Hudson Yards, Manhattan
Hudson Yards is a neighborhood on the West Side of Midtown Manhattan in New York City, bounded roughly by 30th Street in the south, 41st Street in the north, the West Side Highway in the west, and Eighth Avenue in the east.[4][5] The area is the site of a large-scale redevelopment program that is being planned, funded, and constructed under a set of agreements among the State of New York, City of New York, and Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), with the aim of expanding the Midtown Manhattan business district westward to the Hudson River. The program includes a major rezoning of the Far West Side, an extension of the New York City Subway's 7 and <7> trains to a new subway station at 34th Street and 11th Avenue, a renovation and expansion of the Javits Center, and a financing plan to fund the various components. The various components are being planned by New York City Department of City Planning and New York City Economic Development Corporation.
Hudson Yards | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 40°45′22″N 74°00′02″W | |
Country | United States |
State | New York |
City | New York City |
Borough | Manhattan |
Community District | Manhattan 4[1] |
Population | |
• Total | 70,150 |
Neighborhood tabulation area; includes Chelsea | |
Ethnicity | |
• White | 65.1% |
• Hispanic | 14.6 |
• Asian | 11.8 |
• Black | 5.7 |
• Others | 2.8 |
Time zone | UTC−05:00 (Eastern) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC−04:00 (EDT) |
ZIP Codes | 10001, 10018 |
Area code | 212, 332, 646, and 917 |
The largest of the projects made possible by the rezoning is the 28-acre (11 ha) multiuse Hudson Yards real estate development by Related Companies and Oxford Properties, which is being built over the West Side Rail Yard. Construction began in 2012 with the groundbreaking for 10 Hudson Yards, and is projected to be completed by 2024. According to its master plan, created by Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates, the Hudson Yards development would include 16 skyscrapers to be constructed in two phases. Architects including Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill, Thomas Heatherwick, Roche-Dinkeloo, and Diller Scofidio + Renfro contributed designs for individual structures. Major office tenants include or will include fashion company Tapestry, gym chain Equinox Fitness, and financial company BlackRock.
The area includes other major development projects. One such project is Manhattan West, developed by Brookfield Property Partners over the rail yard west of Ninth Avenue between 31st and 33rd streets. Other structures being developed in the Hudson Yards Zoning District include 3 Hudson Boulevard and the Spiral. The special district also includes Pennsylvania Station, the subject of a major overhaul.
Hudson Yards is part of Manhattan Community District 4 and its primary ZIP Codes are 10001 and 10018.[1] It is patrolled by the 10th Precinct of the New York City Police Department.
Geography
"Hudson Yards" takes its name from the MTA rail yard along the Hudson River between 30th Street and 33rd Street, part of a Penn Central rail yard that once extended to 39th Street. The portion of the MTA yard between the river and Eleventh Avenue is called the Western Rail Yard, and the portion between Eleventh Avenue and Tenth Avenue is called the Eastern Rail Yard. The Hudson Yards area includes parts of the Garment Center, the Javits Convention Center, Madison Square Garden, the Port Authority Bus Terminal, the Farley Post Office, and the Lincoln Tunnel.[6] Most of the Hudson Yards redevelopment area is also known as Hell's Kitchen South.[7][8] The special purpose district covering the area, the Special Hudson Yards District, includes a "Hell's Kitchen subdistrict", encompassing the core residential area existing prior to redevelopment of the surrounding area. The subdistrict extends between 30th Street to the south and 41st Street to the north.[5]
Context
Early plans
There has been a long series of proposals to develop the rail yard air rights, including for a major expansion of Midtown Manhattan by William Zeckendorf in the 1950s[9] and for a housing development considered by U.S. Steel in the 1960s.[10] The idea of building housing on air rights over the rail yard, with commercial development between 34th Street and 42nd Street, was included in a plan announced by Mayor Robert F. Wagner Jr. in 1963 that would have included projects covering a swath of Manhattan from its southern tip up to 72nd Street.[11]
