One Vanderbilt Begins Gaining Prominence On The Midtown East Skyline

One Vanderbilt, photo by Andrew Nelson rendering by Jose HernandezOne Vanderbilt, photo by Andrew Nelson rendering by Jose Hernandez

Right across from the iconic Grand Central terminal in Midtown, construction is moving along for the commercial supertall One Vanderbilt. Our last update in March showed that the building had reached two floors above the distinctive retail podium. We can report that the structure has more than doubled in height over the past three months, now standing 17 floors above street level. The building will eventually top off 1,401 feet above street level, and SL Green is developing.

Cranes and top of construction at One Vanderbilt visible from 53 West 53rd Topping Out Ceremony, image by Andrew Campbell Nelson

Cranes and top of construction at One Vanderbilt visible from 53 West 53rd Topping Out Ceremony, image by Andrew Campbell Nelson

The latest photos from Tectonic show that the structure is currently an estimated 380 feet tall, meaning it stands about 80 feet taller than the Statue of Liberty, and is just shy of the height of the Park Row Building, the tallest commercial building in Manhattan from 1899-1908. Over 1,000 feet remain before topping off.

1 Vanderbilt with corner of Grand Central visible in bottom right corner, image by Tectonic

1 Vanderbilt with corner of Grand Central visible in bottom right corner, image by Tectonic

The 58-story building will add 1.6 million square feet to the area. It will open up as the fourth-tallest building in the city, overshadowed only by the Steinway Tower, Central Park Tower, and One World Trade Center.

One Vanderbilt, rendering by Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates

One Vanderbilt, rendering by Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates

$220 million from the project will be put toward transit upgrades, which includes a link to the Grand Central terminal and an additional 4,000 square foot waiting area. This comes as part of the MTA’s plan for a multi-billion-dollar connection on the LIRR from Sunnyside Yards to Grand Central.

One Vanderbilt, image by Kohn Pedersen Fox

Observation deck versions, image by Kohn Pedersen Fox

Kohn Pedersen Fox is responsible for the design, making this their second supertall in New York City and fourth in the USA. While One Vanderbilt doesn’t have a dramatic angular observation terrace like 30 Hudson Yards, the three-tiered rooftop should offer a distinctive, 100-foot tall crown.

1 Vanderbilt from across 42nd Street, image by Tectonic

1 Vanderbilt from across 42nd Street, image by Tectonic

Since construction passed the 13th floor, the rate of rise has increased from two floors per month to three. At this pace, steel will reach the 34th floor by the end of 2018, and the 58th floor will be reached by August 2019.

One Vanderbilt Midtown East

One Vanderbilt and the Empire State Building

Façade installation is expected to start this July. Completion is expected by 2021.

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7 Comments on "One Vanderbilt Begins Gaining Prominence On The Midtown East Skyline"

  1. Please pardon me for using your space: New fame for future progress. (So exciting, looking again so exciting).

  2. Honestly, the all-important base facing 42nd street looks like it was designed by an inebriated third-rate architect. This street-level base has no sense of proportion, nor balance nor cohesion.
    Instead, it’s a skewed hodgepodge jumble of conflicting forms, angles, shapes and voids
    It attempt to look “modern” but only winds up looking confused & ridiculous.
    All in all it’s an ugly and incongruous neighbor to stately Grand Central Terminal,
    and looks all the worse by being in close proximity to such an iconic building,
    How do these hideous building schemes ever get past the drawing board?
    Perhaps it’s not only the architects who are apparently inebriated and third-rate… 🙂
    They would have been much better off if they had simply extended the rhythmic building elements
    above the base all the way down to street level – while perhaps expanding the spacing between the lowest levels to allow for a genuinely more airy feel in this congested part of the city.

  3. Jeffrey Gratton | June 11, 2018 at 11:16 am | Reply

    Question:
    Isn’t 58 floors a very low number for a building of this height?
    What’s the reason?

  4. Hervin Romney AIA | June 16, 2018 at 12:50 pm | Reply

    Tell StanChaz that there was no Drawing Board, merely a computer screen, All the suggested remedies have come too late to avoid an unexpectedly strange end product from the architects.

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