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Lower Manhattan still buzzing after a year that saw visible progress and
frustrating setbacks at the World Trade Center.
By Tom Nicholson
Construction includes high-profile jobs such as the Freedom Tower and rebuilding at
the World Trade Center site; complex transportation infrastructure projects such as the
World Trade Center Transportation Hub; high-rise commercial projects such as
Goldman Sachs headquarters; and a spate of mixed-use, residential and hotel projects.
The volume of
PANYNJ executive director Chris Ward issued a report to New York Gov. David
Paterson in July outlining a myriad of challenges to the WTC projects.
“Costs and schedules presented to the public were not realistic,” Ward said in the
report. He attributed the delays to a lack of centralized leadership, unresolved
stakeholder issues and inadequate cost analysis that failed to consider logistics and
staging.
According to the LMCCC, construction crews have reached several milestones on WTC
projects this summer.
On the Freedom Tower, the pouring of the concrete slab base is complete and the first
signs of vertical construction are emerging with the installation of new column sections.
Bolted to two of the structure’s 24 steel columns, the sections currently stand more than
80 ft high from the base, about 15 ft above street level. Currently, about 9,400 tons of
steel—of the nearly 50,000 tons of steel required for the 2.6-million sq-ft tower—have
been ordered.
According to the PANYNJ, about 90% of construction contracts on the project have
been awarded. Current estimates put construction cost at more than $3 billion.
The National September 11 Memorial and Museum at the World Trade Center, for
which costs have risen from $500 million to nearly $1 billion, foundation work and slurry
wall reinforcement were completed this summer. Structural framework has started and
will continue through the year.
Deconstruction is continuing at the former Deutsche Bank building at 130 Liberty St.,
which was damaged on Sept. 11. Work has resumed after a stop order, which was
enacted this spring by the city after fire broke out at the building, was lifted in May. The
40-story tower has been deconstructed to the 26th floor.
Excavation work for World Trade Center Towers 3 and 4 was completed earlier this
year. PANYNJ removed nearly 400,000 tons of concrete, soil and rock; constructed the
80-ft-deep foundation and an 80-ft-deep slurry wall; and installed more than 240 steel
tiebacks to reinforce the walls.
The project was turned over to Silverstein Properties to begin vertical construction,
according to Richard Keilar, spokesman for New York-based Tishman Construction Co.
Costs and schedules for each of the WTC projects have shifted several times. Original
completion dates were between 2009 and 2013, but are now extended pending
PANYNJ’s analysis.
Although still a gritty construction zone, the 16-acre WTC site is a tourist magnet
helping to drive an explosion of hotel construction, developers say. There are more than
a dozen hotel projects currently under way in Lower Manhattan and as many in the
pipeline. “We’ve never seen this many hotel projects in Lower Manhattan,” the
Downtown Alliance’s Berger says. “There is certainly a change occurring.”
Hotel occupancy rates for hotels in the area regularly hover around 85%. There are
currently 10 hotels in Lower Manhattan, totaling 2,197 hotel rooms, with new
construction representing an additional 2,800 rooms scheduled to open in the next two
to three years, according to LMCCC.
For now, hotel developers see plenty of room in the market for the number of hotels
going up, says Gary Wisinski, chief operating officer at Great Neck, N.Y.-based McSam
Group, which has five hotel projects under way in Lower Manhattan, says, “The World
Trade Center site has become a major tourist attraction, and the closing of the fish
market near South Street Seaport has encouraged tourism there.” Wisinski says he
expects the hotel boom to last through next year.
“Every major hotel chain in the world is coming to Lower Manhattan now. We are
looking at a very robust market,” says Wisinski “Hotels in Lower Manhattan are sold out
five and a half days of the week. The hospitality industry is not serving Wall Street very
well.”
The Trump SoHo building (left) is one of a slew of luxury residential facilities being built in
the re-imagined downtown area. The topped-out Goldman Sachs tower (right) is the first
major headquarters project in Lower Manhattan in 20 years. (Photos by Tom Nicholson)
The surge of hotel construction is accelerating in tandem with mixed-use residential and
commercial projects, some of which include condominiums and hotel space in the same
tower.
One example is the 175-room, 694,000-sq-ft Four Seasons hotel tower with 143
condominiums being built by Silverstein Properties at Church St. Foundation work
started in June with completion planned for 2010, Tishman’s Keilar says.
According to a report by Manhattan borough president Scott Stringer’s office this year,
based on the amount of new residential construction, the population in the financial
district is projected to increase by 20% in the next five years, making it the most
populous section in Lower Manhattan.
“There are many companies that want to locate their businesses downtown,” Harvey
says. “And there is a demand for residential construction because people want to live
where they work.”
Avi Shick, chairman of Lower Manhattan Development Corporation, says the changing
nature of the Financial District will continue to spur construction. “We are working to
change Lower Manhattan from a strictly financial district to a 24/7 community,” Shick
says. “We need to create all the amenities for neighborhoods where people live, work
and play.”
Much of the residential projects are mixed-use structures, and some of them are
“startlingly large,” Harvey says. It is an apt description of one of the largest mixed-use
towers being erected in downtown: the Frank Gehry-designed, 76-floor, 1.1-million-sq-ft
Beekman
The glass and titanium-skinned, cast-in-place reinforced concrete tower will house 903
residential units and will devote 100,000 sq ft of space to a public school, hospital
offices and retail space, according to New York-based developer Forest City Ratner
Cos. Currently, steel superstructure work on the $660 million building is complete to the
sixth floor, according to Susi Yu, senior vice president at Forest City Ratner Cos.
“There was little residential construction in downtown in the ’90s, but now
condominiums and mixed-use buildings are the right product,” Yu says.
Much of the construction dotting downtown’s skyline is the result of about $8 billion in
government incentives provided for post-Sept. 11 reconstruction, Yu says.
Incentives include tax abatements offered by the city for developers to convert office
space to residential units.
One of the largest infrastructure projects in Lower Manhattan is the Fulton Street
Transit Center, owned by Metropolitan Transportation Authority. The center will connect
12 subway lines converging in Lower Manhattan when complete.
Construction continues on the Dey Street Concourse and the restoration of Corbin
Building, which will serve as an entrance to the station.
Of the dozens of other projects proliferating downtown, Harvey says most are on track
for some level of LEED certification.
One such project is New York Marriott Downtown’s installation of a “microturbine farm”
at its hotel at 85 West St. The 11 gas-fired microturbines will reduce the building’s
power use by 80%, according to Marriott Hotels.
“The next chapter calls for the public and private sectors to partner in support of Lower
Manhattan’s growth and revitalization beyond the borders of Ground Zero—and to
strike the appropriate balance between the commercial uses planned for the World
Trade Center site and the need to develop a viable, full-service community,” Manhattan
Development Corporation’s Shick says.
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