The administration of John Lindsay maintained the goal of the 1963 plan—a westward expansion of Midtown—but shifted their focus to the blocks north of 42nd Street, home to 35,000 residents of the Hell's Kitchen neighborhood.[12] As a first step, the City approved a convention center on 44th Street. But after the defeat of a bond issue that would have funded a 48th Street "people mover,"[13] the City abandoned it and the rest of the master plan.[14] At the same time the local Hell's Kitchen community proposed that midtown expansion take place south of 42nd Street instead.[15] A community-proposed convention center site—between Eleventh and Twelfth avenues from 34th to 39th streets—was later promoted by Donald Trump, who had obtained an option on the rail yard from the bankrupt Penn Central in 1975.[16] Facing political opposition and the severe fiscal crisis of the 1970s, the City and State eventually chose the rail yard site when the 44th Street site proved to be too expensive.[17] However Trump's offer to build the convention center was rejected.[18] In 1987 the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) converted the remainder of the rail yard into a storage facility for commuter trains; the new West Side Yard was designed with space left between the tracks for columns to support development in air rights above the tracks.[19]
Despite the completion of the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in 1986, no further development took place. One impediment to development was a lack of mass transit in the area, which is far from Penn Station, and none of the proposals for a link to Penn Station were pursued successfully (for example, the ill-fated West Side Transitway).[20] No changes to the zoning happened until 1990, when the city rezoned a small segment of 11th Avenue across the street from the Javits Center.[21][22] However, as most of the area was still zoned for manufacturing and low-rise apartment buildings, the rezoning did not spur development.[23]
Formal planning
The Hell's Kitchen community's 1973 proposal for major office and residential development south of 42nd Street was finally realized when all impediments to development were addressed. In 2003, the New York City Department of City Planning issued a master plan that envisioned the creation of 40,000,000 sq ft (3,700,000 m2) of commercial and residential development, two corridors of open space – one between Eleventh Avenue and Tenth Avenue, and another network of open space between Ninth Avenue and Tenth Avenue to create a park system from West 39th Street to West 34th Street, portions of which would be located along the Dyer Avenue/Lincoln Tunnel Expressway corridors.[24] Dubbed the Hudson Yards Master Plan, the area covered is bordered on the east by Seventh and Eighth Avenues, on the south by West 28th and 30th Streets, on the north by West 43rd Street, and on the west by Hudson River Park and the Hudson River. The city's plan was similar to a neighborhood plan produced by architect Meta Brunzema and environmental planner Daniel Gutman for the Hell's Kitchen Neighborhood Association (HKNA). The main concept of the HKNA plan was to allow major new development while protecting the existing residential core area between Ninth and Tenth avenues.[25][26]
To help facilitate development, the city's plan called for extending the IRT Flushing Line to a 34th Street subway station under Eleventh Avenue at the rail yard, and next to the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center, which would be expanded by the State. To fund the subway and a park and boulevard and other infrastructure, the City proposed a novel tax-increment financing scheme within a Hudson Yards financing district to collect both residential property taxes and commercial payments-in-lieu-of-taxes (PILOTS) and sell transferable development rights to prospective developers.[27] A Hudson Yards Infrastructure Corporation would issue bonds against expected revenues.
In January 2005, the New York City Council approved the 60-block rezoning, including the eastern portion of the West Side Yard.[28] The newly rezoned Hudson Yards area was to have 25,800,000 sq ft (2,400,000 m2) of Class A office space, 20,000 housing units, two million sq ft (190,000 m2) of hotel space, a 750-seat public school, one million sq ft (93,000 m2) of retail and more than 20 acres (8 ha) of public open space.[29][30][31]
