Construction is nearing completion on 7 Platt Street, a 464-foot-tall mixed-use building in Manhattan’s Financial District. Designed by Hill West Architects and developed by The Moinian Group, the 37-story structure will span 250,000 square feet and yield 250 rental apartments in studio- to two-bedroom layouts, including penthouse residences with an accompanying penthouse lounge. The project will also include 43,740 square feet of retail space on the first five stories and 34 below-grade parking spaces. The property is alternately addressed as 110 John Street and located on an interior lot bounded by John Street to the north and Platt Street to the south.
The reflective glass curtain wall finished enclosing the tower since our last update in December, when the envelope was still rising up the reinforced concrete superstructure and the podium remained exposed. The base and crown are now clad in dark bronze paneling, and only the main entrance and the gap in the northern elevation where the hoist is anchored remain to be completed.
The main rendering in the main photo depicts the southern elevation, where the topmost levels feature stacks of balconies that line the corners. The building culminates in a rooftop deck and bulkhead clad in gray paneling. An additional landscaped terrace is shown topping the multistory podium.
Residential amenities will include a fitness center, a rock climbing wall, a library, work and study pods, longe spaces, a TV screening wall that opens onto the coinciding outdoor deck, private dining spaces with outdoor terrace access, a gaming and virtual reality area, laundry facilities, and a communal kitchen. Other outdoor amenities include a rooftop sundeck and garden lounge, a movie lounge area with seating, barbecue grilling stations, outdoor fitness equipment, coworking space, and a golf putting area.
Fogarty Finger was the interior designer for the project.
The site is located near the Fulton Street subway station, served by the A, C, J, Z, 2, 3, 4, and 5 trains.
7 Platt Street is expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2026.
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I like the base, looks sharp.
No rental prices mentioned. Are the apartments bugged?
Very blue, if I were a bird, I could see getting confused and flying into it; new bird ‘safety’ glass or not..
but there will be a painful crash….✨!☕️
Glad they did away with the two vertical bars being different facade expression idea looks much better, podium looks nice too
Good looking building on one of those odd Lower Manhattan blocks.
The upper 5 floors of the podium is the best part of the design. The tower shaft is weird with the recessed cake pans, and it’s all ruined by the hugely projecting balconies at the top-heavy top. Fortunately the building is lost amongst the other buildings.
maybe I should move away Sutton Place and settle down to life here….difficult decision ?!
I’m sure you’ll figure it out..
Possible. I actually live in Los Angeles, but I’m often in NYC. My job requires it, and I also have some good friends in NYC.& and I love this city..
Five floors of retail seems a bit wishful thinking in today’s retail climate.
First 6 floors are hotel with small retail space only on the ground floor.
Possible. I actually live in Los Angeles, but I’m often in NYC. My job requires it, and I also have some good friends in NYC.& and I love this city..
Fantastic structure. Hope they offer washer dryers in all of the units. It remains me of Brooklyn latest high-rises. My only grievance with these modern buildings is you can’t open up any windows like you would back fifteen years ago. The Window open only a crack.