Madison

The Round-Up: Tuesday

  • Costs of 2nd Avenue Subway grow.
  • [NY Times]
  • 76,000-square-foot lease at 88 Pine Street.
  • [NY Post]
  • Moinian drops condos at 60 Madison. [2nd item]
  • [NY Post]
  • More on subprime mortgage problems.
  • [Daily News]
  • Parks Department tries again in Coney Island.
  • [Daily News]
  • Bill would close southern Brooklyn zoning loophole.
  • [Daily News]
  • Construction starts on Upper East Side condo.
  • [GlobeSt]

    Did we miss any New York City real estate news this morning? Please send along tips and links.

Ravenous Broadway Partners Gobbles Two More Monsters

100 Wall Street.
Getty Images
100 Wall Street.

Is there anything more active than Scott Lawlor’s Broadway Partners?    read more »

Quietly, Midtown Asserts Its Dominance

illustration by nigel holmes

Downtown Manhattan grabbed headlines throughout the end of February, as Governors Spitzer and Corzin  read more »

SL Green Dreams Grand Central With $76 Million Madison Ave. Buy

<b>Second Item:</b> Stephen Green, principal of SL Green.
Don Hogan Charles/The New York Times
Second Item: Stephen Green, principal of SL Green.

The upmarket men’s clothier Thomas Pink is moving downtown.    read more »

The Sheriff of Landmarks

Robert Tierney.
NINA ROBERTS
Robert Tierney.

LOCATION: The controversy over 980 Madison Avenue has yet to be resolved, but the Landmarks Preserva  read more »

$1,739,370,834

WWPLAZA-L.jpgThat's the official amount the Macklowes paid for Worldwide Plaza, the second most-expensive office-building sale in U.S. history.

Here are the official price tags on three other buildings they bought:

1540 Broadway: $967,555,811 527 Madison: $234,641,309 Tower 56: $178,521,008

The Real Estate is still waiting on the records for the other four buildings the Macklowes bought last week from Blackstone; 1301 Avenue of the Americas should come close to breaking more records.

- John Koblin

Landmarks Leaves Door Slightly Ajar for Foster

A bad marriage or an open door? How best to characterize the reaction from Tuesday morning's Landmarks Preservation Commission meeting on Norman Foster's 22-story tower for 980 Madison Avenue?

The Real Estate called the principal actors for comment, having been unable to attend in person.

"Nine out of 10 commissioners strongly opposed the current project because of the height, the scale, and the materials were inapporpiate for the district," said commission spokeswoman Lisi de Bourbon. "They felt the building did not relate well with the Parke-Bernet building."

One commissioner, the Rev. Thomas Pike, even called it a "bad marriage."

But the developer, Aby Rosen, was ready for a lot worse.

"From our perspective, it went quite well," said Rosen's spokeswoman. "Nobody was closing the door and saying, 'Absolutely not. You can't build something on top of the Parke-Bernet building.'"

At least the commission did not take a vote, permitting the Foster-Rosen team to come back in a few months with a revised plan.

- Matthew Schuerman

Apparel Giant Dons Fresh Lease in Murray Hill

In renewal news, Phillips-Van Heusen has renewed and expanded to nearly 200,000 square feet at 200 Madison. The apparel company that brings you Calvin Klein, Bass and Izod renewed its 150,000-square-foot lease and expanded by an additional 47,629 feet at its Murray Hill home.

Cushman & Wakefield's Matthew Astrachan, Mitchell Konsker and Steven Bauer represented the tenant.  read more »

Release after the jump.

- John Koblin

The Round-Up: Wednesday

  • Quinn introduces 421-a compromise.
  • [NY Times]
  • Rising rates ratchet up costs of subprime mortgages.
  • [NY Times]
  • Forget the stats. Northeastern home values falling.
  • [NY Times]
  • Toll Brothers reports 44 percent earnings drop.
  • [NY Times]
  • Automated garages may rise in New York area.
  • [NY Times]
  • City eatery owners respond to trans-fat ban.
  • [NY Post]
  • 980 Madison opponents submit petition to Landmarks.
  • [NY Post]
  • 366 Madison sells for $116 million. [3rd item]
  • [NY Post]
  • UN to renovate secretary-general's Sutton Place mansion.
  • [Daily News]
  • Can French cuisine change Port Authority's reputation?
  • [NY Sun]

    Did we miss any New York City real estate news this morning? Please send along tips and links.

Aby Loves Tom - Not!

71955045%5B2%5D.jpg
Wolfe "works with the insult factor."

In a conversation on Tuesday with The Real Estate, the developer Aby Rosen did his best to besmirch the knight in a white suit who tried to rescue 980 Madison in the Times this weekend:

Tom Wolfe loves to rant and he's been ranting against the city and the Landmarks [Preservation] Commission and the commissioners left and right. I think the commissioners are doing a fantastic job. They do not need Tom Wolfe telling them what to do. The landmarking issue is worldwide. There is an issue, but he works with the insult factor. I always felt insults were a sign of weakness, not strength. He should stick to writing books. His facts were not great, either. It's easy to write an op-ed piece. You can pick and choose your facts.

