6th Avenue – Union Square
$40/SF – Available Immediately
1,450 SF – Partial Floor
Beautiful open floor-plan with southern exposure providing great lighting to the space. 11' tin ceilings and an IT room which can also be used as a break-out room or supply room. Phone system, computers and furniture available for 18+. Perfect for startups, tech and media companies. Tenant controlled A/C
Click to Contact Shane Kramer about this listing
Terms: Lease assignment (contact for details) Size: 1,450 RSF Asking: $50/RSF Possession: Immediate Term: 3 years
Shane has been a Manhattan real estate Broker for over a decade and on a national level brings more than twenty years of experience in real estate development, management and deal making to his clients. His background is more than just a broker.
His experiences as an owner of a full service construction company, a residential real estate firm as well as an owner of multifamily and commercial developments gives Shane the unique ability to provide his tenants and landlords with clear and simple direction throughout complex office leasing or building sales transactions.
Union Square is an important
and historic intersection in New York City, located where Broadway and
the former Bowery Road - now 4th Avenue - came together in the early
19th century; its name celebrates neither the Federal union of the
United States nor labor unions but rather denotes the fact that "here
was the union of the two principal thoroughfares of the island." Today
it is bounded by 14th Street to the south, Union Square West on the
west side, 17th Street on the north, and on the east Union Square East,
which links together Broadway and Park Avenue South to Fourth Avenue
and the continuation of Broadway. Union Square Park is under the aegis
of the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation.
Neighborhoods around the square are the Flatiron District to the north,
Chelsea to the west, Greenwich Village to the south, and Gramercy to
the east. The eastern side of the square is dominated by the four
Zeckendorf Towers, on the site of the bargain-priced department store,
S. Klein, and the south side by the full-square block mixed-use One
Union Square South (Davis Brody Bond, 1999). It features a kinetic wall
sculpture and digital clock expelling bursts of steam, titled
Metronome. Among the heterogeneous assortment of buildings along the
west side is the Decker Building.
Union Square is a popular meeting place, given its central location in
Manhattan and its many subway lines. There are many bars and
restaurants on the periphery of the square, and the surrounding streets
have some of the city's most renowned (and expensive) restaurants. S.
Klein's department store promoted itself in the middle 20th century as
an "On the Square" alternative to higher prices uptown, and late in the
century several big-box chain stores established a presence, including
Barnes & Noble, Babies "R" Us and Staples. In addition, the W Union
Square Hotel opened at the park's northeast corner, in the landmark
building that formerly housed the Guardian Life Insurance Company of
America.
Some text and images from List of Manhattan Neighborhoods at Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.