Work on the façade and interiors of 40 East End Avenue is nearing completion on the Upper East Side. The 100,000-square-foot, 29-unit residential building is located at the corner of East 81st Street and will feature two- to five-bedroom apartments, a maisonette, and a duplex penthouse with a private rooftop terrace. Pricing for the residences will range from $3 million to $25 million. Deborah Berke Partners designed the 210-foot, 20-story project in collaboration with Gerner Kronick + Valcarcel Architects. Lightstone is the developer, while Corcoran Sunshine is responsible for sales and marketing.
“We thought a lot about what it means to live uptown today,” Deborah Berke said. “This building is richly textured and has a sense of mass, but it’s very human-scaled. I think neighbors will think the building belongs here, and that residents will feel a sense of belonging.”
New photographs show the simple yet stately exterior, which features a distinctive brick pattern.
The curtain wall is composed of large glass panels for the punched windows, as well as charcoal- and gray-colored bricks. This design was intended to evoke the historic pre-war architecture of the Upper East Side while also imparting a fresh, contemporary look to the structure. Cast-stone panels additionally add to the textural variety of the envelope. A curved driveway cuts through the base of the first floor, creating a covered porte-cochere.
A secondary entrance will be located on the eastern elevation of the first level, under a cantilevering metal and glass canopy.
40 East End Avenue is anticipated to be completed this summer.
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Nice . Quality looks excellent and in keeping with the designers intention it looks to fit in perfectly with its surrounding neighbors!
Bravo!
I think this will always be seen as the poor man’s 20 East End Avenue. Not as gracious. Much less detailing. Cheaper materials. However, the prices they’re asking don’t appear to reflect as much of a discount as you may have expected.
cheap materials
I like how it’s not totally covered in glass!! Excellent job team!
Not bad. Not bad at all. It will age gracefully.
I must say that 40 East End Avenue is beautiful design, but because it demolished our supermarket and a nice restaurant we now live in a food desert. I miss dashing out and quickly buying a quart of milk, etc. The restaurant really filled a niche.