Tishman Speyer’s BIG Supertall Ready To Rise at 66 Hudson Boulevard, Hudson Yards

Rendering of 66 Hudson Boulevard. Credit: BIG/Tishman Speyer.Rendering of 66 Hudson Boulevard. Credit: BIG/Tishman Speyer.

The last time YIMBY reported on progress at 66 Hudson Boulevard was back in September of 2016, when Tishman Speyer filed permits for the 64-story office giant, designed by Bjarke Ingels Group/BIG. Now, demolition has wrapped on the site’s former low-slung structures, which means work can officially begin on the spiraling supertall.

66 Hudson Boulevard

66 Hudson Boulevard on 10/31 with demolition ongoing, photo by JC_Heights

The site is located on the northwest corner of 34th Street and Tenth Avenue. Last month, YIMBY reported that demolition had wrapped and excavation had started at Related Companies’ 50 Hudson Yards, located across the street to the south of 66 Hudson Boulevard. At the same time, construction officially began on The Moinian Group’s 3 Hudson Boulevard, which will be situated immediately to the west of 66 Hudson Boulevard, across Hudson Park & Boulevard.

66 Hudson Boulevard

66 Hudson Boulevard this week, photo by JC_Heights

Suffice to say, the impending boom across the northern blocks of Hudson Yards could potentially be even more impressive than what’s occurring across the Eastern Railyards right now, where 15, 30, and 35 Hudson Yards are currently rising. At no other time in New York City’s history have so many office behemoths been under construction, one next to the other, at the heights and scopes of the Hudson Yards towers.

66 Hudson Boulevard will stand 1,005 feet to its rooftop, taking “supertall” status by a mere 21 feet. The actual usable space will top-out 962 feet above ground level, however, the mechanical bulkheads will boost the height beyond the 1,000-foot mark.

Bjarke Ingels’ design for the tower is characteristic for the architect, and takes the building a step beyond “standard” contemporary architecture. The exterior will feature “hanging gardens and cascading atria,” and the renderings paint a picture resembling a vertically-extruded take on the ziggurats of ancient Mesopotamia. With open space on every level, and an iconic appearance to boot, the tower is likely to be quite impressive from both inside and out.

Rendering of 66 Hudson Boulevard showing cascading terraces. Credit: BIG/Tishman Speyer.

Filings indicate a scope of 2.2 million square feet, however Tishman Speyer has previously said the tower will span 2.8 million square feet, which is about the same size as 30 and 50 Hudson Yards, in the two blocks to the south. The offices up above will be complemented by 27,000 square feet of retail space on the ground floor, ensuring the pedestrian realm sees improvements equal to those impending on the skyline.

Daylight rendering of the skyline featuring 66 Hudson Boulevard. Credit: BIG/Tishman Speyer.

Daylight rendering of the skyline featuring 66 Hudson Boulevard. Credit: BIG/Tishman Speyer.

While completion has tentatively been set for 2019, the current pace of construction is probably an indicator that 2020 is a likelier estimate. Though demolition has now wrapped, foundation work has yet to begin.

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4 Comments on "Tishman Speyer’s BIG Supertall Ready To Rise at 66 Hudson Boulevard, Hudson Yards"

  1. Welcome Home (David) | December 13, 2017 at 8:17 am | Reply

    Please pardon me for using your space: Future, I feel to future when surface with supertall.

  2. The building’s location in the drawing on top does not make sense.

  3. Not sure how I feel about this. Seems like it could block iconic empire state views

  4. The ESB has been visually dominant since its opening in 1931. That part of Midtown never took off until recently. Tall and super talls are being erected closer and closer to the point the ESB will be blocked out just like its Art Deco brother and sister towers of lower Manhattan. Sad.

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