Rosen, whom Wolfe described standing outside last month's commission hearing with his "chin up, tummy out," went on to extol all the great parts of 980 Madison Avenue that Charlotte Simmons' alter ego overlooked: the museum, sculpture garden, green technology and a very nice building to boot.  read more »

"I am a respected developer. I would do things right."

- Matthew Schuerman

Everybody Loves Eliot

Spitzer got up early today.

He was jogging out of Central Park and onto Madison Avenue at six in the morning when he ran into some journalists. He joked to a CBS reporter that the closer he came to being governor, the more people told him what to do.

He showed up at the school on 81st and Madison at 7:00 to shake hands and vote with Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Then he attended to some last-minute campaigning.

At a subway station on 72nd and Broadway, Spitzer joined Andrew Cuomo around 8:00 to pass out palm cards and shake hands. Soon after, more local politicians, like City Councilwoman Gail Brewer and Assembly candidate Linda Rosenthal, showed up and slipped into line behind the two men.There were so many photographers opposite the candidates, eventually including Congressman Jerry Nadler, that reporters and candidates formed a narrow sidewalk gauntlet which most of the morning commuters opted to avoid on their way to the station.

Most of the people who did walk the line went right for Spitzer, who wore a dark suit and a pilling red-striped tie.

"I'm a taxi driver and I'm going to cast my vote for you," said one man.

"We are all with you brother," said another.

One woman, Erin Oates, a 48-year-old who works in communications for a medial research center, told Mr. Sptizer that she voted for him despite being a Republican.

"He takes action -- he's not a talker like the others, and I'm tired of politicians who just talk," said Oates. "I'm sure he is ambitious and wants to be president, but he's doing s a great job in the meantime. So why vote for the Republican?"

--Jason Horowitz

Events for September 9-10, 2006

Tomorrow, Hillary Clinton joins Eliot Spitzer, Andrew Cuomo, David Paterson, and Alan Hevesi as "the labor ticket" to kick off the Labor Day Parade and Primary Day GOTV. The presser starts at 10:30 and the fun kicks off from Fifth Ave and 44th Street.

Unite Here representatives endorse Hillary Clinton at 45th Street between Madison and Fifth avenues.

Eric Gioia unveils a memorial plaque honoring 34 Woodside residents lost on September 11 at Doughboy Park in Woodside.

Ray Kelly will be awarded France's "Legion of Honor" medal at the French Consulate.

Peter King keynotes the Long Island 9/11 Memorial Ceremony at Farmingdale State's Little Theatre in Roosevelt Hall.

On Sunday, a candidates forum will be held for the 74th Assembly district.

Karol's throwing a blogger party at Mica Bar.

We don't have much for Sunday, so if we forgot anything please drop it in the comments section.

—Nicole Brydson

The Times on Ralph Lauren on Madison

rr.bmp
Ralph likes Madison
The Times' critical shopper Alex Kuczynski waxes philosophical about Ralph Lauren's voracious appetite for that WASPy block of Madison between 71st and 72nd.

Who knew things had gotten so bad "in the last couple of years"? Who knew the Episcopalians were resisitng? Who knew Joan Didion cared?  read more »

- Max Abelson

Café Infidélité

Where did they dine? <i>An Affair to Remember</i>.
Where did they dine? An Affair to Remember.

The Affair Restaurant is the setting—or one of the settings—for that stage of adultery t  read more »

Upper East Side Getting Green (and Leafy)

fractalromanesco8tw.jpg
Last night, Community Board 8 approved plans for two new greenmarkets on the Upper East Side. The first, at P.S. 6, on East 81st Street between Madison and Park, still needs approval from the school's principal and custodian, and then authorization from the city's Department of Education. The second, at St. Stephen of Hungary Parish (how apropos), on 82nd Street between First and York, needs the official green light from the church, which is expected to be given shortly.

Both greenmarkets, if approved, will operate from the beginning of July through mid-November. P.S. 6's will be held every Saturday, and St. Stephen's will be held every Sunday. Leftover food from the St. Stephen greenmarket will be donated to the church's soup kitchen, according to a greenmarket official.  read more »

-Matthew Grace

A Dress Appears, As If In A Dream....

