| JPMorgan Chase Building 270 Park Avenue | |
|---|---|
| Topped-out JPMorgan Chase Building, as seen from the Empire State Building, situated between 432 Park Avenue and One Vanderbilt; March 2025 | |
| |
| Alternative names | JPMorgan Chase Building |
| General information | |
| Status | Completed |
| Type | Office building |
| Architectural style | Structural Expressionism, Neo-Art Deco |
| Location | 270 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017, U.S. |
| Coordinates | 40°45′21″N73°58′31″W / 40.7558°N 73.9754°W |
| Construction started | April 8, 2021 |
| Completed | August 25, 2025 |
| Opening | October 20, 2025 |
| Height | 1,388 feet (423 m) |
| Technical details | |
| Floor count | 60 |
| Floor area | 2,500,000 square feet (230,000 m2) [1] |
| Design and construction | |
| Architect | Foster + Partners |
| Architecture firm | AAI Architects, P.C. |
| Engineer | Jaros, Baum & Bolles (MEP) |
| Structural engineer | Severud Associates |
| Main contractor | Tishman Construction |
| References | |
| [2] | |
270 Park Avenue, also known as the JPMorgan Chase Building, is a supertall skyscraper on the East Side of the Midtown neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It has served as the global headquarters of JPMorgan Chase, the largest banking institution in the U.S., since October 2025. [3] [4]
Designed by the firm of Foster + Partners with an estimated $3 billion construction, the skyscraper rises 1,388 feet (423 m). [5] [6] Formally topped off in August 2025, the tower replaces the 52-story Union Carbide Building, built in 1960 and demolished in 2021. [7] The older building was originally the headquarters of American chemical company Union Carbide. [8]
Located in New York City's Midtown Manhattan neighborhood, 270 Park Avenue will occupy the entire city block bounded by Madison Avenue to the west, 48th Street to the north, Park Avenue to the east, and 47th Street to the south. [9] [10] The lot measures about 80,000 square feet (7,400 m2) with a frontage of 200 feet (61 m) on each avenue and 400 feet (120 m) on each street. [9]
The lot is part of Terminal City, the area that developed rapidly after the 1913 completion of the largely underground Grand Central Terminal. [11] The buildings erected in the following years included office buildings such as the Chanin Building, Bowery Savings Bank Building and New York Central Building, and hotels such as the Biltmore, Commodore, Waldorf Astoria, and Summit. [12] The site of the future 270 Park Avenue was occupied by a six-building complex, the Hotel Marguery, which opened in 1917 and was developed by Charles V. Paterno. The stone-clad hotel was 12 stories high and designed in the Renaissance Revival style. [13] [14] By 1920, the area had become what The New York Times called "a great civic centre". [15]
The Hotel Marguery was replaced by the 52-story Union Carbide Building, the first structure to occupy the entire block, which opened in 1960. [16] The building eventually became JPMorgan Chase's world headquarters. [17] Among the site's current neighbors are the old New York Mercantile Library and 400 Madison Avenue to the west; Tower 49 to the northwest; 277 Park Avenue to the east; 245 Park Avenue to the southeast; and 383 Madison Avenue to the south. [9]
Foster and Partners designed the building, which will be 1,388 feet (423 m) tall and rise to 60 stories. [18] [19] [20] [21] There are 24 massive columns at the base, [22] which will support a lobby measuring about 80 feet (24 m) high, with public space facing Madison and Park Avenues. Above the lobby will be a series of setbacks to the west and east, tapering to a pinnacle. [23]
The interior will fit 15,000 employees and will contain a food hall, a penthouse conference center, a fitness center, and large spaces illuminated by natural lights. [23] The floor plates will be able to be configured in several layouts. [24] To comply with city legislation, which bans the use of natural gas in all new buildings constructed after 2027, the structure will be powered entirely by hydroelectric energy. Ninety-seven percent of materials from the old building were creatively reused, recycled, or otherwise diverted from landfills. [23] [25]
The design team also includes Adamson Associates as architect of record; Jaros, Baum & Bolles as MEP engineer; Vishaan Chakrabarti as Collaborating Architect; [26] Gensler as workplace designer; [27] and Severud Associates as structural engineer. [28]
In February 2018, JPMorgan announced it would demolish the former Union Carbide Building to make way for a structure that was almost twice as tall. This was the first major project to be announced as part of the Midtown East rezoning in the 2010s. [29] [18] [28] The former building became the tallest voluntarily demolished building in the world at the time, overtaking the previous record-holder Singer Building that was demolished in 1968. [30] The replacement 1,388-foot (423 m), 70-story headquarters would have space for 15,000 employees. Tishman Construction Corporation will be the construction manager for the project. [18]
