35 Hudson Yards
Hudson Yards, Manhattan

35 Hudson Yards Condos for Sale

A Soaring Limestone Tower with Equinox Living and Panoramic Hudson River Views

About 35 Hudson Yards

About 35 Hudson Yards

35 Hudson Yards is the residential crown jewel of the Hudson Yards development -- and we say that having watched every tower in this complex go up from our office a few blocks east. When Related Companies set out to build a luxury condo here, they made a smart structural decision: put the Equinox Hotel on the lower floors and start residences on the 53rd floor. That is not a marketing gimmick. It means you are already at supertall height before the residential portion of the building even begins. The lowest apartment at 35 Hudson Yards sits higher than the top floor of most Manhattan condo buildings. We have walked units here from the earliest closings, and the immediate, unobstructed views from even the entry-level floors are genuinely striking -- Hudson River, midtown skyline, Statue of Liberty, all of it, from day one.

David Childs of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill designed the tower, and Childs made an interesting choice: limestone cladding rather than the all-glass curtain walls that dominate Hudson Yards. That gives 35 HY a more traditional, substantial feel compared to its neighbor 15 Hudson Yards, which is full glass and sculptural in the Diller Scofidio + Renfro mode. Inside, Tony Ingrao handled the interiors -- Smallbone of Devizes kitchens, Taj Mahal quartzite counters, Gaggenau appliances, Iceberg Quartzite in the master baths. The finishes are serious. We tell clients who are cross-shopping with One57 -- another condo-above-a-hotel model -- that 35 HY's interior quality is a step up, and the hotel-services integration is far more developed. One57 gave you a Park Hyatt downstairs. 35 HY gives you the entire Equinox ecosystem: the hotel, the 60,000-square-foot gym, the pools, SoulCycle, spa, and Major Food Group dining. It is a meaningfully different proposition.

Here is the honest context we give every buyer considering this building. 35 Hudson Yards competes at the top of the Manhattan market -- you are looking at $4 million for a two-bedroom and north of $30 million for a penthouse. At that level, our clients are also touring 220 Central Park South, Central Park Tower, 53W53, and the other Billionaires' Row addresses. What 35 HY offers that those buildings do not is the hotel-services infrastructure and the fact that every single residence has views that would be penthouse-caliber in most other buildings. What it does not offer is a Central Park address or the established neighborhood feel of the Upper West or Upper East Side. Hudson Yards is still a new neighborhood -- exciting and genuinely convenient, but different in character. We have sold units in this building and we are candid about both sides because that is what serious buyers at this price point expect.

72Stories
143Residences
2019Delivery
Building Details

35 Hudson Yards at a Glance

Address

35 Hudson Yards, New York, NY 10001

Developer

Related Companies & Oxford Properties

Architect

David Childs / SOM

Year Completed

2019

Residences

143

Stories

72

Building Type

Condominium

Neighborhood

Hudson Yards

Available Residences

35 Hudson Yards Condos for Sale

What Makes It Special

Why Buyers Choose 35 Hudson Yards

Every Residence Starts at the 53rd Floor -- Instant Views, No Compromise

This is the structural advantage that most distinguishes 35 Hudson Yards from its competition. By placing the Equinox Hotel on the lower floors, Related guaranteed that the lowest residential unit sits higher than the top floor of most Manhattan condo buildings. We have shown units at 35 HY where the buyer walks in and immediately understands -- there is no version of this apartment that does not have a dramatic, wide-open view. Compare that to Billionaires' Row towers where a lower-floor unit might look directly into a neighboring building. At 35 HY, the entry-level view is what other buildings call the penthouse view. That consistency across all units is rare and genuinely valuable.

The Equinox Integration Is Not Marketing -- It Is the Daily Experience

We have been in enough hotel-branded condos to know that the label often overpromises and underdelivers. 35 Hudson Yards is different because Equinox actually operates the hospitality layer of the building. The 60,000-square-foot gym, the indoor and outdoor pools, SoulCycle, the spa, the hotel concierge infrastructure, the Major Food Group and Stephen Starr restaurants -- these are not amenities tacked onto a residential building. They are the core of the building's lower half, and residents plug into that ecosystem daily. For buyers who are serious about wellness, who want hotel-caliber service without living in a hotel, this integration is unmatched in Manhattan. We tell clients: if the Equinox lifestyle resonates with how you actually live, no other building competes with this one.

Hudson Yards as a Self-Contained City Within a City

Love it or critique it, Hudson Yards has assembled something no other Manhattan neighborhood offers in one location: over 100 shops and restaurants, The Shed arts center, the High Line, Edge observation deck, Mercado Little Spain, and direct 7-train subway access -- all within a five-minute walk from your front door. For international buyers who split time between cities, or for anyone who values the efficiency of having everything immediately accessible, the convenience factor is real. We have clients who chose 35 HY specifically because they can go from their apartment to a world-class gym, dinner, and a cultural event without ever hailing a cab. The neighborhood is not for everyone -- we are the first to say that -- but for the buyer it fits, nothing else is as turnkey.