The rezoning and financing district did not include the western portion of the rail yard; this was reserved for the proposed West Side Stadium, which would have been built as part of the New York City bid for the 2012 Summer Olympics. At the conclusion of the Olympics, the stadium would have been used by the New York Jets.[32] When not in use for football, the covered stadium would be a venue for conventions at the Javits Center, and so proposers dubbed the structure the "New York Sports and Convention Center." This effort, led by Deputy Mayor Daniel Doctoroff, was unpopular with both the public and politicians.[33] Consequently, the City Council insisted that financing for the city's broader rezoning plans not be used to subsidize the rail yard stadium.[34][35] In June 2005, the stadium proposal was defeated, and after the International Olympic Committee awarded the 2012 Olympics to London, the stadium proposal was permanently scrapped.[36] The city government subsequently rezoned the western rail yard for residential and commercial development and added it to the financing district. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) then sought to develop the 26-acre (11 ha) yard, and in conjunction with the city government, the MTA issued a Request for Proposal (RFP) for a 12,700,000 sq ft (1,180,000 m2) mixed-use development to be built on platforms over the rail yard, which would remain in use throughout.[36]
Rail yard development bids
Five developers responded to the RFP: Extell, Tishman Speyer,[37] Brookfield, Vornado, and the Related Companies.[38] Tishman Speyer won the bid in March 2008.[39] Tishman Speyer entered into a 99-year lease with the MTA, paying $1 billion for the air rights.[40] It would also spend another $2 billion for development over the rail yards, including for the two platforms over the yards to support 15 acres (6.1 ha) of public spaces, four office buildings, and ten high-rise residential towers.[39]
However, just two months later, the deal broke down due to the late-2000s financial crisis.[41] Subsequently, the MTA chose the Related Companies and Goldman Sachs to develop Hudson Yards under the same conditions.[42] In December 2009, the New York City Council approved Related Companies' revised plan for Hudson Yards, and the western portion of the West Side Yard was rezoned.[36] Following the rail yards' successful rezoning, the MTA signed another 99-year lease to the air rights over the rail yard in May 2010. The air rights were signed over to a joint venture of Related Companies and Oxford Properties Group, which invested $400 million to build a platform above both the eastern and western portions of the yard on which to construct the buildings.[36][43] Groundbreaking for 10 Hudson Yards, the first building, occurred on December 4, 2012.[44]
In April 2013, the Related/Oxford joint venture obtained a $475 million construction loan from parties including Barry Sternlicht's Starwood Capital Group and luxury retailer Coach. The financing deal was unique in several aspects, including the fact that it included a construction mezzanine loan, that Coach was a lender on both the debt and equity sides,[45] and that the MTA reused a "severable lease" structure (previously used by Battery Park City) that allowed for the loans. A portion of the project was also financed by the EB-5 investment program, which provides a path for immigrants to become green card holders after investing capital in project which employs American workers.[46]
Transportation
Bus
The M12 and M34 SBS serve 34th Street, and the M12, M42 and M50 serve 42nd Street. The M12 was introduced to improve transit on the far west side, including Hudson Yards, in 2014.
Subway extension
After the Hudson Yards project was approved in 2005, the MTA received proceeds from the initial 2006 bond offering to pay for the 7 Subway Extension to 34th Street–Hudson Yards station.[47] With funding assured, the MTA proceeded quickly to construct the extension.[48] The first construction contracts were awarded in October 2007.[49][50] After a series of delays related to the construction of the 34th Street station, the subway extension opened on September 13, 2015.[51][52] The station connects to nearby buildings and developments, including 30 Hudson Yards[53] and Hudson Park and Boulevard.[54] The 34th Street station's main entrance, escalators and an elevator on the west side of Hudson Park and Boulevard between 33rd and 34th Streets, is at the foot of 55 Hudson Yards and is just half a block away from the rail yard's northern edge.[55] Another station, planned for Tenth Avenue and 41st Street, was not built.[56]
Parks
The platform atop which the Related development was built includes a 6-acre (2 ha) public square.[57][58] In the middle of the square is Vessel, a 16-story structure of freestanding, connected staircases designed by Thomas Heatherwick.[59][60]
Hudson Park and Boulevard, a four-acre system of parks and roads,[61] is located north of the rail yard site, extending from 33rd Street to 39th Street, mid-block between Tenth Avenue and Eleventh Avenue. The boulevard is divided into a Hudson Boulevard East and a Hudson Boulevard West, with the park between the two.[62] The first phase, between 33rd and 36th Streets, was completed in August 2015.[63] Proposed parks between Ninth and Tenth avenues in the original plan were later dropped.
