5th Avenue – Flatiron
$39/SF – Available
7,000 SF – Full Floor
Exceptional full floor loft space with high ceilings, refinished floors, full pantry, great light and tenant controlled AC.
Click to Contact Thomas Jacobs about this listing
Located in the center of the Flatiron, steps to Union Sq., Madison Sq. and all the amenities & transportation the area has to offer. Newly renovated attended lobby with two large passenger elevators and separate freight elevator.
Thomas is a lifelong New Yorker with a successful 20 year background as an entrepreneur, having founded and run multiple companies in Manhattan with one going public on the NASDAQ. The experience of managing complex real estate requirements and the necessity for finding appropriate office space in one of the most competitive markets anywhere has been an invaluable experience which he draws upon in both Landlord and Tenant representation. With the ability to understand and clearly articulate the myriad concerns and requirements that intersect in identifying the right real estate solutions come from a depth of personal experience as a Tenant and Landlord representative.
The Flatiron District is a
neighborhood in the New York City borough of Manhattan, named after the
Flatiron Building at 23rd Street, Broadway and Fifth Avenue. Generally
the Flatiron District can be said to be bound by 17th Street, Union
Square and Greenwich Village to the south; the Avenue of the Americas
(Sixth Avenue) or Seventh Avenue and Chelsea to the west; 25th Street
and NoMad to the north; and Lexington Avenue/Irving Place,
Gramercy Park to the east.
Broadway cuts through the middle of the district, and Madison Avenue
begins at 23rd Street and runs north. At the north (uptown) end of the
district is Madison Square Park, which was completely renovated in
2001. The Flatiron District encompasses within its boundaries the
Ladies' Mile Historic District.
The designation "Flatiron District" for this area is of relatively
recent vintage, dating from around 1985, and came about because of its
increasingly residential character, and the influx of many restaurants
into the area &emdash; real estate agents needed an appealing name to call the
area in their ads. Before that, the area was primarily commercial, with
numerous small clothing and toy manufacturers, and was sometimes called
the Toy District. The Toy Center buildings at 23rd Street and Broadway
date from this period, and the annual American International Toy Fair
took place there beginning in 1903, except for 1945. When much of this
business moved outside the U.S., the area began to be referred to as
the Photo District because of the large number of photographers'
studios and associated businesses located there, the photographers
having come because of the relatively cheap rents.
As of the 2000s, many publishers have their offices in the district, as
well as advertising agencies, and the number of internet and
web-related start-up companies in the area caused it to be considered
part of "Silicon Alley" , along with TriBeCa and SOHO, and today the
Flatiron remains a dominant force technology and creative firms.
Notable buildings in the district include the Flatiron Building, one of
the oldest of the original New York skyscrapers, and just to east at 1
Madison Avenue is the Met Life Tower, built in 1909 and the tallest
building in the world until 1913, when the Woolworth Building was
completed. It is now occupied by Credit Suisse since MetLife moved
their headquarters to the Pan Am Building. The 700-foot (210 m) marble
clock tower of this building dominates Madison Square and the park
there.
Nearby, in the adjoinging NoMad neighborhood on Madison Avenue between
26th and 27th Streets, on the site of the old Madison Square Garden, is
the New York Life Building, built in 1928 and designed by Cass Gilbert,
with a square tower topped by a striking gilded pyramid.
Some text and images from List of Manhattan Neighborhoods at Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.