LAURIE: I made my once-yearly visit to Barneys the other day. Or rather, I made my once-yearly visit to the 8th floor, a.k.a. Barneys Co-Op, a.k.a the only floor on which I do not get the sense that they are calling security on me--me with my broken-zippered windbreaker and the slight, sweaty sheen I get from riding the subway, no matter what time of year. I know that some of the city's wealthiest people dress like bums, but I doubt that high-end retail staffs mistake me for one of those people.
store clerk from pretty woman.jpg
Coping with high-end retail staff: Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman

So I did my usual routine: Enter on Madison, cut a sharp left to the elevators, avoid eye contact with everyone and head right up to 8. On the way back down, I like to take the escalators and peek in on every floor. I usually stop and check out the lingerie on 6; sometimes an $80 bra gets marked down to $20. One summer evening several years ago, I was so rattled by the uppity saleswoman sizing up my Old Navy tank top and grubby sandals that I put a gorgeous, delicate, full-price, dry-clean-only set of bra and undies by Prada on my beleaguered Visa card. Two balance transfers, an accidental and devastating trip to the laundromat and a debt-reduction program later, I'm sure that I'm still paying that shit off.  read more »

But this time, on a mixed-brand rack in the center of the sales floor, I found a simple, casual white cotton dress, strapless, knee-length, and priced at just over a hundred bucks. I tried it on: it fit, and it would fit if I shaved off a few pounds, put on a few pounds, or stayed exactly the same. It was the very first potential wedding dress I tried on, and I bought it without even soliciting a second opinion.

Showhouse Flipper Strikes Again

9east67.jpg
Flip this!
Recently, it seemed that almost every townhouse on the block of East 67th Street between Fifth and Madison avenues was up for grabs.

Last month (yes, now that we've moved down to the Flatiron District we don't get up there as often as we should), The Real Estate strolled the tony block and found four townhouses currently on the market, with the least expensive located at No. 9. Since November, that limestone mansion had been listed for $29 million, with Shel Joblin and C.B. Whyte at Stribling and Associates.

But now the 12,400-square-foot residence has been temporarily taken off the market, according to a source with knowledge of the listing.

At the center of it all (isn't she always?) is the Upper East Side's notorious Showhouse Flipper.  read more »

The Revolution Begins— On the Upper East Side!

Chalk one up for the evildoers: A man told the police that he was walking past 203 East 89th Street  read more »

Enlightened Self-Interest

Sent:* Thursday, July 14, 2005 * To:* *444 Madison * Subject:* from Adam Moss

everybody,

i am happy to announce that ben wasserstein will soon be joining our staff. as many of you know, ben is now an associate editor of vitals, where he helps edit/assign all the text (there's more of it than you think). he's been a frequent contributor to slate (among other things writing for their "summary judgment" column, like the other bens around here) and to the new kinsleyfied opinion pages of the la times. in various capacities, he's also worked at brill's content, caa, miramax, cbs and time warner -- and on the fabulous, if short-lived, new york magazine convention daily.

for obvious reasons, i have had the opportunity to get to know ben over the last year. he has impressed me as a smart and lovely guy, a talented editor who wants to work hard and to learn. i have remarked to some of you that he'd be a perfect candidate for a job here if he weren't a wasserstein -- and then recently, it began to seem like his last name was a pretty dumb reason not to hire him. so, in the past few weeks, we began to talk about a job. ben will be an associate editor, working principally for intel with jared and carl. he will also take on assorted projects for the strategist (exploiting some of the skills he's learned at vitals), and where necessary, pitch in on the culture pages.  read more »

so that's the new configuration. ben will be joining us after labor day. many thanks.

The Ring Cycle on 88th Street: Lost-and-Found Bauble Drama

What would you do if you found a ring on the street, an obviously expensive ring?  read more »

Mademoiselle of Madison Avenue

Luxury-goods heiress Coralie Charriol Paul was on the phone."There's this woman who lives on the Upp  read more »

Excess for Success: Young Chef Earns Wings … at Sea Level

"How do chefs think up such things?" asked my mother over the telephone from England.  read more »

Crime Blotter

Senior Moment: Old Man Robs Bank, Then Goes Back For MoreIt makes sense that, as the population keep  read more »

Ring Ring … Britney's Wolfin' a Bialy at Kossar's.

Upoc, a wireless messaging service that distributes text andvoice info to cell phones, has a popular  read more »

A Penny and Her Thoughts

"Oh my God, now I've gotten distracted by my own breasts," PennyArcade said.  read more »

The Crime Blotter

New York's Finest Work Mayor Mike's Chichi Shindig For what may have been the first-but certainly wo  read more »

Battleship B.S.: With Its New $516-Million Tower, Bear Stearns Bunkers Down for the Big One

Bear, Stearns and Company has built a new corporate headquarters ready for the worst New York has to  read more »

Decrepit Water Main Could Blow Anytime Right Under Fifth

Every day, tens of thousands of New Yorkers walk and ride above a 48-inch-wide Victorian-era water m  read more »

Here's One Way to Get A Cab to Take Your Route

The cabby, uncharacteristically for that breed, did as he was told, exiting the cab and waving good  read more »

Zitomer's Goes to the Dogs (and Cats)

Sharon Sternheim has eaten dog food. "I've tasted it," she admitted on Nov. 8.  read more »

Tang's Glitzy Shanghai Megashop May Not Be Long for Madison Avenue

When cigar-smoking, mandarin-jacket-wearing David Tang decided to open aShanghai Tang store on Madis  read more »

A $300 Million Dispute: Bank Sues Harry Macklowe Over Grand Skyscraper Plan

Harry Macklowe has the perfect real estate deal for the harried chief executive who rides the Metro-  read more »