YIMBY Scopes The Views From No. 33 Park Row, in Financial District

No.33 Park Row seen from City Hall Park at sunset. Rendering by Noë & Associates with The Boundary

Construction is close to completion on No. 33 Park Row, aka Pearl on the Park, a 23-story residential building in the Civic Center section of the Financial District. Designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Sir Richard Rogers and Graham Stirk of Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners and developed by Centurion Real Estate Partners and Urban Muse, the 331-foot-tall reinforced concrete structure spans 95,000 square feet with 30 units. These homes range from one- to five-bedroom condominiums and penthouses with many featuring private outdoor space. No. 33 Park Row stands on a corner plot along Park Row, which served as a historic location for some of New York City’s first skyscrapers such as the New York Tribune Building and the World Building. Consigli Construction Co., Inc. is the general contractor and Compass Development Marketing Group is the exclusive marketing and sales agent for the property, with sales underway.

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

YIMBY took photographs showing the nearly finished exterior with only the ground floor underneath the sidewalk scaffolding left to be completed. There are also views looking from the rooftop and upper loggia that presented a wonderful vantage point of City Hall Park and the surrounding landmarks.

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

No. 33 Park Row. Photo by Michael Young

Homes span floors six through 23, with a maximum of three residences per level. All feature views of City Hall Park and are finished with floor-to-ceiling and wall-to-wall tempered Climaguard high-performance (low-e) glass windows, open-plan kitchens, custom white oak cabinetry, a suite of premium Miele appliances, and sculptural honed tundra gray marble islands with waterfall edges. Most units have a selection of loggias, terraces, and Juliet balconies that come with wooden floors and custom-perforated copper screening for privacy while allowing airflow.

Looking during the daytime. Designed by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Looking at night. Designed by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

The ground floor of No. 33 Park Row along Beekman Street. Designed by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

A bedroom.

Looking out to City Hall Park.

A bathroom.

Photo by Michael Young

Amenities will be located at the base and pinnacle of the building and include a 24-hour doorman and concierge service; a fifth-floor indoor/outdoor fitness center and yoga studio curated by The Wright Fit and adjacent covered outdoor kitchenette and dining area; the Park Library on the sixth floor, which includes a residential lounge with a show kitchen, dining area, and co-working space; a 2,500-square-foot rooftop garden and lounge with al fresco dining and entertaining areas that embrace panoramic views overlooking City Hall Park and Lower Manhattan; bicycle storage; a cellar-level craft room and workspace; and a 12-person screening room with state-of-the-art audio system and wet bar.

Total completion of No. 33 Park Row is expected sometime in early months of 2022.

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13 Comments on "YIMBY Scopes The Views From No. 33 Park Row, in Financial District"

  1. David : Sent From Heaven. | November 13, 2021 at 8:24 am | Reply

    Views overlooking City Hall Park so beautiful, and Lower Manhattan. The surrounding next to the progress, beautiful views as well as I see on your photos: Thanks to Michael Young.

  2. David in Bushwick | November 13, 2021 at 8:54 am | Reply

    This design is a real gem. But $2.2 million for a 1 bedroom?!

  3. This building is just incredible. Robert Stirk Harbour+Partners is really second to none. Look at 3 WTC for example. Anyhow, very nice.

    • Everything about the building is first rate but, for $5 million, where do you put a vacuum cleaner? Buildings about Instagram photos but not living. We should hold the builders/ architects responsible!!

  4. Views aren’t half bad 🙂

  5. The range of architectural styles and details shown in these photos is incredible in comparison to Hudson Yards/Dubai West….

    Will add this area to my next NYC visit in ’22!! 🤗

  6. Wow… Stunning photography. Thank you Michael Young!

    Love how this building turned out and the views are incredible.

  7. This and its immediate neighbor to the south on Park Row are lamentable downers to the exquisitely rich architectural landscape that characterize this district.
    As your obsessively amassed photos of surrounding ‘views’ illustrate they are parasitic presences ‘glommed-on to the urban fabric— there strictly on the take, with only static to contribute. Both are adolescent works
    perplexingly stuck in the last century’s infatuation with “the expressed grid”. Move on people! Open your eyes and get beyond hermetic ideology.

    • Did you type this while standing alone in the corner at a party?

    • Thanks, Debbie Downer. Your architectural ideology appears to be hermetically sealed in another time and place. You criticized these two buildings without offering any suggestion of what is wrong with them or what would be better in your view. The Rogers Stirk Harbour building is gorgeous, as are its “parasitic” views.

  8. Mr. Young has a wonderful job photographing lower manhattan. Is there anything grander than the Woolworth Building? Time moves on, and soon people will ask what is Woolworth’s?

  9. @FR. Kinda agree.
    But- It ..seems to be…. from photos a very well designed building given 2021 context but heck..I agree on the 2.2M price tag. It’s a very rough / civil servant / tourists getting onto Brooklyn Bridge area. Not nice for most people with money. Only a sliver of people would pay that top dollar for such a “MEH Location” – IMO.

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