A riverside locale is proving to be one of Sutton Tower‘s premier elements. Designed by Thomas Juul-Hansen and developed by JVP Development and Gamma Real Estate, the 850-foot tower at 430 East 58th Street is the tallest residential building on Manhattan’s East Side. Along with expansive waterfront views, Sutton Tower has 120 homes ranging from one to five bedrooms, as well as an extensive amenity package spanning five floors. Sales and marketing are led by Corcoran Sunshine Marketing Group.
All Sutton Tower residences have corner floor plans with a minimum of two exposures. Select full-floor and duplex penthouse residences offer south-facing outdoor loggias with views of the East River waterfront, Manhattan skyline, and New York Harbor. In 2024, Corcoran Sunshine reported five waterfront condo sales of more than $3,000 per square foot. Last fall Sutton Tower listed a $65 million duplex penthouse, the largest and most expensive new development condo on the East Side.
It isn’t just about the views when it comes to Sutton Tower. Nestled among chic townhouses and Art Deco buildings on the East Side waterfront, Sutton Tower offers residents seamless access to Midtown’s world-class dining and shopping, the Upper East Side, the plentiful gardens and green spaces, the East River Esplanade, and convenient transport via the East River heliport and seaplane terminals.
Indoors, residential amenities include a skylit club lounge with an outdoor terrace; formal dining room with seating up to 14 and adjacent chef’s kitchen; and screening room with a wet bar and a cinema-level audio-visual system. There is also a library; game room; playroom; casual dining lounge; and sports simulator. Health and wellness spaces include a 50-foot swimming pool; whirlpool; a state-of-the-art fitness center with boxing and movement studios; a spa treatment room; infrared saunas; showers; and changing rooms.
Sutton Tower residences have ceilings spanning from approximately 10 to over 15 feet, expansive windows, and wide-plank solid oak floors. Finishes for primary bathrooms include vanity and sinks carved from a single block of Bianco Dolomiti, marble slab walls, Waterworks polished chrome fixtures, Laufen soaking tubs, and radiant-heated floors. Kitchens come equipped with Sub-Zero refrigerator/freezer and wine refrigerator, Wolf oven and cooktop with vented hood, Dornbracht Tara Ultra polished chrome fixtures and Italian custom-crafted matte lacquer white cabinetry.
One- to five-bedroom residences begin at $1.825 million. For additional information or to schedule an appointment, contact the sales team at 646-846-5558 or visit www.suttontower.com.
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I looks out of place.
The NYC skyline is not as harmonious as it used to be
Are you expecting all the buildings to be the same height? NYC gets taller, if a new building is tall, then they all get taller afterwards. Once upon a time, the Empire State Building was out of place.
I wonder how slow sales are? Gone are the days of 15 CPW being sold out- and even resold- before being finished.
15 CPW was also an anomaly, much like 220 CPS is currently. Another buyer just flipped their 220 CPS unit for a decent profit without it ever being officially for sale.
I like the look for sure
The Riverhouse, the prestigious and imposing address of a residential tower looks kind of puny in the middle-ground in the thumbnail depiction.
It might look puny, but I’m sure it feels more solid and secure. They don’t build ’em like they used to.
If I had the money to afford one of these amazing properties, I’d still never live about the height of a fire truck ladder.
In NYC, the FDNY has a variety of ladder trucks, including 75-foot, 95-foot, and 100-foot rear mount ladders. A 300 ft. tower ladder exists, but NYC doesn’t have one.
A 100 foot ladder is typically considered to reach around 3-4 stories high.