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
| Dec 27, 2013
U.S. Capitol dome’s cracks to be repaired during $60 million renovation
Rings of scaffolding will start to rise this spring around the cast-iron dome of the U.S. Capitol in Washington as part of a $60 million renovation project to repair more than 1,300 cracks.
| Dec 16, 2013
Major renovation for historic Northwestern Building in Minneapolis
Minneapolis’s Northwestern Building, originally built in 1914 as a glass factory, is undergoing a major renovation. The 85,000-sf, four-story building is now serves as office space for multiple tenants in Minneapolis’ North Loop neighborhood.
| Dec 9, 2013
Bethlehem, Pa., receives preservation award for Bethlehem Steel building renovation
Bethlehem, Pa., is a recipient of a 2013 award by Preservation Pennsylvania for a renovation of the oldest building on the former Bethlehem Steel Corp. site.
| Dec 3, 2013
Historic Daytona International Speedway undergoing $400 million facelift
The Daytona International Speedway is zooming ahead on the largest renovation in the Florida venue’s 54-year history. Improvements include five redesigned guest entrances, an extended grandstand with 101,000 new seats, and more than 60 new trackside suites for corporate entertaining.
| Dec 2, 2013
Army Corps of Engineers workers displaced during renovation of federal building in Huntington, W. Va.
A $47.6 million overhaul of the Huntington Federal Building in Huntington, West Virginia, includes altered traffic lanes on adjoining streets and the displacement of some of the more than 500 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers employees who work in the building.
| Nov 27, 2013
Wonder walls: 13 choices for the building envelope
BD+C editors present a roundup of the latest technologies and applications in exterior wall systems, from a tapered metal wall installation in Oklahoma to a textured precast concrete solution in North Carolina.
| Nov 27, 2013
University reconstruction projects: The 5 keys to success
This AIA CES Discovery course discusses the environmental, economic, and market pressures affecting facility planning for universities and colleges, and outlines current approaches to renovations for critical academic spaces.
| Nov 25, 2013
Plans for massive redevelopment of Ft. Monmouth in New Jersey likely to be revised
The redevelopment of Fort Monmouth, a former New Jersey army base, is likely to be revised on a building-by-building and parcel-by-parcel basis, officials say.
| Nov 18, 2013
Office design trends spurring office building renovations in Grand Rapids, Michigan
Key office design trends such as downsizing of overall space, more open floor plans, and the inclusion of more collaborative workspaces are prompting property owners in Grand Rapids, Mich., to renovate thousands of square feet of office space.
| Nov 11, 2013
Reconstruction of historic Salzburg, Austria railroad station took complex planning
Salzburg, Austria’s Central Station remained in operation during reconstruction, a feat that required complex planning.