$3 Subway Fare By 2017

Start saving your quarters; the MTA all but definitively announced at its board meeting yesterday that it will raise subway and bus fares by 2017 in an effort to raise more than $300 million annually. This is part of their four-year financial plan that includes fare and toll hikes every two years to

Jamison Dague of the nonprofit Citizens Budget Commission told the Daily News that if past increases are any indication, the MTA will likely raise fares from $2.75 to $3, a four percent increase that would bring in roughly $308 million through 2020. And if another increase was implemented in 2019, the cash-strapped agency would pull in an additional $594 million over two years.

This is the agency’s fifth fare hike since 2009. The last increase came just this past March, when rides went up from $2.50 to $2.75. And a month later, in April, top transit officials warned that if the MTA wasn’t able to bridge its $15 billion budget gap, fares could’ve been raised to $3.15. But this was before the state and city finally reached an agreement to keep the MTA’s $26.1 billion, five-year capital plan on track, which will partly fund Governor Cuomo’s recently unveiled high-tech subway cars and stations.

According to the Daily News, “In 2015, the MTA pulled in $7.7 billion in fare and toll revenue, which covers half of what it costs the MTA to run its system.” And this past year saw a record-breaking annual ridership of 1.7 billion, the highest since 1948.

The MTA noted that the hikes are part of a budget projection and could change when the numbers are reevaluated in November. A final vote is planned for December.

Restaurants In China Are Replacing Waiters With Robots

Chinese restaurants started to replace their workers with robots as early as 2006. Though some have proven pretty incompetent, they're still cheaper than human wait staff — the approximate $1,200 up-front cost per robot is just a couple months' salary for an average server in China (though robot prices vary).

Robot waiters seem to have taken off in China because they're novel and fun, rather than for their efficiency. Many robots in Chinese restaurants appear anthropomorphic and toy-like — The Wall Street Journal writes that the Chinese even refer to their robots as jiqiren (机器人), literally meaning "machine people."

Here's a look at seven Chinese restaurants that have replaced some of their staff with robo-waiters.

These ten robot waiters serve customers in Chengdu, China, carrying dishes around and giving simple greetings to customers.

They cost around $11,310 each when they were bought in 2014.

Rupert Murdoch Sells West Village Townhouse For $27.5M

Last August 6sqft reported that News Corp. head and Fox News founder Rupert Murdoch had put his West Village townhouse–the one he’d boughtjust five months prior for $25 million–on the market. Now, just five months after listing the 25-foot-wide, four-story brick home for $28.9M, the house has found a buyer, the New York Observer reports. Whomever is behind the entity known as West 11th Street, LLC has purchased the 6,500-square-foot Greek Revival manse for $27.5 million. The deal represents a $2.5M profit for Murdoch (and we all know how much he needs a few more million).

The grand historic townhouse at 278 West 11th Street has definitely been an easier sell, even for eight figures, than a $72 million triplex trophy pad at Flatiron skyscraper One Madison; the media mogul’s 6,850-square-foot penthouse in that high-profile building has remained unsold since Murdoch listed it in April of 2015 (even with Tom Brady and Gisele Bundchen as neighbors). What–besides the ridiculous price difference and 350 square feet–makes a West Village townhouse so much easier to sell? In addition to location, the house–thoroughly renovated when Murdoch bought it–is gorgeous inside and out, starting with the three-level landscaped patio.

The home’s previous owner, who bought the property for $8.2 million in 2011, restored the former purple bed-and-breakfast to its original single-family mansion glory, restored the home’s façade, and modernized it by replacing south-facing walls with glass to let in more light and adding a roof deck, elevator, 1,200-bottle wine cellar, smart home technology and a gym.

In addition to the elevator, there’s a grand elliptical staircase for making the kind of entrances you can’t make in a lift.

 

The roof deck has Empire State Building and One World Trade Center views, limestone pavers and a Spanish cedar pergola.

The billionaire octogenarian recently wed former model (and Mick Jagger’s ex) Jerry Hall (his fourth wife), and even more recently saw Fox News embroiled in a sexual harassment scandal involving co-founder Roger Ailes, so having one less property to worry about might be a good thing.

Kelsey Grammer Lists His Riverfront Chelsea Apartment for $10M

Actor Kelsey Grammer will list his 3,076-square-foot condo in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood for $9.75 million.

Mr. Grammer purchased the property for $6.4 million in 2010 through a limited-liability company, according to public records. A representative for Mr. Grammer confirmed that the actor owns the apartment. 

The three-bedroom, 3½-bath apartment is located on an upper floor of a glassy 23-story tower designed by Pritzker Prize-winning French architect Jean Nouvel. The unit has 11-foot ceilings and roughly 100 linear feet of glass walls overlooking the Hudson River and Manhattan landmarks such as the Empire State Building.

Mr. Grammer’s publicist, Stan Rosenfield, said his client is selling the apartment because he feels that he and his family “have outgrown it.” Mr. Grammer has six children and is married to Kayte Grammer, a former flight attendant.The apartment has an open layout with a combined living, dining and kitchen area, with terrazzo flooring throughout. Completed in 2010, the building is known for its unusual glass facade with morethan 1,600 differently shaped window panes.

