Demolition Wraps Up at 289 Hudson Street in Hudson Square, Manhattan

Photo by Michael Young

Demolition work is finished at 289 Hudson Street, the site of a forthcoming six-story residential building in Hudson Square, Manhattan. Designed by SRA Architecture + Engineering and developed by Ponte Equities under the BNC289 LLC, the upcoming 73-foot-tall structure is planned to span 14,829 square feet and yield 15 rental units with an average scope of 688 square feet. There will also be 1,710 square feet of commercial space and a cellar level. The property is located at the corner of Hudson and Spring Streets, directly across from the recently completed New York headquarters for Disney at Four Hudson Square.

Recent photographs show the corner lot fully cleared of the former low-rise structure and partially excavated. The lot sits behind wraparound wooden fencing, while no excavation or construction machinery have been delivered to the site yet. When finished, the new building will eventually surpass the height of the abutting structures to the immediate south.

Photo by Michael Young

The below Google Street View image shows the former two-story commercial occupant of the property before its demolition.

289 Hudson Street in Hudson Square, Manhattan

289 Hudson Street via Google Maps

The nearest subways from the site are the C and E trains, located at the Spring Street station to the east on Sixth Avenue along the border of SoHo.

A construction timeline and set of finalized architectural renderings for the new 289 Hudson Street have yet to be publicly released.

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7 Comments on "Demolition Wraps Up at 289 Hudson Street in Hudson Square, Manhattan"

  1. Michael Jenkins | August 13, 2024 at 7:50 am | Reply

    Wayyy too many short buildings being filed below 59th street

  2. Why only six stories?

  3. Build taller! What’s up with such valuable real estate not being used to its full potential?

  4. Absurdly short. Should be at least 5x as tall. Stupid NIMBYs.

  5. David : Sent From Heaven. | August 14, 2024 at 12:54 am | Reply

    Height exceeds adjacent structures, but I don’t think it’s too high, right? Thanks.

  6. Lot of jazz history there when it was the Half Note club from the ’50s-’70s. John Coltrane, Charlie Mingus, Bill Evans and a lot more heavyweights graced the stage.

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