A large, deep gash on one side of the 467-foot-tall building will create a central, light-filled public atrium.
The pyramid is expected to cost more than $500 million to build, with completion slated for 2015.
The Durst Organization expects that West 57 sustainability features, including a blackwater recycling system and a compressed-natural-gas shuttle bus to the Columbus Circle transit hub, will earn it a coveted LEED Gold-rating.
[See ElectricWeb | Blogger, Apr 29, 2012]
The construction team is largely in place, with Thornton Tomasetti as structural engineer, SLCE as architect of record and Starr Whitehouse as landscape architects.
Despite all its planning and engineering, the site will still be quite difficult to develop; a sloping plot land in flood evacuation Zone B, adjacent to Con Ed’s 58th Street steam plant, the Sanitation Department’s Pier 97 facility, and the West Side Highway.
City officials leaned on the developer to provide upgrades to the 59th Street highway underpass for safer pedestrian access to the waterfront.
The City Council’s Zoning and Franchises committee held its first public hearing on January 17, and the City Council will vote in early February to approve, modify, or block the project.
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