The High Line, an elevated park using the former right-of-way of the southern portion of the West Side railroad line, runs along Hudson Yards' southern and western edges before continuing south to Gansevoort Street in the Meatpacking District; its northern terminus is at 11th Avenue and 34th Street on the north side of Hudson Yards. In 2012, the city government acquired the northernmost section of the High Line from CSX Transportation.[64] In late 2014, the final phase of the High Line opened. It enters the Hudson Yards site and curves along 30th Street, Twelfth Avenue and 34th Street, with a spur along 30th Street to Tenth Avenue. The High Line is integrated with the Related Development's buildings; for example, 10 Hudson Yards cantilevers over the Spur.[65] Dubbed "High Line at the Rail Yards", the section was built in three phases. The right-of-way from 30th Street was extended into the Hudson Yards site, running parallel to 30th Street past Eleventh Avenue, and developed in a manner similar to the previous sections of the park. The Spur along 30th Street received an amphitheater, restrooms, trees and grasses above Tenth Avenue.[66] Finally, the curved section around the western part of Hudson Yards was originally developed as an "interim walkway", with further construction occurring in 2015.[67] There are entrances to the High Line from within the rail-yard development.[68]
Hudson Yards development
The Hudson Yards development is being built by Related Companies on top of a large platform bordered by 10th and 12th Avenues and by 30th and 33rd Streets.[69][70] Construction on the platform began in 2014.[71] The platform was to be constructed over the existing at-grade West Side Yard, allowing LIRR trains to continue to be stored during midday hours. The land parcel is bordered by 30th Street and Chelsea on the south, Twelfth Avenue on the west, 33rd Street and Hell's Kitchen on the north, and Tenth Avenue on the east. Eleventh Avenue runs through the site, and splits the redevelopment project into two phases.[72] Before Phase 2 was built, an underground concrete casing was built for Amtrak's future Gateway Project under the Hudson River.[73] Construction started in December 2014 and was nearing completion as of July 2017, though funding disputes stalled the tunnel box's completion.[74]
Phase 1, the eastern phase, contains two office towers on Tenth Avenue, plus a retail podium between them. The southern tower is the 52-story, 895 ft (273 m) 10 Hudson Yards, which opened in 2016.[75] The other tower on Tenth Avenue is the 80-story, 1,337 ft (408 m) 30 Hudson Yards, which is the city's third-tallest building;[76] it is expected to be completed in early 2019.[77] Bordering Eleventh Avenue are two mixed-use buildings, 15 Hudson Yards and 35 Hudson Yards. 15 Hudson Yards, the more southerly of the two towers, is connected to a semi-permanent structure, a performance and arts space known as The Shed.[78] The mixed-use 15 Hudson Yards was topped out in February 2018.[79] 35 Hudson Yards, a mixed-use skyscraper located to the north of 15 Hudson Yards, was topped out in June 2018.[80] Phase 1 also includes a 7-story mall called Shops & Restaurants of Hudson Yards.[58] Phase 1 opened on March 15, 2019.[81][82]
The western portion of the yard is bordered by 30th Street and 33rd Street in the north and south, and Eleventh and Twelfth avenues in the east and west. Plans for the western phase of the project originally called for up to seven residential towers, an office building at 33rd Street and Eleventh Avenue tentatively known as "West Tower", and a school serving Pre-K to eighth grade students.[83] Reporting in September 2022 by The New York Times and Bloomberg indicate that Related may build a casino and resort in partnership with Wynn Resorts instead of the originally proposed mixed-use complex.[84] The third phase of the High Line will traverse Phase 2 of the project.[78] Work on the platform to cover the second half of the tracks was originally scheduled to begin in 2018,[85] and reporting in 2014 indicated the entire project, including Phase 2, could be completed by 2024,[86] though work has not begun on the western yard as of late 2022.[84]
The development received mostly negative press when it opened to the public for its failure to integrate into the broader city and its architecture.[87][88] The complex also suffered due to decreased traffic from commuters and visitors during the COVID-19 pandemic. In May 2020, the Financial Times noted the development had become a "ghost town".[89]
Other development projects
50 and 55 Hudson Yards
50 and 55 Hudson Yards are located just north of the West Side Yard on the block bounded by 33rd Street to the south, 10th Avenue to the east, 34th Street to the north, and 11th Avenue to the west. 50 Hudson Yards and 55 Hudson Yards are respectively located on the east and west side of the block.[90] Work on the foundation of the 985 ft-tall (300 m) 50 Hudson Yards began in May 2018.[91] The 780 ft-tall (240 m) 55 Hudson Yards started construction on January 22, 2015,[92] and topped out in August 2017.[93]
