Media Press

THE LEANING LANDMARK OF BROADWAY

LINK TO ARTICLE

M&R is proud to be awarded this project of extreme importance to landmarks and the city of New York. We are undertaking the extreme challenge of restoring and structurally stabilizing the jewel of iron facade buildings.

  • Read More

    Talk about endangered landmarks.


    The elegant cast-iron building at 287 Broadway, which “graphically illustrates the transformation of lower Broadway in the 19th century from a residential boulevard into the city’s commercial center” (as the Landmarks Preservation Commission put it), is leaning about eight inches to the south.


    This month, steel shoring is being erected against its south facade to replace the timber bracing that has been in place since late last year. The entire six-story building was vacated Nov. 29 by order of the Department of Buildings, leaving the Pizza Cafe, at the corner of Reade Street, with Christmas holiday decorations still hanging.


    “Our engineers feel strongly that 287 Broadway is stable and can be salvaged,” said Kate Lindquist, press secretary at the buildings agency. But for the moment, there is no saying when.


    That has left the building’s tenants in limbo, uncompensated and uncertain when they can return home or resume business.


    “They all know who did it,” said David Jaroslawicz, the lawyer for the Yenem Corporation, proprietors of the Pizza Cafe. “There’s no secret here. But nobody’s stepped up to the plate to say: ‘We’d like to take care of the tenants and the commercial space. And we’re sorry.”‘


    The “who,” Mr. Jaroslawicz said, is the John Buck Company of Chicago, a large development concern that is planning a 20-story condominium apartment building called 57 Reade Street, which will form an L shape around the landmark. It was designed by SLCE Architects.


    “I do not intend to comment,” Greg Merdinger, a principal in the John Buck Company, said by e-mail. “My goal is to simply finish construction of the building.”


    As the story goes, however, 287 Broadway was already leaning about four inches when excavation for 57 Reade Street began last spring, as permitted by the city. During excavation, monitors attached to the landmark recorded up to four more inches of movement. The city was notified. A vacate order was issued.


    Timber shoring, required by the city, was designed by Richard Herschlag, whom the city identified as the developer’s engineer. It was built by Hunter Atlantic Inc., which the city said was also responsible for the new steel shoring.


    “To safely rescind the vacate order, the remedial work on the foundation of 287 Broadway must be underway,” Ms. Lindquist said. “The developer’s engineer is working to find a way to perform the remedial work on the foundation. We expect the engineer will submit a plan for review within the month. At that time, we can better assess when the vacate order can be safely rescinded.”


    The saga has attracted coverage in The Tribeca Trib andamNewYork and has drawn comments on the Curbed and Lost Cityblogs, among others.


    Mr. Jaroslawicz said the situation pointed to the need for an insurance or bonding mechanism by which owners who were deprived of their businesses by construction accidents could be quickly compensated, rather than waiting years for the courts to straighten things out — as will almost certainly be the case at 287 Broadway.


    “The general contractor is going to blame the underpinning subcontractor, who’s going to blame the plant overseer, who’s going to blame the guy operating the backhoe, who’s going to blame the guy operating the crane,” he said. “And all the lawyers are going to have a feeding frenzy for the next couple of years.”


    There is something curiously appropriate about this, since 287 Broadway has been home to numerous lawyers’ offices since its completion in 1872. John B. Snook, a leading architect of the day (the original Grand Central was his work), designed the structure for the estate of Stephen Storm, combining Italianate and French Second Empire styles.


    “The prestige of the building was indicated both by the mansard roof and an early Otis passenger elevator,” the landmarks commission said in its 1989 designation report. It added, “Above the first story, the exterior of 287 Broadway looks much as it did in 1872.” This includes a 96-foot-long facade on Reade Street with 52 enormous arched windows, six of them set in monumental dormers.


    Antoine Scott, a street vendor on Broadway, has been watching the structural drama from his table full of socks, hats and gloves. “I’m just hoping that doesn’t fall down when I’m working here,” he said. “That’s what I’m talking about.”


    Mr. Jaroslawicz did not sound too confident about the fate of the “leaning tower of pizza,” as he calls it. “Don’t breathe too heavily,” he cautioned. “It might collapse.”


    But city officials sound confident that 287 can and will be saved. “Absolutely,” said John Weiss, deputy counsel of the Landmarks Preservation Commission.


    “Unless it was determined by the Department of Buildings that there was an immediate danger to public safety and the building had to be taken down right away,” Mr. Weiss continued, “a permit would have to be obtained from Landmarks for demolition.


    “It would be fair to say that the chance would be infinitesimal that the landmarks commission would authorize demolition of that landmark.”

RENTAL CONVERSION PLANNED FOR TRIBECA’S 319 BROADWAY

LINK TO ARTICLE

This project was awarded to M&R.

319 Broadway was a commercial conversion into beautiful, luxurious rentals, with a facade restoration offering some of New York’s finest architecture.

  • Read More

    A luxe rental conversion is coming to Tribeca, according to BuzzBuzzHome. Located at 319 Broadway, the eight-unit project is being developed by United American Land.


    The units will be a mix of one- and two-bedrooms, measuring a respective 850 square feet and 1,100 square feet, a United spokesperson told BuzzBuzzHome.


    GreenbergFarrow is the project architect.


    The five-story Italianate-style property is the remaining survivor of the “Thomas Twins,” which were identical commercial buildings that rose at 317 and 319 Broadway in 1869. No. 319 retains most of its appearance from the era and was landmarked in 1989.

BURLINGTON COAT FACTORY LEASES ALMOST HALF OF LABOZ’S JAMAICA RETAIL COMPLEX

LINK TO ARTICLE

M&R is excited to be involved with this pioneering project that is redeveloping Jamaica Avenue.

Burlington Coat Factory will anchor United American Land’s Jamaica Avenue retail redevelopment, leasing 70,000 square feet.

  • Read More

    The New Jersey-based retail chain will occupy the third and fourth floors of the GreenbergFarrow-designed building, as well as half of the second floor. Asking rent for the Queens space was $55 per square foot. The Burlington store is expected to open in the spring of 2017.United American Land represented itself in the deal, while Clifford Simon of CNS Real Estate represented Burlington, the New York Post reported.


    The developer, led by principal Albert Laboz, will combine 161-02 Jamaica Avenue with 160-16 Jamaica Avenue and 160-08 Jamaica Avenue to make one large, interconnected retail complex of about 150,000 square feet. The firm completed the assemblage of the three parcels last year. [NYP] – Ariel Stulberg

Share by: