TriBeCa

Tribeca's 40 Walker Hits Market

Tribeca's 40 Walker Hits Market
Browh Harris Stevens.

Brown Harris Stevens announced today that the four condos that comprise Tribeca's 40 Walker Street, a former textile factory built in 1849, have hit the sales market. Broker Reid Price has the exclusive. The three full-floor two-bedrooms and the three-bedroom penthouse range in asking price from $2.795 million to $6.995 million.  read more »

And New York City's Most Expensive Zip Code Is....

Just north of the Financial District, ironically enough. According to a Forbes magazine analysis, the zip code 10013, which covers most of Tribeca (as well as some of Soho, Little Italy and Nolita) is the most expensive within New York City and the 14th most expensive nationwide.

Radar Picks Up 'Below-Radar' Hotel

Radar Picks Up 'Below-Radar' Hotel
HotelChatter.com.

Celebrity hotelier Robert De Niro's notoriously secretive Greenwich Hotel has finally allowed another media outlet, besides Vanity Fair, to peak inside its exclusive chambers. Sort of.

Hotel Chatter - which had its own reservation revoked in April - directs us to this recent Newsweek review of Bobby D.'s lodge, which briefly discusses the rooms, the food, and the decor of this supposed "below-the-radar" hotel.

What, no mention of that posh illegal penthouse?

Tribeca Nation's Most Overpriced Zip, Forbes Says

Tribeca Nation's Most Overpriced Zip, <i>Forbes</i> Says
wallyg via flickr.

Ah, pricey condos and hip restaurants! Tribeca's 10013 zip code, according to Forbes magazine, is America's most overpriced.

Basically, it's like this: the return on cost of living in Tribeca is so high that it makes it almost not worth it; it would be better to rent there, according to Forbes criteria, than to buy based on the return on dollars spent. Tribeca finished just ahead of Boston's Chinatown zip code. Who knew?

Hat tip, Curbed.

Hotel Reviewer Barred Entry To Robert De Niro's Greenwich Hotel

It seems the control freaks running Robert De Niro's new Greenwich Hotel aren't only cracking down on camera-equipped spectators.

On opening day, management also kicked out a reviewer for the hospitality industry site Hotel Chatter, abruptly canceling her reservation.

And she wasn't even requesting a cheap press rate! To wit:

we had a room booked at the Greenwich Hotel tonight. Juliana was going to stay there. In fact, she was excited to stay there.

However, our credit card was flagged by the hotel, Focker style, and we were informed this weekend that we needed to agree not to publish any images that resulted from our hotel stay. Long story short, the hotel has an embargo on photos with some international publication with a long lead time, how archaic is that?

 

You Takin' A Picture of Me? Shutterbugs Snubbed At Robert De Niro's New Hotel

You Takin' A Picture of Me? Shutterbugs Snubbed At Robert De Niro's New Hotel
Robert Grossman

Celebrity hotelier Robert De Niro's hugely anticipated and high-priced lodge, the 88-room Greenwich Hotel, officially opens for business today in Tribeca.

And talk about excellence in hospitality!

A Curbed tipster reports from the scene:

there are three staffers outside the hotel, guarding against photographs. OF THE EXTERIOR. I managed to get a few shots, and one through the glass of the lobby, before a nice Asian lady nearly popped a blood vessel and grabbed at my camera. Bobby D, you've done it again, sir.  read more »

The Local: Tribeca's Last Gritty Street

The Local: Tribeca's Last Gritty Street
permanently scatterbrained via flickr.

Watts Street does not have a sign at the moment, but residents of the edgy, untrammeled, Tribeca block cut-off by the Holland Tunnel probably prefer it that way.

At the crossroads of SoHo, Tribeca, and the West Village, the two-block strip of Watts below Canal Street had been passed over during the downtown development boom until recently. It remains the same gritty, inaccessible no-man's land today as it did 10 years ago; but the residential construction flanking Watts at Canal on one end and West Street on the other suggest that the tide may be turning for Tribeca’s last holdout.  read more »

Welcome to The '07 Manhattan Market: 'Just Put in Any Serious Offer'

Welcome to The '07 Manhattan Market: 'Just Put in Any Serious Offer'
Getty Images.