Manhattan West
Brookfield, a Canadian asset manager, developed the second-largest project in Hudson Yards. Dubbed "Manhattan West" the complex includes six buildings, two of which are pre-existing structures undergoing substantial renovations.[94] These buildings include three office buildings, two residential buildings, and one hotel.[95] The two principal office buildings and a public green space, open year-round, were built on a platform over covered tracks that lead from the West Side Yard to Penn Station. To facilitate construction Brookfield announced in 2014 that it would use prefabricated parts to build the platform.[96] Despite its considerable scale, Manhattan West has been referred to as "somewhat eclipsed"[97] and "overshadowed"[98] by the larger Hudson Yards.[97][98]
The project was mostly completed by 2021, and Brookfield held its grand opening on September 28, 2021.[99] The second of the two office buildings, Two Manhattan West, topped out in 2022.[100] Two Manhattan West is scheduled for completion in 2023.[101]
The Spiral
In early 2014, real estate firm Massey Knakal announced a conceptual supertall with a 1,220,000 sq ft (113,000 m2) capacity and 108 stories that would soar over 1,800 feet on the north side of 34th Street between Hudson Boulevard and Tenth Avenue in order to show the potential of a site that it intended to sell.[102] Dubbed Hudson Spire and designed by MJM+A architects, it would be the tallest tower in the Western Hemisphere if completed. The site was later purchased by Tishman Speyer on April 30, 2014, along with two adjacent properties for a total space of 2,850,000 sq ft (265,000 m2).[103]
The plans for The Spire were later replaced with plans designed by Bjarke Ingels Group, dubbed The Spiral. The building started construction in June 2018, and topped-out in January 2021.[104][105] As of June 2022, work on the façade was nearing completion.[106] Tishman has secured pharmaceutical company Pfizer as an anchor tenant.[107]
3 Hudson Boulevard
Among the neighboring projects are 3 Hudson Boulevard (formerly the GiraSole), located on 34th Street and Eleventh Avenue.[108] 3 Hudson Boulevard is under construction, although it lacks an anchor tenant.[109]
Construction was supposed to begin in mid-2014[110] or 2015,[111] with the building's completion planned for 2017.[110][111][112][113] Completion was rescheduled for 2022.[114] The building, directly across Eleventh Avenue from the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center, would abut the secondary entrance to the new 34th Street – Hudson Yards subway station, built as part of the New York City Subway's 7 Subway Extension project.[110][115][116] Consequently, the foundation is being built by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, because the subway station is directly underneath; the rest of the building is being built by Moinian Group.[117] The foundation works started May 2016.[118] A groundbreaking ceremony was held November 3, 2017.[119]
On June 26, 2014, Joseph Moinian secured a loan for the construction of the building.[115] The firm began "speculative" construction of the project in 2022.[120]
Associated developments
Even before the opening of any of the rail yard buildings, many businesses in the area have seen increased profits due to the project's construction. The Hudson Yards redevelopment program catalyzed plans to build new buildings along the future Hudson Boulevard. There has also been a development boom in the vicinity of the rail yard development.[121]
In February 2015, the Chetrit Group, headed by Meyer and Joseph Chetrit, announced that it wanted to spend US$29 million to expand one Hudson Yards development site to 373,068 sq ft (34,659.2 m2). It would add about 200,000 sq ft (19,000 m2) of space to a site between 11th Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets, and Hudson Boulevard that previously allowed 173,000 sq ft (16,100 m2) of retail space. A buyer would be able to split the space between two buildings.[122]
In June 2015, Tishman Speyer bought another lot between West 36th and 37th Streets on 11th Avenue; the lot was zoned for a 735,000 sq ft (68,300 m2) residential and hotel property.[123] It is next to a lot—zoned for a planned residential tower—that was bought in 2012 by Lalezarian Properties for $46.5 million,[124] Tishman Speyer's land is also close to a lot owned by former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer, who bought the lot in 2013 and plans at least 414,000 sq ft (38,500 m2) of new development space.[125]
