799 Broadway Completes Construction in Greenwich Village, Manhattan

799 Broadway. Rendering by Binyan Studios

Construction is complete on 799 Broadway, a 12-story commercial building in Greenwich Village. Designed by Perkins + Will and developed by Columbia Property Trust, the 182-foot-tall structure yields 180,000 square feet of office space marketed by JLL. Consigli Construction Co. served as the general contractor for the project, which is located at the intersection of Broadway and East 11th Street.

Finishing touches have concluded since our last update exactly one year ago. All sidewalk scaffolding has been removed, the railings for the multiple staggered outdoor terraces are in place, and the soaring main entrance along Broadway is complete. We can also see the logo design for the property displayed across the ground-floor retail frontage.

799 Broadway. Photo by Michael Young

799 Broadway. Photo by Michael Young

799 Broadway. Photo by Michael Young

799 Broadway. Photo by Michael Young

799 Broadway. Photo by Michael Young

799 Broadway. Photo by Michael Young

799 Broadway. Photo by Michael Young

799 Broadway. Photo by Michael Young

799 Broadway. Photo by Michael Young

799 Broadway. Photo by Michael Young

799 Broadway. Photo by Michael Young

The main website indicates that there is 114,000 square feet of remaining office space and that the first tenants, which will occupy floors eight through 12, are expected to move into the building later this summer. The bespoke space ranges in floor plate sizes from 9,300 square feet to 22,478 square feet, and includes the private terraces that form the signature architectural design of 799 Broadway.

The concourse level comes with 12,670 square feet and 17-foot-high ceilings; the first level has 10,468 square feet and 17-foot-high ceilings; the second story comes with 20,821 square feet; the third floor has the largest available floor plate measuring 22,478 square feet; the fourth level has 21,409 square feet of office space and a 931-square-foot terrace; the fifth level has 19,828 square feet and a 1,547-square-foot terrace; the sixth floor has 14,735 square feet with a 4,773-square-foot terrace; and the seventh story has 14,739 square feet and a 354-square-foot terrace. Floors two through seven all have 15-foot-high ceilings.

799 Broadway. Rendering by Binyan Studios

799 Broadway. Rendering by Binyan Studios

The main lobby for 799 Broadway. Rendering by Binyan Studios

799 Broadway. Rendering by Binyan Studios

799 Broadway. Rendering by Binyan Studios

To the north is the 14th Street-Union Square station that services the 4, 5, 6, L, N, Q, R, and W trains.

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8 Comments on "799 Broadway Completes Construction in Greenwich Village, Manhattan"

  1. I really like this building. The setbacks are very unique and gentle and it looks so nice with the surrounding buildings.

  2. David : Sent From Heaven. | April 10, 2022 at 8:49 am | Reply

    Nothing is not beautiful, do not look through to the inside. Because the outside is very beautiful, both color of glass and white border that spreads throughout the building: Thanks to Michael Young.

  3. Looks great!

  4. Love the design, but the glass seems cheap compared to the renderings. It looks somewhat value-engineered. Anyone disagree?

  5. David of Flushing | April 10, 2022 at 7:29 pm | Reply

    Perhaps stained glass would have been better given Grace Chruch across the street.

  6. Because of the white outline features that highlight the massing, the built construction looks more like the renderings than most other recent projects shown on YIMBY. But like every other new building, when the renderings show a light translucent glass skin, the built reality always disappoints us with a darker, opaque, reflective reality.

  7. I had an office many years ago at 799 Broadway (80 E.11th St.) I liked it just fine.

  8. Beautiful building but completely out of place in the Village. The historic Hotel Denis was torn down at this site to build this ultra modern building which is much more suited for a midtown location. Our rich NYC architectural history is being erased block by block downtown and we can never get it back. Very short sighted of these greedy developers and our government officials that allow it. Shameful really and it happens all the time.

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