Work is wrapping up on The Prince, a 15-story residential building at 134-03 35th Avenue in Flushing, Queens. Designed by My Architect PC and developed by United Construction Development Group, the structure will yield 120 condominium units in one- to two-bedroom layouts. C&G Empire Realty, LLC is listed as the owner of the property, which is alternately addressed as 33-71 Prince Street and located at the corner of 35th Avenue and Prince Street.
Recent photographs show the building nearly fully enclosed in its reflective glass curtain wall, with only some sections of the ground floor and near the entrance to the subterranean parking garage awaiting completion. The sidewalks and main entrance are still blocked off by wooden fencing, metal gates, and construction barriers, but this should likely be removed in the coming weeks.
The western elevation facing Prince Street features six stacks of balconies lined with glass railings.
Residential amenities include 24/7 security, a full-time doorman, parcel room, rooftop garden, indoor parking, bicycle parking, and shared laundry facilities. The pet-friendly units will be equipped with hardwood floors, Bosch household appliances, and gas stoves.
Below is an updated rendering showing the podium covered with a rooftop garden, a children’s play area, and lounge seating.
The below renderings were released around the time of YIMBY’s first coverage of the project in 2016, along with early interior design concepts.
The nearest subway from the property is the 7 train at the Flushing-Main Street station to the south along Roosevelt Avenue.
YIMBY predicts The Prince will fully finish construction by the summer at the very latest.
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This is another Flushing development in the former district of low warehouses.
All that glass will make those balconies impossible hot and bright from May to September.
Yuck.
If you check the website, the 2 bedroom units are less than 800 SF. The only closets are one in each bedroom. My 1958 building a few blocks away has 1150 SF units for 2 bedrooms. The vaunted unobstructed view of Manhattan could change with the next project.
Reflective looks better than clear, so proud on giant glass panels as high as a 15-story building: Thanks.