Two other new Related buildings, One Hudson Yards and Abington House, are adjacent the Phase 1 buildings, but are unrelated to the Hudson Yards project.[126] Another Related development also on the West Side, originally dubbed "Hudson Residences" is under construction at the same time as Hudson Yards.[127] The project ultimately took the shape of two unrelated buildings: Lantern House, designed by Thomas Heatherwick, and The Cortland, designed by RAMSA.[128] Related is also developing several buildings with Spitzer Enterprises at sites including 451 10th Avenue, 511 West 35th Street, 506 West 36th Street, and 512 West 36th Street.[129][130]
New York state issued a request for proposals for a site across the streets from the Javits Center[131] at 418 11th Avenue in 2021.[132] The New York Convention Center Development Corporation, a subsidiary of the Empire State Development Corporation, owns the lot, known as "Site K".[133] A proposal for the site by developer Don Peebles, designed by David Adjaye, received attention in 2021 for its design and scope.[132] The request for proposals was withdrawn in late 2021.[131]
Interpretations and reception
Urban planning and architecture
The Related development Hudson Yards, within the broader Hudson Yards area, has received negative attention for its inability to blend into the city and its architectural character.[134][135][136] The Related development has been cited in opposition to other, similar projects.[137]
Justin Davidson, in an article about the Manhattan West's opening for New York, compared the Brookfield development favorably to Related's Hudson Yards, writing that Manhattan West "[...] feels like a corner of New York conceived with actual human beings in mind" while Hudson Yards has "[...] has aged from a shiny new space station to a disconsolate one".[138]
Restaurants and amenities
In a review of the restaurant offerings at Related's Hudson Yards development written in anticipation of the complex opening to the public, Ryan Sutton criticized Related and Oxford for including only two establishments run by women.[139] Further, Sutton criticized Related and Oxford for failing to provide opportunities for small, local operators to open in Hudson Yards, instead leasing to established restaurateurs and organizations which had already experienced "great success".[139] Sutton also criticized the lack of "vibrancy" at the Hudson Yards development, caused by a lack of street-level restaurants.[139] Sutton noted the presence of several chain establishments, such as Sweetgreen and Think Coffee, at street-level in and near the complex, but wrote that "Fast casual isn't known for fostering communal dinnertime bonhomie".[139] In his review, Sutton did express positive anticipation of Mercado Little Spain, a restaurant and food court which had not yet opened in 10 Hudson Yards at the time the piece was published by Eater.[139]
When Mercado Little Spain ultimately opened in 2019, Eater published a mixed review of its offerings written by Robert Sietsema.[140] In a separate review by Sutton of the opened complex, published in 2019, the critic referred to Hudson Yards as "the worst place to eat fancy food in New York".[141] In the 2019 review, which served as an introduction to Eater's individual reviews of restaurants in Hudson Yards, Sutton panned TAK Room, a restaurant by Thomas Keller, but offered praise for Korean restaurant Kawi and Milos Wine Bar.[141] In his full review of TAK Room, Sutton criticized its prices and the discrepancy between the cost of eating at the restaurant and his perception of the quality of the food and service.[142] Pete Wells, in his review of the restaurant, echoed Sutton's criticisms.[143] TAK Room closed in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[144]
The Equinox Hotel in Related's development received a positive review from Vanity Fair.[145] Samantha Lewis praised the hotel for its emphasis on providing guests with "blissful slumber".[145] The hotel's restaurant, Electric Lemon, has received an "underwhelming" review from Pete Wells.[146]
In Manhattan West, restaurants including Ci Siamo and Zou Zou's, were given positive reviews by Adam Platt and Ryan Sutton, respectively.[147][148] Italian Restaurant Legacy Records, located in a new apartment building on West 38th Street, was reviewed favorably by Pete Wells.[149]
Demographics
For census purposes, the New York City government classifies Hudson Yards as part of a larger neighborhood tabulation area called Hudson Yards-Chelsea-Flat Iron-Union Square.[150] Based on data from the 2010 United States Census, the population of Hudson Yards-Chelsea-Flat Iron-Union Square was 70,150, a change of 14,311 (20.4%) from the 55,839 counted in 2000. Covering an area of 851.67 acres (344.66 ha), the neighborhood had a population density of 82.4/acre (52,700/sq mi; 20,400/km2).[2] The racial makeup of the neighborhood was 65.1% (45,661) White, 5.7% (4,017) African American, 0.1% (93) Native American, 11.8% (8,267) Asian, 0% (21) Pacific Islander, 0.4% (261) from other races, and 2.3% (1,587) from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 14.6% (10,243) of the population.[3]
