flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Not so strange bedfellows: hybrid buildings in New York combine unlikely tenants

Reconstruction & Renovation

Not so strange bedfellows: hybrid buildings in New York combine unlikely tenants

“Found money” for owners looking to monetize their air spaces, says FXCollaborative, which has designed several of these buildings.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | March 3, 2020
77 Greenwich in New York City architect FXCollaborative

77 Greenwich in New York City combines spaces for a school and residential tenants. These “hybrid” buildings are becoming a more attractive option in this land-scarce metro. Renderings: FXCollaborative

   

New York City’s scarcity of developable sites, and pressures on the use of what land is available, have created opportunities for innovative design that, for the past few years, FXCollaborative has taken advantage of by creating hybrid buildings that pair tenants that typically stand alone.

“Our experience is understanding the three-dimensional puzzle,” says Dan Kaplan, a senior partner at the firm. He adds, too, that these hybrids—which he also calls “graphed buildings”—give owners and developers more options for monetizing their land and air space. “It’s found money.”

This has developed into something of a subpractice for FXCollaborative, as it touches on zoning, entitlement, and several of its other practices’ typologies.

The firm’s first hybrid project, which was completed in 2016, was 35XV in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood. The 170,000-sf project utilized excess development rights from the historic Xavier High School by expanding the school by 40,000 sf and building condos on top of that building. The school’s emergency power and egress are independent of the residences. The finished product, certified LEED Silver, rises 347 ft. (The clients were Alchemy Properties and Angelo Gordon.)

Nearing completion this year is a similar hybrid, 77 Greenwich, which has street-level retail and a 70,000-sf 476-seat public school at its base, and a 90-unit residential tower above, crowned with a penthouse. Trinity Place Holdings is the client for this 300,000-sf 42-story stone and glass building. “It doesn’t look like your standard public school,” says Kaplan.

One Willoughby Square in Brooklyn, which is scheduled for completion next year, will include 34 stories of office space graced with abundant daylighting and outdoor terraces, coupled with ground-level retail and a 320-seat public school on floors two through six, with its own entrance. Office workers and students will benefit from a new one-acre park in front of the building.  (JEMB Realty is the client.)

A cutaway rendering of what the office layout will look like at One Willoughby Square in Brooklyn, which will have a school and retail space on its lower floors. 

 

In the works, although construction hasn’t started yet, is La Hermosa Church, which FX Collaborative is working with to develop a 33-story building on the site of an existing house of worship that would include 160 residential units, of which 50 will be affordably priced. Adjacent to the tower would be a low-rise community center that includes space for religious worship as well as a gallery and event space, practice rooms, and performance space.

Kaplan notes that the building is in a neighborhood where Latin jazz has its roots, “so community is superimportant.” The development must also address landmarking, which Kaplan explains can be a challenge for a religious structure at a time when parishes are shrinking.

In January, FXCollaborative hosted a panel discussion about hybrids with a land-use attorney, a developer, and representatives from ULI NY and New York City’s School Construction Authority. Kaplan says that FX has been getting more interest from developers and owners throughout New York's counties: new projects include a library in Brooklyn, N.Y., that would have condos or offices above it. “These are buildings within buildings, and it all comes down to design and site planning,” he says.

Related Stories

| Feb 14, 2014

Must see: Developer stacks shipping containers atop grain silos to create student housing tower

Mill Junction will house up to 370 students and is supported by 50-year-old grain silos.

| Feb 13, 2014

Extreme Conversion: Nazi bunker transformed into green power plant, war memorial

The bunker, which sat empty for over 60 years after WWII, now uses sustainable technology and will provide power to about 4,000 homes.

| Feb 5, 2014

Extreme conversion: Atlanta turns high-rise office building into high school

Formerly occupied by IBM, the 11-story Lakeside building is the new home for North Atlanta High School.

| Jan 31, 2014

6 considerations for rehabbing student union buildings

Most colleges and universities feel pressure to offer the latest amenities in order to attract and retain the best and brightest students. While hauling in the bulldozer to create modern facilities is attractive in some regards, deciding to renovate can be just as effective and, in some cases, even preferable to new construction.

| Jan 29, 2014

Historic church will be part of new condo building in D.C.

Sorg Architects unveiled a design scheme for 40 condos in a six-story building, which will wrap around an existing historic church, and will itself contain four residential units. 

| Jan 29, 2014

Notre Dame to expand football stadium in largest project in school history

The $400 million Campus Crossroads Project will add more than 750,000 sf of academic, student life, and athletic space in three new buildings attached to the school's iconic football stadium. 

| Jan 14, 2014

D.C. Navy Yard building, site of mass shooting, will be renovated

A remembrance area and a new visitor's entrance will be among the changes when the Navy rebuilds Building 197 of the Washington Navy Yard, where a gunman killed 12 people and then was killed in a shooting spree in September 2013.

| Jan 6, 2014

Energy-efficiency retrofits can help reduce healthcare costs

Reducing energy consumption through energy-efficiency retrofits represents an underappreciated way to cut healthcare costs, according to the Rocky Mountain Institute.

| Jan 2, 2014

West Hollywood drug den to be remade into boutique hotel

San Vicente Inn, a cluster of century-old historic bungalows, known as a haven for nudists and drug users, in West Hollywood, Calif., will be converted into a boutique hotel.

| Dec 31, 2013

Top 10 blog posts from 2013

BD+C editors and our contributors posted hundreds of blogs in 2013. Here's a recap of the most popular topics. They include valuable lessons from one of the first BIM-related lawsuits and sage advice from AEC legend Arthur Gensler.  

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Libraries

Reasons to reinvent the Midcentury academic library

DLR Group's Interior Design Leader Gretchen Holy, Assoc. IIDA, shares the idea that a designer's responsibility to embrace a library’s history, respect its past, and create an environment that will serve student populations for the next 100 years.



Brick and Masonry

A journey through masonry reclad litigation

This blog post by Walter P Moore's Mallory Buckley, RRO, PE, BECxP + CxA+BE, and Bob Hancock, MBA, JD, of Munsch Hardt Kopf & Harr PC, explains the importance of documentation, correspondence between parties, and supporting the claims for a Plaintiff-party, while facilitating continuous use of the facility, on construction litigation projects.


halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021