Mr. Grammer, 61, is best known for his roles on the sitcoms “Cheers” and “Frasier.” He now stars in the Amazon drama “The Last Tycoon,” based on the unfinished novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Rent vs. Buy

Rent vs. Buy

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The choice between buying a home and renting one is among the biggest financial decisions that many adults make. But the costs of buying are more varied and complicated than for renting, making it hard to tell which is a better deal. 

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Under Armour Is Taking Over Old FAO Schwarz Space

Under Armour is opening a new store in Manhattan, in the building FAO Schwarz used to call home, the company announced on Tuesday morning.

According to CNBC, the company will take hold of the 53,000 square-foot space in 2018.  

While the opening of one store doesn't always make headlines, CNBC notes that this new store will fuse experiences, such as work-out classes, with traditional shopping.

CEO Kevin Plank said on a recent earnings call that the new space will be "t he single greatest retail store in the world."

Under Armour already has a boost in that it sells activewear, one of the few categories for which consumers will pay a premium.

Under Armour posted another quarter of sales growth, making it the 25th consecutive quarter with over 20% revenue growth, the company noted.

734 East 5th Street, Unit 3R


734 East 5th Street, Unit 3R

Kensington, Brooklyn

2 Bed  |  2 Bath  |  Parking  |  Private Storage

Offered At $795,000


 

Full Listing HERE

DEEDED PARKING and STORAGE!!

This 2 BD, 2 BA, convertible 3, Condo is priced to sell QUICKLY!! Apt features 2 Private Balconies, a deeded parking spot and large private storage room room. Spacious 3rd Floor apartment is easily convertible to a 3 bedroom or home office. The East facing balcony floods apartment with morning sun and west facing balcony off the 2nd bedroom in the back is perfect for afternoon light. Also enjoy beautiful bay windows in master bedroom. The open living and dining area is perfect for lounging or entertaining. Hard-wood flooring through-out every room. Open kitchen is custom made with walnut stained cabinets, white marble counter tops, stainless steel appliances, gas stove, Sub-Zero refrigerator and double sinks. Bathrooms features deep soaking tubs and Toto toilets. Master bath equipped with jetted tub. Also includes Bosch Stackable Washer/Dryer, Central air and video intercom security.
Additionally, building is wheelchair accessible with indoor/outdoor elevators. With super LOW taxes and Common Charges, this apartment is a STEAL. Tax abatement until 2026. F train close by at Ditmas Ave. Plenty of shops at 18th Ave to choose from or take a short walk to trendy Cortelyou Road. Sorry, No Pets Allowed

Public Plaza & Pedestrian Bridge Outside 50 West Street Revealed,

Now that exterior work has completed on 50 West Street – the 64-story, 191-unit mixed-use tower dubbed simply “50 West” under development in the Financial District – crews are now focused on building a 6,800-square-foot public plaza around the base of the building and a pedestrian bridge over West Street (a.k.a. the West Side Highway). Renderings of the spaces have been revealed by the Wall Street Journal. The 24-hour plaza will feature an art gallery, a café, vegetation, and seating. The pedestrian bridge, dubbed the West Thames Street Bridge, will feed directly into the plaza. It will boast steel structural supports and a glass roof and walls. The New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC) is building the new pedestrian bridge, which will replace the Rector Street bridge located a block northward. Demolition of the Rector Street bridge and construction of the new one is expected to last two years.

Rendering of public plaza at 50 West Street. Rendering by DBOX.

The 782-foot-tall, 584,277-square-foot 50 West Street hosts condominiums averaging 2,126 square feet apiece. Roughly 60 percent of the apartments, ranging from one-bedrooms to a five-bedroom penthouse, are in contract. The building also features 15 office condominium suites. Time Equities is the developer and Helmut Jahn is the design architect. SLCE Architects is serving as the architect of record and WXY Studio is behind the design of the new pedestrian bridge. Completion is expected later this year.

This Week’s 5 Most Expensive Listings

In the past seven days, eight new listings priced at $10 million and above hit the market, according to StreetEasy. From that list, these are the crème de la crème, otherwise known as the five most expensive residential listings to hit the Manhattan market.


21 East 61st Street #16A

Address 21 East 61st Street #16A
Price $19,900,000
Type/Size Condop: three bedrooms and four-and-a-half bathrooms
At the very top of the Upper East Side’s Carlton House, is this 3,500-square-foot penthouse. It comes with 1,120 feet of wrap-around terraces, and although the listing points out that the interiors are finished in “a soft, calming palette,” all we see is shades of white.


252 West 12th Street

Address 252 West 12th Street
Price $19,600,000
Type/Size Townhouse: six bedrooms and five-and-a-half bathrooms
Coming in at second place this week is this West Village townhouse. Built in 1910, it comes with wine storage, a finished basement, and a very lovely kitchen. The current owners did some smart shopping in 2010 when they snapped up this spread for a seemingly reasonable $6.8 million, which makes the current asking price an impressive 188 percent increase. And they decorate beautifully.


212 Fifth Avenue #17A

Address 212 Fifth Avenue #17A
Price $16,600,000
Type/Size Condo: six bedrooms and five-and-a-half bathrooms
212 Fifth Avenue started life in 1912 as an office building, and now, in classic New York style, its turning into luxury condos. Of the 28 units that have hit the market to date, over half are in contract, including the two most expensive units. No word on the apartment itself, but it comes with access to a host of amenities including a screening room and a fitness center.