Police and crime
Hudson Yards is patrolled by the 10th Precinct of the NYPD, located at 230 West 20th Street.[151] The 10th Precinct ranked 61st safest out of 69 patrol areas for per-capita crime in 2010.[152]
The 10th Precinct has a lower crime rate than in the 1990s, with crimes across all categories having decreased by 74.8% between 1990 and 2018. The precinct reported 1 murder, 19 rapes, 81 robberies, 103 felony assaults, 78 burglaries, 744 grand larcenies, and 26 grand larcenies auto in 2018.[153]
Fire safety
The Hudson Yards neighborhood is served by the New York City Fire Department (FDNY)'s Engine Co. 34/Ladder Co. 21 at 440 West 38th Street.[154][155] However, there are no firehouses in or near the Hudson Yards real-estate development.[156][157]
Post offices and ZIP Codes
Hudson Yards is located within two primary ZIP Codes. The area south of 34th Street is in 10001 and the area north of 34th Street is in 10018.[158] The United States Postal Service operates the RCU Annex Station post office at 340 West 42nd Street.[159] In addition, the James A. Farley Station, the main post office for New York City, is located at 421 8th Avenue.[160]
List of buildings
Below is a list of buildings constructed, planned, or proposed for the broader Hudson Yards neighborhood (from Northwest to Southeast) from 2000 to present:
Street Address | Building Name | Building Use | Construction Started | Completed Date | architectural Height | Height (Stories) | Status | Developer / Architect |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
650 West 42nd Street | River Place | Residential | 1999 | 40 | Completed | Silverstein Properties | ||
635 West 42nd Street | Atelier | Residential | 2007 | 46 | Completed | Moinian Group | ||
620 West 42nd Street | Silver Towers | Residential | 2009, June | 653 ft. (199 m) | 60 | Completed | Silverstein Properties | |
605 West 42nd Street | Sky | Residential | 2008/2013 | 2016 | 656 ft. (200 m) | 61 | Completed | Moinian Group |
520 West 41st Street | Residential | 2015 | 2020 | 1,100 ft. (335 m) | 106 | Postponed | Silverstein Properties | |
350 West 42nd Street | The Orion (skyscraper) | Residential | 2004 | 2006 | 604 ft (184 m) | 58 | Completed | CetraRuddy / Extell Development Company |
450 West 42nd Street | MiMA (including Yotel) | Residential including Hotel |
2007 | 2011 | 669 ft. (204 m) | 63 | Completed | Related / Arquitectonica |
555 Tenth Avenue | 555Ten | Residential | 2016 | 610 ft. | 53 | Completed | Extell Development Company / SLCE Architects | |
550 Tenth Avenue | Residential | 520 feet (160 m) | 47 | In Development | Gotham Organization | |||
528 West 39th St / 476 Eleventh Avenue |
Mixed-Use | In Development | Rockrose | |||||
515 West 38th Street | Henry Hall | Residential | 2014 | 2017 | 361 ft. (110 m) | 30 | Completed | Imperial Companies / BKSK Architects |
470 Eleventh Avenue | Hudson Rise Hotel | Hotel | 47 | In Development/ Litigation[161] |
Kuafu Properties and Siras Development | |||
550 West 37th Street | Offices | In Development | Tishman Speyer | |||||
541 West 37th Street | In Development | Chetrit Group | ||||||
505 West 37th Street | Residential | 2009 | 44 | Completed | TF Cornerstone | |||
455 West 37th Street | Residential | 2008 | 32 | Completed | TF Cornerstone | |||
400 West 37th Street | Hudson Crossing Apartments | Residential | 2002 | 13 | Completed | Equity Residential | ||
515 West 36th Street | Hudson 36 | Residential | 2019 | 45 | Completed | Lalezarian Properties / Ismael Levya Architects | ||
460 Tenth Avenue | Residential | 40 | In Development | Sherwood Equities | ||||
451 Tenth Avenue | 70 Hudson Yards / The Set | Mixed-Use | 2017 | Exp 2022 [162] | 587 feet (179 m) | 45 | Topped Out | Related / Handel Architects |
444 Tenth Avenue | Four Points by Sheraton | Hotel | 2017 | 17 | Completed | Maddd Equities / Aufgang Architects | ||
445 West 35th Street | Residential | 2013 | 2018 | 12 | Completed | Maddd Equities / Aufgang Architects | ||
411 West 35th Street | The Lewis | Residential | 2013 | 2018 | 12 | Completed | Maddd Equities / Aufgang Architects | |
555 West 34th Street | 3 Hudson Boulevard | Offices | 2016 | Exp. 2023 [163] | 1,034 ft. (315 m) | 66 | Under Construction | Moinian Group / FXFOWLE Architects |
550 West 34th Street | 55 Hudson Yards | Offices | 2015, January | 2019, April | 780 ft. (240 m) | 51 | Completed | Related / Kohn Pedersen Fox and Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates |
435 Tenth Avenue | The Spiral | Offices | Exp 2023 [164] | 1,005 ft. | 65 | Under Construction | Tishman Speyer / Bjarke Ingels Group | |
