– Columbus Circle
Available Immediately
2,500 SF – Partial Floor
Unique and beautiful creative office or showroom space with 20' ceilings and significant architectural details. Flexible buid out with team rooms, work areas, private offices, pantry, private restroom. Boutique building with attended lobby.
Click to Contact Elizabeth Juviler or call 212-253-8708
Elizabeth is a native New Yorker, graduate of Yale University, and brings her life long passion for this incredible ever-changing city to work every day. No two companies have the same real estate requirements, and she scours this remarkable city's skyline to locate the most sought-after office and loft spaces to satisfy her clients unique needs.
Elizabeth has assisted over 100 companies secure leases in both up and down markets; She has established a professional reputation based on integrity, resourcefulness, and determination.
Columbus Circle, named for
Christopher Columbus, is a major landmark and point of attraction in
the New York City borough of Manhattan, located at the intersection of
Eighth Avenue, Broadway, Central Park South (West 59th Street), and
Central Park West, at the southwest corner of Central Park. It is the point from which all official
distances from New York City are measured. The name is also
used for the neighborhood a few blocks around the circle in each
direction. To the south of the circle lies Hell's Kitchen, also known
as "Clinton", and the Theatre District, and to the north is the Upper
West Side.
The center piece of Columbus Circle is the Time Warner Center, the
world headquarters of the AOL Time Warner, is located on the west side
of Columbus Circle on the site of the old New York Coliseum. The
complex also hosts the Shops at Columbus Circle, Jazz at Lincoln
Center, the New York City studio headquarters of CNN and the Mandarin
Oriental, New York hotel. On the north side of Columbus Circle is the
Trump International Hotel and Tower, with its noted steel globe. This
building had been an office tower, the headquarters of the Gulf +
Western conglomerate, which was stripped to its steel skeleton and
reclad in a new facade.
Some text and images from List of Manhattan Neighborhoods at Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.