After photographing the construction of Fordham’s new law school/dormitory building, I saw a sidewalk fence that was in the process of being built on the corner of Amsterdam and 62nd Street. It was difficult to see inside, however these new documents filed with the Council of Tall Buildings and Urban Habitats show that the building’s construction is imminent, set to begin in earnest next year. With excavation equipment already on site, things are certainly moving forward rapidly.
160 West 62nd Street: Image from Douglaston Development |
While the tower dwarfs most everything around it in this rendering, that will not be the case for long in reality. 160 West 62nd will certainly be one of the tallest in the neighborhood after completion, but there are several buildings within a few blocks that will also be taller than 500 feet. The closest is Fordham’s other residential tower that will soon be going up on the corner of 60th and Amsterdam; also nearby is Extell’s Riverside South development, which may feature multiple buildings of 500′ and greater. Here is the first phase of Fordham’s expansion once more, showing where each of Fordham’s new 50+ story buildings will rise:
Phase 1 Build-Out: Image from Fordham’s development application, posted by NYGuy at skyscraperpage.com |
Until quality renders of the project are released, it will be impossible to gauge the building’s architectural standing, although the one rendering that has been released makes the project look fairly basic.
One thing is certain: Fordham’s expansion will add immense density to the super-block, and the immediate vicinity will increasingly resemble Midtown rather than the Upper West Side, given the scale of development. Still, the building stays within the bounds of other tall Upper West Side buildings–the tallest towers nearby are all roughly 600 feet to the top, besides the Time Warner Center. 160 West 62nd should act more as a ‘stepping-stone’ to the peaks of Midtown rather than as a monolith by itself, and will hopefully make an excellent addition to the growing skyline of the lower Upper West Side.
If only some quality renderings were finally released!
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