- I got a sneak peek of 35 Hudson Yards, the tallest residential building in NYC's new $25 billion neighborhood.
- In addition to its luxury residences that start at $5 million, 35 Hudson Yards will include a 60,000-square-foot Equinox Fitness Club and Spa and SoulCycle, an Equinox hotel, retail spaces, and restaurants.
- Designed by the same architect who designed One World Trade Center, it's marketed as the "more upscale" version of 15 Hudson Yards, the neighborhood's first residential tower to open.
- With its ultra-luxe design and wild amenities, 35 Hudson Yards seems to be setting a new standard for luxury city living.
Hudson Yards, New York City's new $25 billion neighborhood that's the most expensive real-estate development in US history, officially opens to the public on March 15.
Two days ahead of the grand opening, I got a sneak peek of 35 Hudson Yards, the 92-story luxury tower that's the tallest residential building at Hudson Yards. The mixed-use tower will include luxurious two- to six-bedroom condos starting on the 53rd floor, as well as a restaurant, retail space, a 60,000-square-foot Equinox Fitness Club and Spa and SoulCycle, and a branded Equinox hotel — the first of its kind.
"Our tower, 35 Hudson Yards, with its combination of retail, office, hotel and residential uses, is a city within Hudson Yards, exactly in the way Hudson Yards itself is a full mixed-use city within Manhattan," architect David Childs said in a press release.
35 Hudson Yards is touted as the more upscale neighbor of nearby residential tower 15 Hudson Yards, which I toured back in January. In that building, condos were priced between $4.3 million and $32 million.
At 35 Hudson Yards, residences start at $5 million. The high end of the currently priced units is $28.5 million, but the penthouses haven't yet been priced.
Related Sales and Corcoran Sunshine Marketing Group are handling sales and marketing for 35 Hudson Yards. Sales launch on March 15, the same day Hudson Yards officially opens.
Here's what it's like inside 35 Hudson Yards.
I took a tour of 35 Hudson Yards, the tallest residential building in New York City's brand-new $25 billion neighborhood.
Hudson Yards is the city's massive development project on Manhattan's West Side that will ultimately include hotels, luxury residents towers, office spaces, a massive art installation and performance space, shops, restaurants, and more. After years of construction, it's set to open to the public on March 15.
Source: Business Insider
35 Hudson Yards, which will be finished in the fall of 2019, will be a mixed-use building with luxury residences starting at $5 million, a 60,000-square-foot Equinox Fitness Club and Spa and SoulCycle, the very first Equinox hotel, retail spaces, and restaurants.
Source: Related
The amenities for residents include a lounge, a screening room, a kids' playroom, and an office and board room.
Source: Related
Residents of 35 Hudson Yards will also get memberships to the tower's 60,000-square-foot Equinox Fitness Club and have access to the hotel's indoor and outdoor pools.
The 222-room Equinox hotel, which will be located in the middle of the tower, is set to open in June 2019.
Source: Equinox Hotels
35 Hudson Yards is touted as "more upscale" than nearby 15 Hudson Yards, which I toured in January and found to be incredibly luxurious.
Source: The New York Times
Before the tour, the marketing team had the reporters and photographers gather at 10 Hudson Yards, an office building completed in 2016.
Source: Skyscraper Center
There, 35 Hudson Yards architect David Childs, who also designed the new One World Trade Center, described the building's materials: a base made of Bavarian limestone that gives way to the graceful twists and turns of the glassy tower.
Then, we were ready to check out the tower itself. We were given hard hats personalized with our names, which was a first for me.
To get to 35 Hudson Yards, we passed through Hudson Yards' lavish mall, which will open to the public on March 15.
It's full of luxury boutiques, including Fendi, Neiman Marcus, and Louis Vuitton, as well as restaurants and coffee shops.
Source: Hudson Yards New York
Just outside the main entrance of the shops and restaurants is Vessel, Hudson Yards' massive, climbable public sculpture.
Source: Hudson Yards New York
Vessel comprises 154 interconnecting flights of stairs, nearly 2,500 steps, and 80 landings.
Source: Hudson Yards New York