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Façade Installation Progresses on 1 Park Row in the Financial District, Manhattan

1 Park Row. Designed by Fogarty Finger.

Façade installation is continuing on 1 Park Row, a 23-story mixed-use building in Lower Manhattan’s Financial District. Designed by Fogarty Finger Architects and developed by Circle F Capital, the 305-foot-tall structure will span 103,000 square feet and yield 62 condominium units in studio- to three-bedroom layouts. The building will also contain 19,000 square feet of office and retail space on the lower levels. The property is located at the intersection of Park Row and Ann Street, directly across from the southern tip of City Hall Park.

More of the gray and sculpted beige façade panels have been installed across both sides of the reinforced concrete superstructure since our last update in early August, when crews were just beginning to attach the paneling between the grid of floor-to-ceiling windows. Recent photos show the façade covering much of the exterior around the four remaining construction hoists, including almost the entirety of the signature curved corner.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Photo by Michael Young.

Scaffolding and black netting shroud the uppermost floors and mechanical bulkhead above the main setback, as seen in the photograph below.

Photo by Michael Young.

The following renderings of 1 Park Row showcase its position among the surrounding neighborhood, as well as its lofty ceiling heights and views of the nearby World Trade Center, St. Paul’s Chapel, and City Hall Park. Ryan Serhant of SERHANT. Real Estate is in charge of sales and marketing for the property. Paris Forino is serving as the interior designer.

1 Park Row. Designed by Fogarty Finger.

1 Park Row. Designed by Fogarty Finger.

1 Park Row. Designed by Fogarty Finger.

1 Park Row. Designed by Fogarty Finger.

Homes will feature open-plan layouts with wide-plank white oak floors, white oak wood doors, and custom polished nickel hardware. Kitchens will have Breccia Grigio Eurasia Stone marble slab countertops and backsplashes, Italian-crafted light ceruse white oak cabinetry, brass hardware, Vola blackened stainless steel faucets, wine refrigerators, and fully integrated appliances from Gaggenau and Bosch. Bathrooms will feature Waterworks fixtures, custom Italian-crafted white oak vanities with polished nickel detailing, wall-mounted Toto washlets, Bendheim Clear tempered glass shower enclosures, and Eurasia Stone tilework.

Residential amenities will include a 24-hour attended lobby, a fitness center, two outdoor terraces, a dog run, a lounge with a dining room and catering kitchen, and a landscaped rooftop terrace with a grilling station and outdoor kitchenette. Other amenities will include a private storage, a bicycle room, and a secure package room.

1 Park Row. Designed by Fogarty Finger.

1 Park Row. Designed by Fogarty Finger.

1 Park Row. Designed by Fogarty Finger.

Circle F Capital is completing the project with the help of a $90 million construction loan from Parkview Financial.

1 Park Row is located in close proximity to several major transportation centers in Lower Manhattan, including the Fulton Transit Center at the corner of Fulton Street and Broadway, Santiago Calatrava’s Oculus at the World Trade Center, and additional stations at the foot of the Brooklyn Bridge, City Hall, and Chambers Street.

YIMBY anticipates 1 Park Row will finish construction sometime in the latter half of 2025.

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18 Comments on "Façade Installation Progresses on 1 Park Row in the Financial District, Manhattan"

  1. Former Site of J&R Electronics Store Now Houses $25 Million Penthouse
    RIP- J&R

  2. This building completes the ‘flow’ of the block, it’s just right..

  3. Nice, it should just be ten stories taller.

    • Oh god no.

      5 stories shorter and 2 more setbacks would be more adequate and the Park Row Building would be more visible.

      It’s sad, that this almost 130 year old building is now hidden on all sides.

      (and yeah I know it’s design was intended to be)

  4. It looks very nice, unfortunately that area has gone to ……

  5. David in Bushwick | February 17, 2025 at 12:13 pm | Reply

    Wow, this is taking a long time to finish. Is the MTA managing the construction?

  6. Very nice, but I do miss J&R!

  7. If I remember correctly, 1 Park Row had a nice old facade matching the neighborhood. While this look decent, it ruins the visual flow, and is a total waste of money.

    Anyone else find floor to ceiling windows totally creepy?

    • Absolutely not. I find them very modern and overall great idea for more sunlight and less electric lighting

  8. David of Flushing | February 17, 2025 at 12:30 pm | Reply

    I believe the building next to this was briefly the tallest in the world. It is a pleasant modern structure with dramatic views.

  9. Good New York urbanism here! A wall of apartments like on CPW and the lower scale of the new building preserves the visual interest of the two cupolas on the adjacent building from the southwest.

  10. love the rounded windows.

    note to developers , dont cheap out and value engineer the rounded windows … looks so bad when its straight windows, with they add that separation to sorta bend it but not really

  11. A rather simple aesthetic that looks pretty good. I do agree that the building should have been at least 10 or more stories higher but not bad. What a view. What a location.

  12. I hope that silvery protective film is removed from the curved windows.
    It looks like one of those funny circus mirrors.
    Let’s hope retail is not more of the heap souvenir shops

  13. David : Sent From Heaven. | February 23, 2025 at 12:26 am | Reply

    No crews’ fingerprints were found on the window panes, that it’s as pretty as the rounded corners in a sci-fi movie: Thanks.

  14. Jenniffer medina | March 9, 2025 at 10:01 pm | Reply

    Love it!

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