The striking, 870,000-square-foot edifice will rise on West 57th Street, between 11th and 12th Avenues, on a site that looks toward the Hudson River. Ingels describes the 700-unit structure as a 'courtscraper,' a fusion of a Manhattan high-rise and an enclosed European courtyard. A large, deep gash on one side of the 467-foot-tall building will create a central, light-filled void; at its base, a verdant courtyard designed by landscape architect Starr Whitehouse will add a natural dimension to the building. 'Let's see what happens if you take the idea of Central Park and introduce it not at the scale of a city,' Ingels says, 'but at the scale of a city block.'
The slanted pyramid will sit atop a podium containing a lobby, shops, and cultural space. Ingels says the sloping facades will ensure that tenants in an adjacent structure still have river views. The slopes also respond to their context metaphorically: The building angles upward from west to east (from the shoreline to the city) and from south to north (from the low-rise Clinton district to high-rise Midtown).
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