60 Riverside Boulevard 3201/2/3

Address 60 Riverside Boulevard 3201/2/3
Price $14,900,000
Type/Size Condo: 10 bedrooms and 11-and-a-half bathrooms
This gargantuan spread takes up an entire floor at The Aldyn. The apartment itself comes with river views, Brazilian cherry floors, and three kitchens (one for each of the original apartments that made up this spread). Plus there are amenities aplenty including a pool and a basketball court.


212 Fifth Avenue #14A

Address 212 Fifth Avenue #14A
Price $12,100,000
Type/Size Condo: three bedrooms and three-and-a-half bathrooms
212 Fifth Avenue makes this list again, but this time it’s a few floors down and a couple of million cheaper. This unit comes with all the same amenities, and the apartment has features like oak floors, soaring ceilings and what looks like a whole lot of marble.

These NYC Apartments Come With Private Pools

Earlier this week we provided you with a sumptuous collection of beach-front properties you could escape to (or dream about escaping to) when the oh-so-foreboding “heat dome” became too much.

But what if you want to stay a little closer to home, and ride out this sweaty inferno in the city?

Here, for your perusal, are some of the city’s best private pools on the market right now:

232 West 15th Street #H1

Address 232 West 15th Street #H1
Price $11,495,000
Type/Size Townhouse: six bedrooms and seven bathrooms
At this Chelsea townhouse the pool takes up almost an entire floor. To be a little more precise, it’s 30-feet long and 8-feet deep and it has a two-story waterfall. Unsurprisingly, the rest of the house is pretty nice too.


60 Riverside Boulevard #2101

Address 60 Riverside Boulevard #2101
Price $17,900,000
Type/Size Condo: six bedrooms and eight-and-a-half bathrooms
While this pool might not be as glamorous as the one above, it is outside, which means that from this 21st floor terrace you can swim while you’re enjoying some pretty fantastic views.


2 North Moore Street

Address 2 North Moore Street
Price $39,500,000
Type/Size Townhouse: six bedrooms and seven bathrooms
When we toured 2 North Moore Street recently, we just knew this top floor lap pool was something special. Is there anything better than enjoying the sunshine… from inside?


18 Gramercy Park South #Ph

Address 18 Gramercy Park South #Ph
Price $47,500,000
Type/Size Condo: four bedrooms and five bathrooms
Does size really matter when you’ve got views like this? We say no. This cozy pool lives on the 18th floor and looks out at the Chrysler Building.


50 United Nations Plaza Dph4243

Address 50 United Nations Plaza Dph4243
Price $70,000,000
Type/Size Condo: four bedrooms and six-and-a-half bathrooms
When you’re dropping $70 million on a home, it better come with a pool. In this case it comes with a 30-foot infinity pool, although on the 43rd floor we wouldn’t swim too close to the edge.

New Self-Driving Bus in Amsterdam Makes the MTA’s Transit Plan Look Dated

While New York City is patting itself on the back for pushing through a subway design that offers eight more inches of door space and an open-gangway format, over in the Netherlands, folks are celebrating the Future Bus, a self-driving bus created by Mercedes-Benz. Per The Verge, the Future Bus has just completed a 20 kilometer (roughly 12.5 miles) drive that took it from Amsterdam’s Schipol Airport to the town of Haarlem (fun side note: Harlem the nabe takes its name from this municipality) along a route that included a number of tight bends, tunnels, and traffic lights.

See Day and Night Views From 432 Park Ave. at 1,400 Feet in the Air

Earlier today, 6sqft brought you flashy new renderings of the amenity spaces at432 Park Avenue. The reveal came with a link to the official building website, which has a section offering jaw-dropping photos that showcase the views from the 1,396-foot tower, the tallest residential building in the Western Hemisphere. As the site notes, they span from the Hudson River to the East River, from Westchester to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean.

Looking north

In addition to all five boroughs, 432 Park will offer views of New York state, New Jersey, and Connecticut.

Looking west

As 6sqft previously reported, 432 Park can be seen from 47 miles away at sea level, “roughly the distance from the tower to Beacon, NY, Bridgeport, Connecticut, or Trenton, New Jersey.”

Looking south

Though technically One World Trade Center is taller than 432 Park at 1,776 feet, this includes its 408-foot-tall spire. Therefore, 432 Park’s roof is actually 29 feet higher, and its uppermost penthouse will look upon One WTC’s observation deck. And this penthouse will sit at 1,302 feet above street level, making it the highest apartment in the world.

Looking east

Thirteen major bridges can be seen from the top floors of the tower: George Washington Bridge, TriBoro (RFK) Bridge, Queensboro (Ed Koch) Bridge, Whitestone Bridge, Throggs Neck Bridge, Williamsburg Bridge, Manhattan Bridge, Brooklyn Bridge, Verrazano Bridge, Hell’s Gate Bridge, Bayonne Bridge, Pulaski Skyway, and Tappan Zee Bridge.

There’s also the fun video below, which gives a great idea of how light changes from day to night.

7 Spectacular Beachfront Properties Around The World

Worried about the so-called “heat dome” that’s about to turn the city into a miserable, sweaty, disgusting cesspool this weekend? Well for the monyed set, one-hundred degree temperatures mean only one thing: escaping the city for the cool ocean breezes of their lavish summer homes. For those who haven’t yet invested in such a home, we’ve collected a number of suitable options currently on the market for your consideration below.


