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55 Broad Street

Coordinates:40°42′19″N74°0′40″W / 40.70528°N 74.01111°W /40.70528; -74.01111
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Building in Manhattan, New York
For the building in Newark, see550 Broad Street.

55 Broad Street
55 Broad Street in 2024, with construction on the top and15 William to the right
Map
Interactive map of 55 Broad Street
General information
StatusUpper floors closed for redevelopment
Type
  • Office (1967–2023)
  • Residential (planned)
LocationManhattan, New York, United States
Coordinates40°42′19″N74°0′40″W / 40.70528°N 74.01111°W /40.70528; -74.01111
Completed1967
OwnerSilverstein Properties and Metro Loft
Technical details
Floor count30
Floor areaAround 410,000 square feet (as of 2013)[1]
Design and construction
ArchitectEmery Roth & Sons

55 Broad Street is a 30-story building atBroad Street andBeaver Street in theFinancial District ofManhattan inNew York City, New York. It adjoins15 William, a skyscraper to the east. The building was constructed from 1964 to 1967, and initially operated as the headquarters of the trading firmGoldman Sachs from 1967 to 1983. It continued as an office building afterward, although it was vacant for renovations from 1991 to 1995. In 2023, renovations began to convert the building from commercial space into residential apartments. The project is expected to create 571 apartments and to finish in around 2025.

The building was owned by the Rudin Management Company from 1964 to 2023; the building was taken over bySilverstein Properties and Metro Loft for the redevelopment effort, although Rudin maintains a stake in the project.Ares Real Estate Group has also invested in the redevelopment venture.

History

[edit]

The area was previously covered by two connected 10-story buildings owned by the Areljay Company, 55 Broad Street and 45 Beaver Street. The former 55 Broad Street had been constructed in a colonnadedneo-Roman style in 1921, and 45 Beaver had been built as an annex in 1931. The main tenant of both buildings was the bankManufacturers Hanover Trust Company, which had previously owned the buildings before selling to Areljay in 1951 and continuing as tenants. Both buildings were bought bySamuel Rudin in October 1964, who arranged for the demolition of both in order to clear the site so that the construction of the new 55 Broad Street could begin.[2]

The new 30-story skyscraper was built by the firmEmery Roth & Sons, and was finished in 1967.Goldman Sachs, in its early growing years, was the building's tenant during its first 16 years. Goldman moved out in 1983 due to outgrowing it, going to the nearby 85 Broad Street. In 1985, investment bankDrexel Burnham Lambert (later infamous as the company at which disgraced financierMichael Milken worked) moved in as the main tenant. The firm went bust in 1990, leaving the building empty. Rudin spent around $40 million renovating the building over the next five years to removeasbestos and to add top-of-the-line for the era broadband and Internet connectivity, attracting tech companies to the building. New tenants includedSun Microsystems and a space for tech startup "incubators" run byErnst & Young.[3] Many of these left after thedot-com bust of 2000. The Rudin family had trouble keeping the space profitably rented in the 2010s, and came to the conclusion that the building was not viable continuing as office space. The Rudins did consider knocking down the building and building a taller replacement. However, changes in zoning rules since the 1960s would have meant having to give up space, and the cost of such a project was estimated at $600 million. The plans for the potential new building were leaked to the public in 2016, but ultimately nothing came of them.[4][5]

Thecoronavirus pandemic in 2020 further increased commercial vacancy rates, increasing the urgency of such a project, while residential vacancy rates remained very low. The Rudins sold most of their stake to Nathan Berman of Metro Loft andSilverstein Properties with the agreement that Metro Loft would lead a residential conversion.[1][5] Silverstein and Metro Loft originally intended to buy the building for $180 million in May 2022,[6][7] butincreasing interest rates led to the postponement of the sale.[8] The building was finally sold in July 2023 for $173 million.[8][9] The owners also took out a construction loan for the project at $220 million.[1][10] The next month,CetraRuddy was hired as the project's architect.[11] The plans called for the building to be converted into 571 apartments.[11][12] Silverstein's CEO Marty Burger cited the "great floor plate, great size, great ceiling heights" as reasons for his company's decision to convert 55 Broad Street into a residential building.[13]

The building's redevelopment is planned to be an all-electric residential building, which is not how buildings were traditionally made in New York. Environmental law changes in the 2010s and 2020s discouraged the use of gas for heating, and it also spared the redevelopment the trouble of including gas piping in the new layout. Many of the apartments are expected to be small studio apartments, aimed at recent college graduates working in the area without a family. One firm that had been renting office space as of 2023 initially sued to keep its lease, but later settled out of court and agreed to move out.[5][14] The building's leasing office had opened by September 2024; at the time, tenants were planned to start moving in by that November.[15][16] A lottery for the affordable apartments began in June 2025.[17][18] That September, Silverstein and Metro Loft placed the building on sale for $500 million.[19]