To build the larger structure, JPMorgan purchased hundreds of thousands of square feet of air rights from nearby St. Bartholomew's Episcopal Church as well as from Michael Dell's MSD Capital, the owner of the air rights above Grand Central Terminal. [31] [32] In October 2018, JPMorgan announced that British architectural firm Foster + Partners would design the new building. The plans for the new building had grown to 1,400 feet (430 m), though the zoning envelope allowed for a structure as high as 1,566 feet (477 m). [33] However, this also raised concerns that the taller building would require deeper foundations that could interfere with the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's East Side Access tunnels and the Grand Central Terminal's rail yards, which are directly underneath 270 Park Avenue. [34]
In May 2019, the New York City Council unanimously approved JPMorgan's new headquarters. [35] [36] In order to secure approvals, JPMorgan was required to contribute $40 million to a district-wide improvement fund and incorporate a new 10,000 square feet (930 m2) privately owned public space plaza in front of the tower. After pressure from Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer and City Council member Keith Powers, JPMorgan also agreed to fund numerous upgrades to the public realm surrounding the building, including improvements to Grand Central's train shed and a new entrance to the station at 48th Street. [36] [37] The MTA had planned to repair the Grand Central Terminal train shed's concrete and steel as part of the 2020–2024 MTA Capital Program. [38] [39] The first portion of the train shed to be repaired was underneath 270 Park Avenue, since the agency wished to conduct the repair work alongside new developments where possible. [39]
In July 2019, JPMorgan Chase signed an agreement with MTA in which the bank guaranteed that the demolition of 270 Park Avenue would not delay work on East Side Access. [40] That month, scaffolding was wrapped around the tower and podium structure on the Madison Avenue side of the building, the first step in an anticipated 18-month demolition effort. [41] But by late December 2020, only the podium structure had been demolished. Still, parts of the new superstructure were assembled on the Madison Avenue side, [42] and the following month saw the assembly of the new structure's first steel beams. [43] Demolition of the main tower was complete by April 2021; the entire demolition effort wrapped up in June. [44] [45]
This allowed workers to begin building support columns in the base across the entire site. [7] [46] By the end of the year, cranes and construction elevators had been built. [47] In April 2022, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon announced that he would further consolidate the company's New York City offices at 270 Park Avenue, since half of the staff would be able to work from home at least part of the time. [48] [49] In the first five months of 2023, construction reached the first two setbacks and rose above the height of the Union Carbide Building. [50] [51] [52] Work was temporarily suspended after a construction worker fell to his death from the 12th floor on March 24, 2023. [53] [54] As of 2023 [update] , the JPMorgan Chase Building was estimated to be completed in 2025. [23] [25] By late September construction had reached the fourth of the five tiers. [55]
There was a topping-out ceremony for the building on November 20, 2023. [56] [57] This involved a beam being welded in place at the top of the fourth tier, with "the crown to be topped out toward the very end of the year". [58] In December 2023, New York YIMBY predicted that the building would be architecturally topped-out by the following month; [59] this had occurred by February 2024. [60] Outside cladding work proceeded on the base columns as well as the walls, the Park Avenue side being done before the Madison Avenue side. [61] In late August the facade work reached the top of the structure. [62] By the end of 2024 the tower crane had been removed although the construction elevator remained in place on 48th Street, with interior and exterior work continuing in preparation for occupancy in 2025. [63] The superstructure and facade was essentially completed by April 2025. [64] JPMorgan Chase began moving employees to the building on August 25, 2025, [65] as part of a multi-phased relocation into the building. [66] The skyscraper was planned to formally open that October, [67] [66] and it had a formal opening ceremony on October 20, 2025. [68] It was one of several buildings in the neighborhood owned by JPMorgan, along with 383 Madison Avenue and 245 Park Avenue. [69]
Architectural critic Alexandra Lange described the new 270 Park Avenue in 2022 as "a Son of Hearst Tower grafted on top of creepy legs." [70] [71] Christopher Bonanos of Curbed characterized the building's base as supporting "all that heft balance, quixotically, on ballerinas' toes." [22] Reese Lewis of the Brooklyn Rail characterized its construction as "the fundamental condition of total contradiction", saying that the building's development had been motivated purely by economic factors and that the previous building had been torn down without good reason. [72]
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