or the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce Building, is a 30-story 343 ft (105 m) residential cooperative tower in the Downtown Brooklyn neighborhood of New York City. [2] The building was designed by architect Abraham J. Simberg, and built in 1926. [3]
Walker had used a similar effect in his designs for 60 Hudson Street [16] and 1 Wall Street. [6] The middle eight bays of the central section set back at the 9th and 12th stories, while the two bays on either side continue as bulkheads that set back at the 13th story. The center six bays set back again at the 15th story, flanked by two-bay-wide ...
One High Line (formerly The XI and The Eleventh) is a pair of buildings in New York City designed by architectural firm BIG. [1] [2] The complex will include 247 condominiums, a 137-room Six Senses hotel, 90,000 square feet (8,400 m 2) of retail space, art space, a spa and club.
Lightstone purchased the former 12-story office building at 130 William Street in May 2014 for $60 million after the previous owner defaulted on a mortgage from East West Bank. [3] Eight months later, the company unveiled Hill West Architects ' plans for a 50-story tall mixed-use building that would reach a height of 581 feet (177 m) and ...
Shortly after the Wall Street Crash of 1929, she invested her last $60 in a small Brooklyn restaurant. Soon she was one of the most successful restaurant owners in the New York area, [2] serving a million meals a year in 1956. [3] Her signature item was the popover, a hot bread dispensed from baskets by costumed servers known as popover girls. [4]
In the 2010s, the office space was converted to condominiums with between one and four bedrooms. [27] [69] The building has 152 condominiums, [27] [70] which span floors 2 through 16. [70] The clock tower contains a three-story, 6,252-square-foot (580.8 m 2) penthouse apartment with five bedrooms and three terraces.