I decided to do a little recreational house-hunting on Sunday afternoon to see if the Manhattan housing market is really as resilient as it's cracked up to be.

My experience hunting for a rental apartment downtown in August had been thoroughly depressing—I did not see a single inhabitable apartment for under $3,000 a month and even then, the choice was between living in a shoebox or in a grungy, amenity-free condo. After reading all the 2007 year-end market reports released by the brokerage firms during the past few weeks, I braced myself for the house-hunting malaise familiar to most New Yorkers. But it never came.  read more »

Downtown Restaurateur Cops To Tax Rap

Tribeca seafood restaurant Fresh "doesn't get enough attention," according to the latest Zagat Survey.

Its owner, Eric Tevrow, though, has attracted plenty -- albeit not the favorable kind.

Mr. Tevrow, who also owned the now-shuttered downtown eateries Coast and Shore, pleaded guilty on Monday to stealing sales taxes collected from all three restaurants.

According to the Manhattan District Attorney's office this afternoon:  read more »

Bouley, Bouley! Star Chef Opening Seventh(!) Tribeca Gnosh Pit

Bouley, Bouley! Star Chef Opening Seventh(!) Tribeca Gnosh Pit
Patrickmcmullan.com

The lights will go out at the Delphi in Tribeca this Halloween and they won’t come on again. The gyros, the hummus, the toasted pita—all of the staples of Greek cooking which Tribeca residents have consumed for over three decades will have to be found elsewhere.

After a dispute with the landlord, the nearly 37-year-old, two-story restaurant did not renew its lease at 109 West Broadway and will be looking for another location in Tribeca, according to owner Bill Moutsatsos. While there may have been arguments between Mr. Moutsatsos, brokers and the owners of the building, the Gindi Family, the final deciding factor was simple—a small local diner can’t afford to pay $55,000 a month in rent.

Cue David Bouley.

According to The Tribeca Trib, Brushstroke, a Japanese restaurant owned by Mr. Bouley will be filling the now vacant space. Mr. Moutsatsos confirmed to The Observer that brokers had mentioned Mr. Bouley as a possible new tenant. Mr. Bouley's representatives would not comment on Brushstroke.

Mr. Bouley already has six establishments in Tribeca. Bouley is located at 120 West Broadway; Austrian-inspired Danube is at 30 Hudson Street; the Bouley Bakery, Market, and Upstairs are all located at 130 West Broadway; and the Test Kitchen is at 88 West Broadway. A new French restaurant, also, is planned for the Mohawk Building at 161 Duane Street.
It’s clear that Mr. Bouley’s empire has expanded a great deal since the 1991 opening of his first restaurant, the eponymous one at 120 West Broadway. But what’s with the narrow geographic range? Mr. Bouley doesn’t have any establishments outside of Tribeca, and most of his businesses are on the same street!

Is this a sign of a lack of imagination, or good business sense? Mr. Bouley seems to be doing pretty well for now, albeit at the expense of the small restaurant owner. Mr. Moutsatsos expressed his sadness at the end of his tenure at this location. He said he would look for a new location in the same neighborhood.

“Of course in Tribeca,” he said. “Because the people they know me here.”

Mr. Moutsatsos and Mr. Bouley seem to have a similar sensibility about these things.

Pump It! Children's Gym Signs Up for Tribeca

The offspring of hedge fund managers and high-profile celebrities will soon have a place to break a sweat in Tribeca.

Play Garden, a fitness center for children, recently signed a 10-year lease at 95 Franklin Street, according to Sinvin Realty. Sinvin would not disclose the annual rent, but the asking rent for the 7,700-square-foot space was $299,000 for the year.