Reception

[edit]

A 2024 article inThe New Yorker by D. T. Max called the building's past as an office space "an unlovable building in an unlivable neighborhood" and wrote that the architecture firm was seeking to merely maximize the amount of rentable office space in its style of construction, which the article derisively called a "stack of boxes".Lower Manhattan had very few people living in it from the 1970s to the 1990s, with the neighborhood emptying out at night as the office workers went home, elsewhere. The redevelopment is part of a trend since 2000 whereby the area has become somewhat more balanced, with more residential space and fewer office buildings.[5]

Gallery

[edit]
  • View from the intersection of Broad and Beaver Streets, looking up
    View from the intersection ofBroad andBeaver Streets, looking up
  • Looking north along Broad Street, street-level
    Looking north along Broad Street, street-level
  • Lower floors
    Lower floors
  • Looking south along Broad Street; setbacks of the higher floors are visible
    Looking south along Broad Street; setbacks of the higher floors are visible

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"Silverstein Properties and Metro Loft Acquire 55 Broad Street" (Press release). Silverstein Properties. July 31, 2023.Archived from the original on May 12, 2024. RetrievedMay 12, 2024.
  2. ^"Rudin Acquires Downtown Site; Two Manufacturers Trust Buildings Are Taken".The New York Times. October 7, 1964.Archived from the original on May 12, 2024. RetrievedMay 12, 2024.
  3. ^
  4. ^Fedak, Nikolai (March 11, 2014)."Revealed: 55 Broad Street".New York YIMBY.Archived from the original on May 12, 2024. RetrievedMay 12, 2024.
  5. ^abcdMax, D.T. (April 29, 2024)."Can Turning Office Towers Into Apartments Save Downtowns?".The New Yorker.Archived from the original on May 6, 2024. RetrievedMay 7, 2024.
  6. ^Dilakian, Steven (May 18, 2022)."Silverstein, Metro Loft Buy 55 Broad Street for $180M".The Real Deal.Archived from the original on May 13, 2024. RetrievedMay 13, 2024.
  7. ^Young, Celia (May 17, 2022)."Silverstein Properties and Metro Loft Buying 55 Broad Street for $180M".Commercial Observer.Archived from the original on May 13, 2024. RetrievedMay 13, 2024.
  8. ^abLarsen, Keith (July 31, 2023)."Silverstein and Metro Loft Close on 55 Broad Street".The Real Deal.Archived from the original on May 15, 2024. RetrievedMay 13, 2024.
  9. ^Small, Eddie (July 31, 2023)."Development giants buy downtown office tower for $173M".Crain's New York Business.Archived from the original on May 13, 2024. RetrievedMay 13, 2024.
  10. ^Coen, Andrew (August 1, 2023)."Banco Inbursa Supplies $220M for Manhattan Office-to-Resi Conversion".Commercial Observer.Archived from the original on May 13, 2024. RetrievedMay 13, 2024.
  11. ^abWalton, Chris (August 3, 2023)."CetraRuddy will design the office-to-residential conversion of Emery Roth's 55 Broad Street".The Architect's Newspaper.Archived from the original on May 13, 2024. RetrievedMay 13, 2024.
  12. ^Davidson, Justin (January 24, 2024)."A Bad Office Can (Maybe) Become a Good Apartment".Curbed.Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. RetrievedMay 13, 2024.
  13. ^Feldman, Eric (November 9, 2023)."Office-to-housing conversions continue in the city".Spectrum News NY1.Archived from the original on May 13, 2024. RetrievedMay 13, 2024.
  14. ^Ralph, Pat (March 20, 2023)."Office tenant sues to stop 55 Broad resi conversion".Archived from the original on May 12, 2024. RetrievedMay 12, 2024.
  15. ^Ginsburg, Aaron (September 23, 2024)."Former FiDi office tower launches leasing for luxury rentals, from $4,100/month".6sqft. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2024.
  16. ^Cattan, Nacha; Wong, Natalie (September 23, 2024)."Goldman's Old Headquarters Turned Into $4,000-a-Month Apartments".Bloomberg.com. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2024.
  17. ^Young, Celia (February 10, 2013)."Housing lottery launches for 143 apartments in the Financial District".Brick Underground. RetrievedSeptember 19, 2025.
  18. ^Ginsburg, Aaron (June 4, 2025)."143 apartments available at FiDi office tower-turned-luxury rental, from $912/month".6sqft. RetrievedSeptember 19, 2025.
  19. ^Cunningham, Cathy (September 18, 2025)."Silverstein, Metro Loft Put 55 Broad on the Market for $500M-Plus".Commercial Observer. RetrievedSeptember 19, 2025.
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