Construction is complete on Tryon North, a 12-story mixed-use building at 4778 Broadway in Inwood, Manhattan. Designed by Aufgang Architects and developed by Maddd Equities, which purchased the property for $12 million in 2018, the 99,000-square-foot structure yields 80 affordable units in studio to two-bedroom layouts, as well as 18,759 square feet of lower-level commercial. The project stands on a 12,000-square-foot interior parcel by the corner of Broadway and Dyckman Street.
All exterior work has wrapped up since our last update in February, when the light gray and black façade panels were just beginning installation on the main northern elevation and rows of CMU blocks were still exposed at the top of the reinforced concrete superstructure. Recent photographs show the finished appearance of the beveled cladding, floor-to-ceiling windows, and ground-floor retail space. The residential entrance is positioned on the eastern end of the building, and the retail space has a separate doorway on the opposite western corner with the address 4778A.
Units are finished with wide plank flooring and expansive windows. Kitchens come fitted with silver sand Caesarstone counters, a stainless steel appliance package, retractable kitchen faucets, integrated microwaves, and Blomberg dishwashers. The bathrooms include rainforest shower heads, porcelain-tiled floors, and brushed nickel fixtures. Select units on the upper floors come with private outdoor space.
Residential amenities at Tryon North include a lobby, package room, shared laundry room, bike storage room, and a fitness center with an adjacent outdoor terrace with lounge seating.
The nearest subway from the property is the A train at the Dyckman Street station to the west.
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Although there is no awning at the entrance, but it probably has a pretty good security system: Thanks to Michael Young.
Very nice
Newer buildings in NYC have no fire escapes. What to do if there’s a fire?
The buildings have long been built with fire retardant materials. If a fire breaks out in an individual unit it can not travel down the hallways or burn through walls to ignite other units.
They have been constructing all new buildings like this in NYC for decades. Where are you living that they aren’t building buildings in this way?