6901 Collins Av PH, Miami Beach, Florida
$25,000,000
7,945 square feet, six bedrooms, seven bathrooms
See forever in this all-glass two-story penthouse that has a glass elevator, a glass staircase and an infinity pool. Just don’t throw any stones.


Cape Yamu, Phuket, Thailand
$22,000,000
21,581 square feet, seven bedrooms and seven bathrooms
The home comes with 111 meters of beachfront property, and (due to it’s insanely large size) has space for eight live-in staff.


22 Lelands Path, Edgartown, Massachusetts
$20,000,000
10,099 square feet, eight bedrooms, nine bathrooms
You can’t ask for better ocean views than the ones on view from this Massachussetts home, which overlooks Katama Bay and about six acres of conservation land.


Villa Verano en Conchas Chinas, Mexico
$16,500,000
37,038 square feet, 22 bedrooms, 37 bathrooms
Not satisfied with just a house? You can buy a resort! This one comes with more than an acre of land and can accomodate 56 hotel rooms and “multiple pools.”


1 Spinnaker Way, Coronado, California$12,900,000
9,380 square feet, eight bedrooms, seven bathrooms
Ahoy! This glass house comes with its very own 100-foot private dock.


Oceanfront Sapodilla Bay, Turks And Caicos Islands
$11,800,000
14,675 square feet, nine bedrooms, nine bathrooms
Privacy is the name of the game at this estate, which comes with two guest homes, a heated infinity pool, a lighted tennis court, a home theater, a gym and most impressive, a dining deck.


Sotogrande, Costa Del Sol, Spain
$7,200,000
27,727 square feet, nine bedrooms and nine bathrooms
The amenities in this property are on point, and include a swimming pool, a bar, two bathrooms, a spa, sauna, Turkish bath and jacuzzi.

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Compass combines best-in-class technology with exceptional agents to make the process of buying and selling a home intelligent and seamless. Learn more about us at Compass.com.

On Governors Island, The World’s Smartest Hill

I took the 7-minute ferry ride from Lower Manhattan to Governors Island last September with a cluster of other journalists. All of us donned OSHA orange safety vests and hard hats, and rode in a caravan of golf carts to see four built-from-scratch hills that, at the time, simply looked like unremarkable mounds of dirt.

Along the way, the expedition leader, 55-year-old Dutch landscape architect Adriaan Geuze, whose firm West 8 won a 2007 competition to design a 40-acre park on the island, waxed poetic about everything from the hum of the park’s new insect population to the prominent white borders that line the park’s new pathways. "They’re soft, like ivory," he said.

Geuze’s firm established an international reputation with the debut of the Schouwburgplein (Theater Square) in the firm’s hometown of Rotterdam. The otherwise understated design incorporated a series of striking red lamp posts shaped like shipyard cranes with coin-operated controls that allowed members of the public to maneuver them. When it opened in 1996, the idea of a civic space that incorporated electronics just for fun was a revelation, a harbinger of a technologically driven approach to urban culture.

The Hills are a perfect example of the hallmark of 21st century design: objects that are hybrids, part manmade and part natural.

The Hills, by contrast, don’t look much like harbingers of anything. Really, they’re just hills. Each has a descriptive name: Grassy, meant for quiet relaxation, is the shortest at 25 feet. Slide, equipped with a quartet of slides, and Discovery, with a nature trail that wends its way to a wee concrete cabin that is actually a Rachel Whiteread sculpture, are each 40 feet tall.

The highest is Outlook, which, at 70 feet, offers a 360-degree view of New York Harbor, a perspective that’s never previously existed. Out in the middle of the harbor, despite being squat compared to, say, the Empire State Building or 1 World Trade Center, Outlook allows you to see all the way to the Verrazano Narrows Bridge where the open ocean begins, to the Statue of Liberty, to the towers of the Financial District, and to the newly burgeoning skyline of Downtown Brooklyn.

Still, a view is just a view. It wasn’t the thing that intrigued me about The Hills. Rather, my curiosity was piqued by remarks made by the project’s geotechnical engineer, David Winter, the CEO of Seattle-based Hart Crowser. "We made a lighter hill," he told the assembled group. "We’ve got settlement sensors everywhere."

Suddenly, I realized that The Hills are a perfect example of what I’ve come to believe is the hallmark of 21st century design: objects that are hybrids, part manmade and part natural. Apartment towers that double as forests, urban rooftops that double as farms, corporate headquarters that double as indoor rainforests. We’re beginning to see a lot of doubling. The boundaries that differentiate urban from rural, and natural from artificial, are getting harder to draw.

On a sizzling July morning, I return to look at The Hills with new eyes.

I rendezvous on the ferry with the outgoing President and CEO of the Trust for Governors Island, Leslie Koch. For a decade, she’s been leading the effort to reshape the island into a destination for day trippers and development (33 acres are currently available for real estate projects). She's stepping down in August, weeks after her epic undertaking opens to the public on July 19.

A whip-smart native of Manhattan’s Upper West Side, Koch, 54, spent her early professional life on the west coast as a marketing executive at Microsoft. She talks me through the genesis of The Hills on the ride over.

