Crown Building (Manhattan)

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Crown Building
Crown Building New York.jpg
View of the Crown Building, 2007
Crown Building (Manhattan)
Former namesHeckscher Building
General information
Address730 Fifth Avenue
Town or city New York City
CountryUnited States
Coordinates 40°45′46″N73°58′28″W / 40.762868°N 73.974554°W / 40.762868; -73.974554
Completed1921
Design and construction
Architecture firm Warren and Wetmore
DesignatedMay 14, 2024
Reference no.2678

The Crown Building is a historic 26-story, 416 foot mixed-use skyscraper at the southwest corner of 57th Street and Fifth Avenue in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. The lower levels contain retail space, while the upper levels formerly housed offices, but were converted to the luxury Aman New York hotel and residences in 2022. Constructed as the Heckscher Building in 1921, the structure was designed by Warren and Wetmore. It was historically one of the most expensive retail and office space locations in the United States and the hotel has the highest base rate of any hotel in the city.

Contents

History

Heckscher Building, 1921 Bird's eye view of Heckscher Bldg. LCCN2004673286.jpg
Heckscher Building, 1921

Office use

The Heckscher Building was constructed by philanthropist August Heckscher, who had built his fortune from zinc and Manhattan real estate. It was designed by Warren and Wetmore and completed in 1921. [1] Architect Charles A. Wetmore was an investing partner with Heckscher in the tower's construction. [2] The building was one of New York's first major multi-use structures, with stores and showrooms on the lower levels and offices on the upper floors. It was also one of the first skyscrapers in the city whose stepped, setback design was regulated by the 1916 Zoning Resolution. The resolution had been passed after the 1915 construction of the Equitable Building in Lower Manhattan, whose towering, vertical sheer walls blocked sunlight to much of the surrounding neighborhood. [2]

The Museum of Modern Art opened in a rented six-room suite on the Heckscher Building's twelfth floor on November 8, 1929, just ten days after the Wall Street Crash of 1929. [3] The museum remained there until 1932. When Rockefeller Center opened nearby in 1933, Heckscher blamed the developers for decreased demand at his building, and sued them for improper leasing methods. The suit never went to trial. However, Heckscher lost ownership of the building in 1938, after a four-year foreclosure process. [2] In 1946, Charles F. Noyes and Joseph Durst bought the building. They sold it to Kenneth S. Keyes in 1950. In 1964, it was renamed the Genesco Building, when Genesco, which owned Bonwit Teller across the street, became a major tenant. [4] In 1966, it was sold to Centurion Real Estate Inc.. [2]

The structure was purchased in 1981 by then President of the Philippines Ferdinand E. Marcos. Marcos used international companies to purchase the building secretly, also obtaining help from Ralph and Joseph Bernstein as well as Adnan Khashoggi. [5] The name was changed to the Crown Building in 1983, after its crown-like look when illuminated at night. [1]

The Crown Building was the focus of various lawsuits after the fall of the Marcos regime. [5] Numerous parties, including the Philippine government, claimed rights to it. Lawsuits claimed that Marcos entered into various agreements for the building or purchased it with money that was not his. [5] The parties involved agreed to sell the building and split the proceeds in excess of the $89 million mortgage. [5]

In 1991, Bernard Spitzer and partners Marvin Winter and Jerome L. Greene acquired the building for $93.6 million. After Spitzer's death in 2014, his son, former Governor of New York Eliot Spitzer, and the Winter family took over the property. [6] The building was scheduled for auction in late 2014, but Jeff Sutton's Wharton Properties and Sandeep Mathrani's General Growth Properties stepped in prior to the auction and purchased the building [7] for $1.75 billion, one of the largest deals in New York City real estate history. The purchase price included both the 400,000 square-foot office portion of the tower and 35,000 square feet (3,300 m2) of retail space on the ground floor of the building. [7]

Hotel use

In 2015, Michael Shvo and Russian billionaire Vladislav Doronin purchased the office portion of the building for $500 million. [8] Shvo and Doronin announced plans to convert and redevelop their portion of the Crown Building into a luxury hotel and residences. [8] [9] General Growth Properties and Wharton Properties retained the retail portion of the building.

Milan-based luxury menswear brand Ermenegildo Zegna announced in March 2016 that it would lease 1,500 square feet (140 m2) of ground-floor space and 7,500 square feet (700 m2) on the second floor for 10 years. [10] [11] The new Peter Marino-designed space opened on February 13, 2019. [12]

In 2019, the $1.45 billion [13] conversion work on the upper levels was begun by Doronin's OKO Group, funded in part by a $750 million loan. [14] The lower levels remained retail, while the rest of the building was converted to the luxury Aman New York hotel & residences, operated by Doronin's Aman Resorts. The hotel portion, on floors 7–14, contains 83 rooms, three restaurants and a spa. The residential portion, on floors 15–30, consists of 22 condominiums. [15] The first units became available in early 2021. [16] The hotel opened on August 11, 2022. [13] Rooms started at $3,200 a night. [17] On May 14, 2024, the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the Crown Building as an official city landmark. [18] [19]

Current retail tenants

See also

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References

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  3. "MoMA Starts: An 80th Anniversary Exhibition". MoMA.org. Archived from the original on August 27, 2022. Retrieved August 27, 2022.
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