Play Garden is the brainchild of Amanda Vierheller, who was an executive with the California-based children's gym franchise MyGym for eight years.  read more »

92nd Y is Tribeca Bound

200%20Hudson%20-%20Exterior.JPG

Jews and Episcopalians of the World, Unite!

The 92nd Street Y is moving to Tribeca. The famed Upper East Side Jewish cultural institute has landed a 15,800-square-foot lease at Trinity Church's 200 Hudson Street.

The Y will move its "Makor" and "Daytime" programs downtown. Those programs are relocating from their former uptown digs at 35 West 67th Street, which was sold to CUNY last year.

The Trinity leasing maven Jason Pizer brokered the deal, along with Janet Liff of J. Liff Co., who repped 92nd Street Y.

Now, of course, the deal means that the "the growing number of retired or semi-retired Baby Boomers" will have a comfy new "home-away-from-home," says the release.  read more »

And find the release after the jump.

- John Koblin

Chain Stores Swarming Tribeca

270GreenwichStreet_store.jpg
2008: Retail Space Odyssey
Sorry, Best Buy. Big-box domestics behemoth Bed, Bath & Beyond now has dibs on 33,500 square feet of the remaining retail space at Tribeca's forthcoming 101 Warren Street complex.

Brokerage Robert K. Futterman & Associates described the deal Thursday as a " testament" to the historic neighborhood's rebirth as, um, a shopping mall.

"Lower Manhattan and TriBeCa in particular are quickly becoming a seven-day retail market, popular with New Yorkers and tourists alike. Bed Bath & Beyond's decision to establish a downtown flagship at 101 Warren, further reinforces the area's retail resurgence," RFK Managing Director Ariel Schuster stated in a press release.

With Whole Foods Market and Barnes & Noble already taking up another 100,000 square feet of the Owings & Merrill-designed building (aka 270 Greenwich Street), there's only enough room left for, say, a Gap or two.

"RFK will be marketing the balance of the 4,294 square feet of retail space to upscale fashion retailers and to luxury home furnishing stores," according to the release.

What, no Starbucks?  read more »

- Chris Shott

400 Square Feet of Luxury?

  • Bloggers are getting exhausted with the overuse of the "luxury" label. (Curbed)
  • Speaking of small luxuries, P. Diddy's former apartment at 813 Park Avenue is being redeveloped as three seperate residences. (Curbed)
  • Neighborhood activists and preservationists are not happy--again--about a new residential development set to take up four blocks in the northern end of Tribeca. (Downtown Express)
  •  read more »

The Same Chili, Sashimi And Sushi Wonders-Next Door

The wonderful Nobu, one of my favorite restaurants, is also notoriously difficult to get into at the  read more »

Austrian Music Mogul Waltzes Into 620 Park; Dr. Marks Departs

One of Manhattan's most sticklerish co-op boards is about to take on a new resident. On Dec.  read more »

Rupert Murdoch Wins $6.5 Million Battle on Prince Street

At long last, media baron Rupert Murdoch has a new home for his new wife.  read more »

Miramax Eyes New Headquarters-$45 Million Place on Greenwich Street

After a protracted search for headquarters in TriBeCa, Miramax Films co-chairmen Harvey and Bob Wein  read more »

Owner Says: No Sale! Broker Says: No Dice!

Due to the tenacity of a Hamptons real estate firm, fashion designer Randolph Duke ended up selling  read more »

A Former Model Finds Beauty on the Other Side of the Camera

Maybe it's because she worked as a circus girl when she was a teenager in Germany–in fishnet stock  read more »

Sensuous Food at Montrachet Muffles Tiresome Money Talk

It was a hot night and the dining room of Montrachet was a sea of pinstriped shirts.  read more »

Chanterelle's Rich, Original FoodEvokes Spirit of Great Gourmand

When a friend of mine said recently that she'd like to go to one of my "downtown places," I didn't t  read more »

Miramax Brother Settles on the East Side of the Park

Upper East SideSix-bed, 3.5-bath, 6,800-square-foot town house.  read more »