In 2006, what was then called the Governors Island Preservation and Education Corporation issued a Request for Qualifications. "We had very specific goals for [the] park, aspirations," Koch recalls. In fact, the RFQ laid out the park’s ideals in flowery language, just this side of Walt Whitman, explaining that it "will be a place to cultivate and indulge in sensory experience and delight—to experience the salt air, fresh air, sunlight, waves, wind and white noise of nature."

"But," Koch stresses, "there was no concept of height."

Along came Geuze, from a country where land is routinely reclaimed from surrounding waters and where lifting the ground above sea level was a survival skill even before global warming. Geuze, who hides his brilliance behind boyish insouciance, explains to me that the original island was a "rock" upon which fortifications like Fort Jay and Castle Williams were built in advance of the War of 1812.

Around 1910, fill generated by the excavation of the Lexington Avenue subway added 103 flat, featureless acres to the island, for a total of 172. So the island itself is an example of manmade nature.

"The military made it flat," Geuze points out. And what can you do with an island that mostly sits below the 100 year flood line? Geuze’s answer: "We could have made a brackish swamp." But, of course, that wasn’t what he proposed.

In 1996, the idea of a civic space that incorporated electronics just for fun was a revelation.

Koch recalls that in his first presentation to the competition jury in January 2007, Geuze showed "the idea of The Hills in sketch. With a marker. A hill on island." The jury winnowed the field down to five finalists, West 8 among them, and then down to two.

Koch describes the final decision process: "We went to the top of Building 877, an 11-story building." The structure, an undistinguished apartment complex built in the 1960s by the Coast Guard and imploded in 2013, stood on roughly the location Geuze had chosen for his hills.

"We walked up 11 flights of stairs in an abandoned building and stood on a spongy tar roof and looked at the view," Koch says. And that’s when she realized how much altitude could pump up that sensory experience she’d envisioned. After a round of due diligence (How much does it cost to build a hill? Is it even possible?) West 8 was commissioned to create a whole new topography for Governors Island.

I ask Geuze, "Why hills?" His response is to deny that the four landforms known as Grassy, Slide, Discovery, and Outlook even exist. In his mind, they are indistinguishable from all the smaller undulations with which he’s covered 40 acres of island. "I think we have a rolling landscape," he insists.

We tend to forget that the tightly gridded, skyscraper-packed isle of Manhattan (of which Governors Island is officially a part) was once a verdant natural place. The Lenape tribe who inhabited the island before the Europeans came along called it the "Island of Many Hills."

Landscape ecologist Eric Sanderson, whose Mannahatta: A Natural History of New York City (Abrams, 2009) convincingly reconstructs what the European settlers found when they arrived, has calculated that there were once 573 hills in Manhattan. The tallest ones, of course, were in the island’s rugged northern reaches.

In 1996, the idea of a civic space that incorporated electronics just for fun was a revelation.

But in Lower Manhattan, one called Bayard’s Mount was an impressive 110 feet tall. Murray Hill—which you only notice if you bicycle in or out of Midtown—was once "a large two-tiered structure, from which springs flowed," according to Sanderson, between 80 and 100 feet tall. Hills were methodically leveled as Manhattan was developed and the 1811 plan for the urban grid was implemented. No one saw any reason to build new hills.

Even Frederick Law Olmsted, the revered landscaper of Central Park, who crafted a pastoral fantasia out of land too rocky or swampy to have much value to real estate interests, didn’t build hills. "They could take a hill away or dam a stream," wrote Sanderson, "but they couldn’t lift up a hill and move it 30 yards to the right."

Olmsted built no hills, but in other respects he was the inspiration for West 8’s work. When I meet with principal landscape architect Jamie Maslyn-Larson, 46, who ran the Governors Island project out of West 8’s New York office, she tells me that the team’s mantra was, "What would Olmsted do?"

His influence is obvious. The new paths on Governors Island, often lined with thickets of greenery and wildflowers, meander. When you climb Outlook Hill on the paved path (instead of on the scramble built from remnants of an old sea wall) you do it gradually. The grade is less than five percent (making it ADA compliant), and switchbacks slow your progress. The strategy originated with Olmsted, who, on his second great work, Brooklyn’s Prospect Park, never made pathways that ran in a straight line and used landscape design to enhance the perception of space.

West 8 similarly took the "flat flat flat" terrain of Governors Island and manipulated it to make it feel like a place worth exploring. "When we started working with topography, we created mini thresholds, inviting spaces for people to go to, like breadcrumbs," Maslyn-Larson explains. "As you’re walking through the park, you have these undulating frames in combination with walkways. The topography makes a really lovely walk."

On the other hand, there’s a basic philosophical difference between Olmsted’s parks and the one that firms like West 8 build today. Olmsted wanted to allow city dwellers to hide from the city, to immerse themselves in an Edenic illusion. He took care to keep his park visitors looking inward, toward the greenery and away from surrounding buildings.

Today’s premier parks—the High Line comes to mind—tend to emphasize their urban surrounding while also rewarding visitors with tall grasses, cultivated wildflowers and cushy places to sit. They are a hybrid form, merging the city and the country. The two are no longer opposites. Geuze calls Governors Island "the smallest vacation you can take." But what you see when you get there is New York City from a new perspective.

The first phase of the West 8 scheme consisted of some basic landscaping. The team built the low-lying areas up with fill, planted them with trees that would be able to survive the island conditions, and carefully sculpted the newly made land. This process was underway when Hurricane Sandy hit in October of 2012.

Koch, alarmed by reports of flooding and uprooted trees across New York, returned to the island as soon as she could and discovered that the newly landscaped areas of the island were "dry as a bone" and only eight of 1,700 trees in the island’s historic district had been lost.

Sandy demonstrated that West 8’s approach was "resilient" before anyone in New York had a clue what that term meant. Koch says that Sandy was "a stress test for Adriaan’s strategy." Suddenly the project’s second phase, the construction of The Hills, became not just a lovely ideal, but something essential for the ongoing survival of the island.

That The Hills were now seen as part of the island’s resilience strategy was a good thing because, as it turned out, they were not so easy to build. Initially, they were supposed to be simple piles of fill. It didn’t matter too much what kind. "As long as it drains and as long as it would compact well, we would take it," says Maslyn-Larson.

The original idea was that The Hills would be composed of demolition waste from the implosion of Building 877 and others. "These buildings were taken down and the concrete and the brick were crushed and processed into eight-inch size or smaller for use inside the hill," Winter says.

There wasn’t enough usable debris, so dirt and gravel was imported from upstate quarries and brought in by barge. The dirt was, as you might imagine, cheap, but it also weighed too much. "When we did the geotechnical tests at the end of design development, we found out this spot was the weakest part on all of Governors Island," Maslyn-Larson says.

"There’s about a hundred feet of loose crappy soil before you get down into the hardpan and the bedrock," engineer Winter explains to me in a phone conversation. There were two potential problems. One was simply that the extra weight would cause the underlying fill to settle too much and Outlook would sink. Worse, Winter says, "there was a risk that there’d be instability and a massive failure as you were building the hill and it would slip off into New York Harbor."

They could, of course, have moved the biggest hill back, away from the shoreline and onto sturdier ground, but that would have ruined the desired effect, a total immersion in the sights and smells of the harbor. Instead, the hill had to get smarter, less natural and more manmade.

Winter and the other engineers on the project had never exactly built a hill before. But some of them had worked on sharp-edged, distinctly unnatural looking, multi-layered terrain for Seattle’s Olympic Sculpture Park. So Winter borrowed ideas from that project, and from mundane disciplines like parking lot construction.

He began working with West 8 to create a 3D computer model of Outlook Hill, one that would show how the size, shape, and composition of the hill might impact the underlying fill. Gradually they began to shift the biggest hill’s weight by sculpting it, making some of the slopes closest to the water’s edge steeper and strategically depositing lighter material in the portions of the hill over the least solid ground.

"We could have made a brackish swamp." - Adriaan Geuze, West 8

One idea for solving the weight problem was to fill the hill with a lightweight product called GeoFoam. "These are just big blocks of Styrofoam," Winter explains. "And they come 4x4x8 foot blocks. You can cut into any shape you want. We were going to construct the big hills out of Styrofoam."

Maslyn-Larson says they were looking at using the foam for the last 10 or 15 feet of the hill before the topsoil. But GeoFoam is expensive and hard to install in a windy waterfront location. "We didn’t like the idea of using foam in the hill. It didn’t feel right. It isn’t a natural material," she explains.

Natural is a relative term. On the steeper parts of both Discovery and Outlook hills, for example, a building technique called Mechanically Stabilized Earth (MSE) was used to prevent erosion. Long sheets of special plastic fabric called Geogrid were layered with fill. Geuze described the structural system, typically used in highway construction, as lasagna. Maslyn-Larson explains: "The pressure from the material is creating tension against this material which makes it really tight and strong. So it self supports."

Outlook Hill is also crammed with electronics. Monitors buried within measured how well and how quickly the fill was settling. "We had deep settlement sensors that went all the way down to the bedrock, so we know where the settlement was occurring and at what rate," Winter says. Settlement, when controlled and timed, is an asset. It makes the underlying fill stronger.

In the end, the solution to Outlook Hill’s weight problem was pumice, a volcanic rock. "It weighs about half of what regular soil weights," according to Winter. Mostly it was used in the part of the hill closest to the water. "Maybe one third of the hill got this lightweight fill."

 

Slide Hill features four slides, including the longest slide in New York City (57 feet long)

Timothy Schenck/Courtesy West8

At West 8’s New York office, Maslyn-Larson walks me through the construction documents, comprising a large-format book of some 400 pages. In these pages is every detail from the composition of the grass seed mixes to the placement of wire baskets used to control erosion on the steepest slopes. It’s enough detail, one would think, to build a supertall tower or a Gehry Guggenheim. God—or whoever or whatever built Manhattan’s original 573 hills—surely did not do this much work.

"In the end these are just big piles of dirt," Winter acknowledges. Then he corrects himself. "I mean, they’re engineered piles of dirt."

"What separates an engineered pile of dirt from an un-engineered pile of dirt?" I ask.

"Well, an un-engineered pile of dirt out there would have slipped into the ocean."

But here’s the most amazing thing about this engineered pile of dirt. All the thousands of shrubs and hundreds of trees will, presumably, thrive, thanks to built-in irrigation and drainage systems. And eventually nature will take over the job of stabilizing the hills.

As Maslyn-Larson points out, "Their root structure provides the stability." So, at some juncture, this rigorously engineered, technologically sophisticated mound of rubble, dirt, pumice, and plastic GeoGrid becomes—Pinocchio style—a real hill.

If you visit Governors Island and climb to the top of Outlook, forget about the view for a moment and think about the hill beneath your feet. Consider the fact that it’s a synthetic object, crafted by experts. A skyscraper or a bridge will always reveal the handiwork of its creators, but this artificial hill, if its designers did their jobs right, will someday be just another hill, a technological product that transitions over time into a natural feature.

Or, as Maslyn-Larson says, "It won’t need us anymore."

This Week’s 5 Most Expensive Listings

Here’s our look at the five most expensive residential listings to hit StreetEasy in the past seven days — the crème de la crème of the Manhattan market this week.


50 Riverside Boulevard #21B

Address 50 Riverside Boulevard #21B
Price $21,000,000
Type/Size Condo: seven bedrooms and nine bathrooms
This spacious spread is the most expensive listing to hit the market this week and it should come as no surprise that the 6,056-square-foot pad, which is set on the Hudson River-facing Riverside Boulevard, has some very pretty views. It also comes with a double height living room, a library and most impressive of all – a private outdoor pool.


25 Columbus Circle #54AG

Address 25 Columbus Circle #54AG
Price $20,000,000
Type/Size Condo: four bedrooms and four bathrooms
The second priciest listing this week is this Time Warner Center duplex. It’s set across the 54th and 55th floors of the famed building and has 10-foot ceilings, floor-to-ceiling windows and a curved staircase. It looks as though it’s been on the market since 2014, but has had a major price cut from the $42.5 million it was originally asking.


10 West Street #Ph2a

Address 10 West Street #Ph2a
Price $13,500,000
Type/Size Condo: four bedrooms and five bathrooms
If there’s one thing all these listing share, it’s impressive views. In this case, they’re from the top of the Ritz Carlton, Battery Park. Residents get access to a private entrance, while the home itself comes with high ceilings, big rooms, a 305-square-foot private terrace and herringbone floors to die for.


1049 Fifth Avenue 18B–M8

Address 1049 Fifth Avenue 18B–M8
Price $12,500,000
Type/Size Condo: three bedrooms and four bathrooms
According to its listing, this Fifth Avenue home has been on the receiving end of a complete and extensive renovation. And judging by the photos, it was worth it. The 2,925-square-foot spread comes with Central Park views, a separate staff apartment and a library with an upholstered wall of Oxblood leather. Fancy, of course, but not as fancy as a room lined in Hermès leather à la 8 East 62nd Street.


160 West 12th Street #96

Address 160 West 12th Street #96
Price $9,995,000
Type/Size Condo: three bedrooms and three-and-a-half bathrooms
According to StreetEasy this pretty Greenwich Village spread was sold last month for $8.5 million. Already it’s back on the market, and with a hefty $1.5 million added to the price tag. It’s owned by an anonymous LLC, so perhaps we’ll never know who’s trying to make a quick profit, but at least they have good taste. The pad comes with beamed ceilings, solid oak floors and a private terrace.

Cost Of LaGuardia Redevelopment Flies Up To $8B!

It appears the estimated cost of redeveloping LaGuardia Airport has climbed by about $1 billion.

According to an agenda released by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Friday, the redevelopment of the Terminals C and D will cost $4 billion — $1 billion more than Gov. Andrew Cuomo has previously announced. Delta Airlines, which is leasing the terminals, is currently in the early stages of designing the new terminals.

At the groundbreaking for construction at Terminal B last month, Cuomo announcedthe total project — the redevelopment of terminals B, C and D — would weigh in at an estimated $7 billion, with Delta’s terminals accounting for roughly $3 billion of the bill. Representatives for the governor could not immediately be reached for comment.

The agency will contribute up to $600 million to the construction of these terminals, which will connect to Terminal B, according to agenda documents for next week’s meeting. Port Authority  is expected to vote on its contribution to the project on Thursday.

Cost changes for major infrastructure projects are fairly common — one extreme case is the World Trade Center Transportation Hub, whose final tab was at least double its $2 billion estimate.

The price tag attached to the airport’s redevelopment has been a sore spot for some Port Authority board members. At a meeting in March, a few of them squabbled over whether the cost of the Terminal B redevelopment would cost $4 billion or $5.3 billion — the discrepancy hinging on whether or not previous work done onsite should factor into the total projected bill.

Officials have long touted the project as one of the biggest private-public partnerships in the country, since a majority of the project is funded from private resources. LaGuardia Gateway Partners — which includes Skanska, Vantage Airport Group and Meridiam Infrastructure — is designing, building, financing and operating the first phase of the airport project, the demolition and rebuilding of Terminal B.

City Gives First Approval for the Lowline, Must Raise $10M Over the Next Year

The world’s first underground park just got one step closer to reality thanks to approvals from the NYC Economic Development Corporation. The Lowline, which will occupy a 40,000-square-foot abandoned trolley terminal below Delancey Street on the Lower East Side, received the thumbs up after an eight-monthbidding process during which no one else submitted a proposal.

City hall granted co-creators James Ramsey and Dan Barasch control of the space provided they can reach a $10 million fundraising goal over the next 12 months, complete a schematic design, and host five to 10 public design sessions and quarterly community engagement meetings.

The decision comes after the success of the Lowline Lab (it’s welcomed 70,000 visitors since opening), a miniature version of the subterranean park that tested its remote skylight system and horticulture, as well as conditional approvals from the local community board. It still needs to make its way through the city’s Uniform Land Use Review Process (ULURP), and as NY Mag points out, it may not be so easy to convince the public that the $60 million project that will require as much as $4 million annually in maintenance is feasible.

Though the city has committed no funds to the project, deputy mayor for housing and economic development Alicia Glen made it clear that public support hasn’t been ruled out. She also very exuberantly expressed her interest: “When they first presented it to me, I thought, That is some crazy, smoking-dope stuff — let’s check it out! We’re very excited about taking interesting technology, and the way the tech ecosystem is converging around cities, to solve civic problems and objectives.”

James Ramsey celebrated the victory: “Every designer dreams of doing civic work that contributes to society and to the profession. Over the last 8 years, we just stuck to what we thought was a great idea that could make our city and our community better. We’re thrilled to move ahead on designing and building a space that people will enjoy for generations to come.”

The Lowline Lab will be open through March, 2017; it’s free and open to the public.

Rental - 124 West 23rd Street, Unit 3C


124 West 23rd Street, Unit 3C

The Citizen • Chelsea, Manhattan, NY, 10011


Available Immediately

1 BED  |  1 BATH  |  $3,650 / MONTH

 

Unit 3C is located in Chelsea’s highly sought after Citizen Condominium at 124 West 23rd Street, with a 24-hour doorman, fitness room, bike storage, and private storage.

Unit 3C is an impeccably designed and finished with oak hardwood floors and high ceilings and floor-to-ceiling south facing windows. The apartment is sleek and modern with a loft-like layout and separate sleeping alcove, and open kitchen. Off the sun-filled living room is a spacious private balcony. The full sized kitchen is finished with top-of-the-line appliances and materials including European lacquer custom cabinetry, marble countertops, Miele dishwasher, SMEG high-end cooktop, and Sub-Zero refrigerator. The marble bathroom features high-end fixtures and soaking tub. This luxurious apartment is rounded out with private in-unit washer and dryer as well as central air-conditioning.

New Subway Cars Are In The Works

Gov. Andrew Cuomo revealed details of a new fleet of subway cars Monday, part of a “redesign of the MTA on every level” that will bear the unmistakable mark of Albany.

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority announced plans to build 1,025 new cars, which will feature Wi-Fi and USB jacks and connect openly to one another. A rendering of the new train showed a diagonal stripe of yellow and a panel of blue along the cars’ exterior, the latest sign that Cuomo is color-coding his legacy into the city’s transit system.

New buses that Cuomo deemed “Ferrari-like” in March and an e-ticket app that debuted this month feature the colors that New Yorkers might recognize from a state trooper’s car or all of Cuomo’s materials—blue and what this reporter mistakenly referred to as yellow at a press conference at the New York Transit Museum in Brooklyn. 

“The state color is not yellow,” Cuomo corrected. “Gold.”

Cuomo spoke at the New York Transit Museum in Brooklyn on Monday.

Cuomo’s office has previously denied a rebranding of the MTA in the state colors, but Cuomo said Monday it is “fair to say you’re seeing a redesign of the MTA on every level, and when you’re building new cars and you’re building new buses, you’re building new stations, etc., colors schemes are a part of that, and the attractiveness is part of that.”

The new cars, announced as Mayor Bill de Blasio was heading to Italy for a week-long vacation, are part of the $27 billion, five-year MTA capital plan. The transit agency will also rebuild 31 subway stations across the five boroughs. Granite floors will replace concrete, and iron bars will be exchanged for glass barriers, according to the preliminary designs. At new subway entrances, the classic green globes are out, and electronic boards showing train status are in.

The governor has previously touted plans for Metro-North and the Long Island Railroad, but at Monday’s press conference he emphasized that the subways are a priority for him as well, though he would not expressly confirm his signature on the new cars.

“I’m sure [MTA] Chairman [Thomas] Prendergast, when he’s done, is going to put on every door and every train, ‘Thank you New York state for the $27 billion,’” Cuomo joked. “As long as the train is on time. If the train is not on time…”

The new cars will also feature open gangways, allowing movement along the entire train.

Not all of the $27 billion actually comes from the state. New York City, the federal government, and, of course, riders also contribute to the capital plan, which includes $15.8 billion for the city's transit system (the MTA also reaches seven suburban counties in New York). Also, the state has yet to identify the source of all of the funds it has committed, which has made transit advocates nervous.

Design experts Debbie Millman and Steven Heller, co-founders of the branding master’s program at the School of Visual Arts, said that if the color stamp is meant to refer to the governor, the signature is subtle.

“I’m a native New Yorker. I’ve lived in all the boroughs except the Bronx and I can tell you that I never once knew that the New York colors were blue and gold,” Millman said.

The e-ticket app colors looks orange and blue, she said.

“It really looks like it was sponsored by the Mets,” Millman said, whereas the buses “almost look more like the love child of the Mets and Citibank.”

Swapping classic blue-and-white buses for blue and gold seems “radical in terms of the identification of the city,” Heller said, and could have political meaning, especially in light of Cuomo’s relationship with the mayor.

"If you take into account Cuomo’s ongoing feud with de Blasio— which could be ego, it could be ideology, it could be any number of things—it’s kind of a slap in the face to a mayor to have something so overt changed on him,” he said.