200 East 75th Street Wraps Up Construction on Manhattan’s Upper East Side

Rendering of 200 East 75th Street, by DBOXRendering of 200 East 75th Street, by DBOX

Work is finishing up on 200 East 75th Street, an 18-story residential building on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. Designed by Beyer Blinder Belle Architects and developed by EJS Group, the 214-foot-tall structure spans 97,569 square feet and will yield 35 condominium units in two- to six-bedroom layouts. The development will also contain ground-floor retail space. The property is alternately addressed as 1305-1307 Third Avenue and located at the intersection of Third Avenue and East 75th Street.

The first four stories have been clad in their Indiana limestone façade since our last on-site update in mid-April, when crews were just beginning to install these panels over the blue waterproof membrane. The sidewalk shed has been removed, revealing the completed look of the ground floor and the main entrance, which is covered by a metal canopy and flanked by two large light fixtures. Beside this is a set of metal doors leading to a porte-cochère.

Some fencing and plastic barricades remain around the newly poured sidewalks, but are planned to be removed this weekend.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

Juliet balconies have also been added to numerous windows across the base.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

200 East 75th Street. Photo by Michael Young.

Yellow House Architects is the interior designer for the condominium units, which include five full-floor penthouses at the top of the building. Alexa Lambert of Compass Development Marketing Group is handling sales and marketing.

Homes come with herringbone and straight-plank oak wood flooring. Kitchens include an Italian Statuario Extra honed-stone counter, backsplash and island, complemented by a suite of Wolf and Sub Zero appliances. Primary bathrooms will feature a freestanding soaking bathtub, steam shower, and custom millwork vanity with silver nickel hardware.

Residential amenities will include a space dubbed The Parlor, complete with fireside seating, library, and catering kitchen that opens to a private courtyard garden. The garden will feature an outdoor fireplace and private seating alcove. There will also be billiards room adorned with French oak paneling, and a landscaped rooftop terrace with a full outdoor kitchen, private seating and dining areas, and panoramic views of the New York City skyline and Central Park.

Additional amenities include the Athletic Club, a fitness and wellness center with a private workout studio and hybrid sauna, as well as a Full Swing multi-sports simulator. The building will also feature a music room with practice space and soundproof recording and podcast booth, a children’s room, teen lounge, private cinema, pet bathing station, bike storage, and 24-hour concierge.

Developer EJS Group purchased the corner property for $32.5 million in March 2021.

The nearest subways from the development are the 6 train at the 77th Street station to the northwest along Lexington Avenue and the Q train at the 72nd Street station to the south along Second Avenue.

200 East 75th Street is expected to be fully finished this winter. Retail tenants have yet to be named.

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26 Comments on "200 East 75th Street Wraps Up Construction on Manhattan’s Upper East Side"

  1. David of Flushing | October 25, 2025 at 9:08 am | Reply

    RAMSA on the cheap.

  2. The cantilevered building to the south on 3rd Avenue makes the reality very different from the rendering.

  3. This is great for new mayor simply raise taxes . These apartments will be purchases and left empty. Sounds like archetural laundry job

  4. David in Bushwick | October 25, 2025 at 12:38 pm | Reply

    This is really well done, and even the ground floor was done right. This just proves again that the very tired glass box is the cheapest of exteriors, even though the usually empty apartments are anything but.

  5. Oof those expansion joints though…

  6. Another nice development with relatively affordable housing for what one gets. It’s out of my price range, but I’m not looking in that neighborhood for a reason- and that’s okay. The cantilevered art-deco is also looking quite nice albeit with an unusually unique design. I hope that tiny building left in between will invest in a nice renovation now, it could certainly use some brick work.

  7. “an unusually unique design” — as distinct from a commonly unique design?
    ___________________________________________
    Are those sunken living rooms on the east side of the building?

    • Haha, I caught myself writing that but left it there. Something about the double cantilever earns the redundancy, and then there is the fact that I don’t mind the uniqueness of the cantilevers which is unusual.

  8. The top floors really look like a mess.

  9. Ham fisted insulting attempt at classical architecture, zero understanding of proportions, looks a mess. The different width arches is a disaster, if this was built 300 years ago it would have been the laughing stock

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