Midtown East Is Hot.............

Started by RealEstateNY
almost 11 years ago
Posts: 772
Member since: Aug 2009
Discussion about
And I don't mean the temperature. "Midtown East does not usually make an apartment hunter’s shortlist. But with prices there lower than in many other Manhattan neighborhoods, buyers and developers are taking a fresh look at the area, roughly defined as from Fifth Avenue to the East River between 40th and 59th Streets, particularly its eastern swath. Until recently, the neighborhood’s biggest draw... [more]
And I don't mean the temperature. "Midtown East does not usually make an apartment hunter’s shortlist. But with prices there lower than in many other Manhattan neighborhoods, buyers and developers are taking a fresh look at the area, roughly defined as from Fifth Avenue to the East River between 40th and 59th Streets, particularly its eastern swath. Until recently, the neighborhood’s biggest draw was its enviable commute to the office. Now, that perception is changing. In recent months, developers have broken ground on several luxury projects, including 50 United Nations Plaza, a 43-story luxury tower rising across from the United Nations Secretariat Building where condominium prices will begin just north of $2 million. As high-rises reshape the skyline, new upscale restaurants are adding a sophisticated flavor to the Second Avenue corridor, which has long been dismissed as a forgettable happy-hour magnet for young office workers. “People associate Midtown East with work, they don’t think of it as residential,” said Victoria Vinokur, a broker with Halstead Property. “We don’t have the boutiques, we don’t have the SoHo atmosphere. But I think this is such a terrific, true Old World neighborhood. It’s very discreet. It’s very charming.” Celebrities are taking notice. Last year, the actress Uma Thurman bought an apartment in the exclusive River House on East 52nd Street. And this spring Mary-Kate Olsen and her fiancé, Olivier Sarkozy, bought a townhouse in Turtle Bay Gardens, an enclave of rowhouses between 48th and 49th Streets where the actress Katharine Hepburn lived for decades. Residential construction has been frenzied recently. A 61-story tower designed by Foster and Partners, the firm headed by the Pritzker Prize-winning architect Norman Foster, is rising at 610 Lexington Avenue next to the Seagram Building. Construction is underway at the Sutton, a 30-story tower at 959 First Avenue. And last month, sales began at the CookFox-designed 301 East 50th Street, a 29-story building with a limestone facade. Added to that, the commercial area around Grand Central Terminal also might change dramatically in coming years once Mayor Bill de Blasio revives a proposal to rezone about 70 blocks of Midtown East. The original plan, which fizzled in the waning days of the Bloomberg administration, would have paved the way for a new generation of taller, state-of-the-art office buildings. As a first step in a long-term rezoning effort, the de Blasio administration plans to rezone Vanderbilt Avenue to allow for a 1,200-foot-tall skyscraper and a pedestrian plaza, along with infrastructure improvements." Read on: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/08/realestate/condos-and-restaurants-make-midtown-east-more-desirable.html?_r=0 [less]
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