461 West 34th Street | Hudson Yards' Marriott Courtyard Hotel | Hotel | 2019, December | 312 ft. (95 m) | 29 | Completed | David Marx | |
424 Tenth Avenue | 50 Hudson Yards | Offices | 2017 | Exp 2022 [165] | 985 ft. (300 m) | 58 | Under Construction | Related / Foster + Partners |
35 Hudson Yards Equinox Tower |
Mixed-Use | 2019, March | 1,000 ft. (300 m) | 72 | Completed | Related / Kohn Pedersen Fox and David Childs | ||
30 Hudson Yards | Offices | 2014, October | 2019, March | 1,296 ft. (395 m) | 92 | Completed | Related / Kohn Pedersen Fox | |
The Shops at Hudson Yards | Retail | 2019, March | 7 | Completed | Related / Kohn Pedersen Fox / Elkus Manfredi Architects | |||
10 Hudson Yards | Offices | 2012, December | 2016, May | 878 ft. (268 m) | 52 | Completed | Related / Kohn Pedersen Fox | |
15 Hudson Yards | Residential | 2014, December | 2019, March | 917 ft. (280 m) | 88 | Completed | Related / Diller Scofidio + Renfro, David Rockwell, and mael Levya Architects | |
The Shed | Arts Center | 2015 | 2019, April | 16 | Completed | The Shed / Diller Scofidio + Renfro and David Rockwell | ||
Western Rail Yards | Hudson Yards Phase 2 | Residential Towers, Office Building, School, & Retail | In Development | Related | ||||
410 Tenth Ave | Offices | 1927 | 2021 (Renovation) | 20 | Completed | SL Green sold to 601W | ||
NE Manhattan West Complex | 1 Manhattan West | Offices | 2019, October | 995 feet (303 m) | 67 | Completed | Brookfield / Skidmore, Owings and Merrill | |
SE Manhattan West Complex | Two Manhattan West | Offices | Exp 2022 [166] | 994 ft. (303 m) | 60 | Under Construction | Brookfield / Skidmore, Owings and Merrill | |
435 West 31st Street | The Eugene | Residential | 2014, December | 2017, July | 730 feet (220 m) | 64 | Completed | Brookfield / Skidmore, Owings and Merrill |
Four Manhattan West | The Pendry | Hotel | 2021, September | 281 feet (86 m). | 21 | Completed | Brookfield | |
450 West 33rd Street | Five Manhattan West | Offices | 2014 (renovation) | 1969, renovated 2016 |
262 ft. (79.9 m) | 16 | Completed | Brookfield / Davis Brody Associates Renovation: REX |
360 Tenth Avenue | Offices | In Development | Frank McCourt / SHoP Architects | |||||
312 Eleventh Avenue | Ohm | Residential | 2010 | 34 | Completed | Douglaston Development / Stephen B. Jacobs Group | ||
530 West 30th Street | One Hudson Yards | Residential | 2015 | 2017 | 367 ft. | 33 | Completed | Related / Davis Brody Bond |
500 West 30th Street | Abington House | Residential | 2012 | 2014, April | 325 ft. (99 m) | 33 | Completed | Related / Robert A.M. Stern |
529 West 29th Street | Residential (Affordable Artist Housing) | 2013 | 15 | Completed | Related / Ismael Leyva Architects |
See also
- Javits Center
- Pacific Park, formerly "Atlantic Yards", a similar redevelopment project in Downtown Brooklyn
- List of tallest buildings in New York City
References
Notes
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- "FDNY Firehouse Listing – Location of Firehouses and companies". NYC Open Data; Socrata. New York City Fire Department. September 10, 2018. Retrieved March 14, 2019.
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- "Clinton, New York City-Manhattan, New York Zip Code Boundary Map (NY)". United States Zip Code Boundary Map (USA). Archived from the original on April 11, 2021. Retrieved March 23, 2019.
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- "Location Details: James A Farley". USPS.com. Archived from the original on March 7, 2022. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
- Warerkar, Tanay (March 23, 2016). "Legal Battles Surrounding the Hudson Yard's Chinese Lantern Tower Drag On - Curbed NY". Ny.curbed.com. Archived from the original on August 24, 2017. Retrieved August 23, 2017.
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Further reading
- Arak, Joey. "Brookfield Properties Goes Splittsville" on Curbed.com (November 19, 2007)
- Chaban, Matt. "Scaling the Towers of Hudson Yards" in New York Observer (July 12, 2011)
- Davidson, Justin. "From 0 to 12 Million Square Feet" New York (October 7, 2012).
- Dobkin, Jake. "Checking In At Hudson Yards, Manhattan's Enormous New Luxury Neighborhood" in Gothamist (July 16, 2015
- Samtani, Hiten. "Anatomy of a deal: Inside Related/Oxford's unusual financing of Hudson Yards" in The Real Deal (August 16, 2013))
- "An Investment That's Paying Off: The Economic and Fiscal Impact of the Development of Hudson Yards" (PDF). hudsonyardsnewyork.com. Hudson Yards. May 2016.
External links
Project websites:
- Hudson Yards Development Corp. website
- Real Estate development website
- Related Companies project website
Descriptions:
- Description of Hudson Yards on development company's website
- Animation: building the platform while trains run through Brookfield properties.
- Hudson Yards news and developments on The Real Deal's website
Maps: