For decades, the New York City skyline was dominated by one building, the 381meter-tall (1,250-foot) Empire State Building. After was One World Trade Center, the city’s tallest building, which tops out at 541 meter (1,776 feet). However, 17 “supertall” skyscrapers, (defined as over 300 meter (984 feet) in height by the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat) have been started or completed since the Great Recession, completely remaking the city’s traditional silhouette.

A new plan to develop a skyscraper, by New York City developer Harry Macklowe, named as ‘tower fifth’, designed by Gensler, would stand at a height of 474 meter (1,556 feet). The project, which will be located just north of St. Patrick’s cathedral, east of fifth avenue between 51st and 52nd streets, in Midtown Manhattan. The project will also include the city’s highest observatory.
Details of the proposal, according the New York Times reported last week when Macklowe submitted the preliminary application to the Department of City Planning. The 96-story supertall would still fall below the current title-holder One World Trade Center, which measures 541 meter (1,776 feet) tall thanks to its spire. But if looking at ceiling height only, Tower Fifth would be considered the tallest in the city, measuring just a foot taller than Central Park Tower. The same developer was behind Rafael Viñoly's 432 Park Avenue.

As renderings depict, the tower would sit atop stilts above 52nd Street, rising upward until the top where a “two-level slab juts out from the northern and southern sides of the building,” the Times wrote.

The building would feature an 26-meter-high glass lobby that would stretch a block and frame St. Patrick’s Cathedral. Above the lobby, there would be shops, a food hall, and a public auditorium made of glass, overlooking the landmark. Amenities and tenant space would measure 89,200 square meter throughout the office floors, according to the architects.

Other plans revealed include an energy-efficient facade, public concourse, and the city’s tallest observatory. A page on the project on Gensler’s website describes the observatory: “At the top of the tower, the city’s highest observatory grants unprecedented views and features an array of unique experiential, cultural, and entertainment experiences within a public observatory.”

The proposed tower is far from becoming a reality. Because the project could encroach on five landmark buildings, including the Rockefeller Center and St. Patrick’s, it will require approval by the Landmarks Preservation Commission.

And Macklowe Properties will have to secure roughly 54,000 square meter of development rights from neighboring properties, a condition allowed under the 2017 rezoning of Midtown East. Under the rezoning, landmarks can sell and transfer unused development rights within the 78-block area.

While plenty of obstacles lie in wait, Macklowe is confident the city will approve his project. “Tall buildings are a reality,” he told the Times. “The days of restrictions on buildings are really over. This is a building that’s never been built before, a 21st-century building.”

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Architects
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Gensler, in collaboration with Harry Macklowe

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Collaborators
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Arquitecto gestión. Architect of record.- Adamson Associates Architects
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Developer
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Macklowe Properties
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Gensler is a global architecture, design, and planning firm with 46 locations and more than 5,000 professionals networked across Asia, Europe, Australia, the Middle East and the Americas. Founded in 1965, the firm serves more than 3,500 active clients in virtually every industry. Gensler designers strive to make the places people live, work and play more inspiring, more resilient, and more impactful.

Arthur Gensler Jr., FAIA, FIIDA, RIBA (1935—2021) founded the firm in 1965 together with his wife Drue and their colleague James Follet. He is widely credited with elevating the practice of interior design to professional standing. He was a Fellow of both the American Institute of Architects and the International Interior Design Association, and a professional member of the Royal Institute of British Architects. Art graduated from Cornell University’s College of Architecture, Art and Planning and was a member of its Advisory Council. A charter member of Interior Design magazine’s Hall of Fame and a recipient of IIDA’s Star Award, he also received Ernst & Young LLP’s Lifetime Achievement Award and the Cornell Entrepreneur of the Year Award. In 2015, he wrote Art’s Principles to offer entrepreneurs the business insights he wishes someone had given him when he was starting out.

Arthur Gensler is recognized as an industry icon and an astute businessman who propelled a small practice into the largest and most admired firm in the industry over the course of his 65-year career.
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Published on: January 25, 2019
Cite: "The New York new super-tall skyscraper will be rise 473m" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/new-york-new-super-tall-skyscraper-will-be-rise-473m> ISSN 1139-6415
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