Permits have been filed for a 45-story mixed-use tower at 606 West 30th Street in Chelsea, Manhattan. Located between 11th Avenue and 12th Avenue, the interior lot is close to the 34th Street-Hudson Yards Subway Station subway station, serviced by the 7 train. Lalezarian Properties is listed as the owner behind the applications. In 2015, they acquired the warehouse on the property for $36 million.
Last year, plans filed for the building included 42 floors, with 252 residential units and 54 parking spaces. New permits are by the same architect of record, Ismael Leyva Architects. The proposed 545-foot tall development will yield 312,350 square feet, with 192,780 square feet designated for residential space and 14,240 square feet for commercial space. It will have 260 residences, most likely rentals based on the average unit scope of 741 square feet. The concrete-based structure will also have a cellar, 30-foot long rear yard, and 56 enclosed parking spaces.
Demolition permits were filed in October of 2018. An estimated completion date has not been announced.
Subscribe to YIMBY’s daily e-mail
Follow YIMBYgram for real-time photo updates
Like YIMBY on Facebook
Follow YIMBY’s Twitter for the latest in YIMBYnews
Please pardon me for using your space: Beautiful design told ugliness go away, but ugliness ignore so work from police able to alert. (Hello YIMBY)
Just click older article and see poor journalism without recearch made by this writer!!! This mention height for Site B, not a Site A, what is 695 feet and 61 story, while shorter building painted as orange is increasing their night from 520′ to 545′, and 42 to 45 stories high!!! Why is this happened, and not a first time when writer post his “news” without clarifying details and just checking out what he/she is written!!!
“night” must be read as “height”, my mistake.
The corner property is Site A, and you mention a Site B, it is the same as to mention “30 Hudson Yards” and giving them floor count and height of “10 Hudson Yards”!!!
Which building goes with which color? Confusing.
Whole article is confusing, in article author mentioned Yellow colored structure, lot A, while given numbers for red/orange one, lot “B”. And looks like smaller lot “B” building get a height increase from 520 feet to 545′, while bigger corner property is 695 feet and 61 stories.
As I said example of poor journalism by Vanessa London, she didn’t even check her writing, and last time she mentioned 30 story building in Greenpoint as 68 feet height, missed “3” in beginning of that number!!!