Izak Senbahar (born 1959) is an American hotelier and real estate developer. He is president of Alexico Group LLC, which is involved in luxury residential and hotel development.[1][2] According to The Real Deal magazine, the combined value of the company's projects in 2014 was approximately $2 billion.[3]
In the mid-1980s, he joined Kiska, a Turkish construction firm, to help the company establish itself in the New York real estate market.[7] With Kiska, Senbahar oversaw the development of various properties including 353 Central Park West, a 19-story luxury condominium building.[8]
The Laurel, 2008. At 400 East 67th Street, this 129-unit condominium was designed by Costas Kondylis & Partners with interiors by Brian Callahan.[citation needed]
In 2017, Bilanz magazine ranked The Mark Hotel as the Best City Hotel in the World. In 2020, Travel + Leisure Magazine ranked The Mark Hotel; #1 Hotel in New York City and #1 City Hotel in The Continental U.S. In 2025, The Mark Hotel was recognized on The World's 50 Best Hotels list - the only property in New York City and one of just two in the United States to receive this distinction.
56 Leonard, completed in 2017. Designed by the Swiss architecture firm Herzog & de Meuron, this 60-story condominium tower stands 821 feet high and is the tallest building in Manhattan's Tribeca neighborhood.[citation needed]
56 Leonard was awarded the 2017 Engineering Excellence National Recognition Award by ACEC and the 2017 Best Projects Winner in the Residential/Hospitality Category by Engineering News-Record. In 2019, 56 Leonard was named one of New York City's 10 Most Important Buildings of the past decade by Curbed New York, a publication for American real estate and urban design.
Senbahar commissioned a sculpture at 56 Leonard Street. The sculpture – 48 feet long, 19 feet tall and weighing 40 tons – cost Senbahar $8 million.[12]
Film and television
Senbahar was featured in Season 1, Episode 1 of How Did They Build That?: Cantilevers & Lifts by the Smithsonian Channel. The show is centered on his 56 Leonard building in Tribeca, New York City.[13]
Personal life
He is married to Sarah Genske;[14] they have two children, Alexi and Oliver.[15] In an interview with The Real Deal magazine, Senbahar said that he enjoys "drumming, percussion and bongos."[16]
↑Katherine Clarke, "Izak Senbahar,"The Real Deal. Retrieved November 16, 2014.
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