Modern Glass Aesthetic for Buyers Who Do Not Want Limestone

Manhattan luxury real estate has a strong classical tradition -- limestone, pre-war proportions, Stern-designed elegance. That is not what every buyer wants. 35 Hudson Yards offers a contemporary, glass-and-limestone hybrid with clean lines, soaring floor-to-ceiling windows, and interiors that feel current without being trendy. We see this consistently with buyers from Miami, London, Hong Kong, and the Middle East -- they come from cities where modern architecture is the norm, and they want that aesthetic continued in their Manhattan residence. When clients tell us they have toured 220 Central Park South and respect the building but want something that feels more of this moment, 35 HY is usually the next stop. It is the contemporary counterpoint to the classical Billionaires' Row addresses, and for the right buyer, that is exactly the point.

Advisor Perspective

Our Perspective on 35 Hudson Yards

We are going to give you the same assessment we give every client who sits down with us to discuss 35 Hudson Yards, because at this price point you deserve candor, not a sales pitch. We have sold units in this building. We work a few blocks away. We have watched Hudson Yards evolve from a construction site to a functioning -- if still-maturing -- neighborhood. Here is what we think.

The strengths are real. The 53rd-floor starting elevation is a genuine structural advantage that no marketing can fabricate. The Equinox integration delivers hotel-level services in a way that most branded-residence programs do not. The 421-a tax abatement, with roughly 13 years still remaining, meaningfully reduces carrying costs. And the finishes -- the Ingrao interiors, the Smallbone kitchens, the quartzite -- are at the level you expect when you are spending $3,000 per square foot. David Childs designed a building that reads as both modern and substantial, and we think it will age well.

Now here is what we tell clients honestly. Hudson Yards still feels commercial and corporate in places. It is not the Upper West Side, where you walk out your door and feel the texture of a real neighborhood. It is not Tribeca, with its cobblestone streets and independent restaurants on every corner. The Vessel, which was supposed to be the centerpiece public art installation, has been closed due to safety concerns, and that has taken some energy out of the public square. Some buyers find the development sterile -- everything is new, everything is polished, and there is a sameness to it that bothers people who value grit and character. We understand that reaction.

The commute is also something to think through. If your life is on the East Side -- kids at school on the UES, office in Midtown East, social life around Park Avenue -- Hudson Yards is a crosstown trip that adds real time to your day. The 7 train goes to Times Square and Grand Central, but it is a single line with no redundancy. If the 7 is down, you are taking a cab.

But the westside lifestyle has genuine appeal. Hudson River Park is a few minutes away, and the waterfront running and cycling paths are among the best in the city. The High Line is your backyard. The restaurant scene in the surrounding blocks is growing. And for buyers who work in Midtown West, the commute is negligible.

Our bottom line: 35 Hudson Yards is a first-rate building in a neighborhood that is still earning its identity. For the right buyer -- someone who values views, services, modern design, and convenience over neighborhood character -- it is one of the best options in Manhattan. For someone who wants a tree-lined street and a 100-year-old building with patina, it is not the fit. We help clients figure out which camp they are in, and we are comfortable saying so either way.

International Buyers Welcome

Foreign nationals can purchase condominiums in Manhattan with no visa or residency requirements. Many international buyers use LLCs for privacy and estate planning. Manhattan Miami specializes in guiding international buyers through the acquisition process, from financing options to closing procedures.

Read Our International Buyer Guide →

About 35 Hudson Yards

35 Hudson Yards is a 72-story luxury condominium tower at the center of the Hudson Yards development on Manhattan's far west side. Designed by David Childs of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill with interiors by Tony Ingrao, the building houses 137 residences starting on the 53rd floor -- above the Equinox Hotel that occupies the lower portion of the tower. As a brokerage that lives and works blocks from Hudson Yards and has sold units in this building, Manhattan Miami brings a ground-level perspective that goes beyond listing data.

The defining feature of 35 Hudson Yards condos for sale is the starting elevation. With every residence beginning at the 53rd floor, the building eliminates the common problem of lower-floor units with obstructed views. West-facing apartments look out over the Hudson River with sunset exposures. East-facing units take in the midtown Manhattan skyline. South exposures capture the Statue of Liberty and the downtown skyline. We have walked these units at different times of day and can tell clients exactly which lines get the best light and when -- that specificity comes from working in the neighborhood, not from a floor plan.

35 Hudson Yards apartments range from two-bedroom layouts around 1,500 square feet to six-bedroom penthouses exceeding 10,000 square feet. Pricing starts at approximately $4 million for two-bedrooms and extends above $30 million for upper-floor penthouses, with per-square-foot pricing generally between $2,200 and $2,800. The building benefits from a 20-year 421-a tax abatement with roughly 13 years of savings remaining, which substantially reduces annual carrying costs compared to buildings without abatements.

What sets 35 Hudson Yards apart from other Hudson Yards luxury condos and competing Billionaires' Row addresses is the Equinox Hotel integration. Residents have access to the largest Equinox fitness club ever built at 60,000 square feet, indoor and outdoor pools, SoulCycle, a full-service spa, and dining by Major Food Group and Stephen Starr. A dedicated Director of Residences coordinates hotel-caliber in-home services. Our clients who have compared the hotel-services model here with One57's Park Hyatt arrangement consistently find the Equinox integration more developed and more useful in daily life.

Buyers considering 35 Hudson Yards condos for sale are typically also looking at 15 Hudson Yards, the neighboring Diller Scofidio + Renfro-designed tower with 285 units and a lower entry price point. They are also cross-shopping with 220 Central Park South, Central Park Tower, and 53W53. The key differences come down to neighborhood preference, design aesthetic, and price. 35 HY offers a modern, services-rich, westside lifestyle. The Billionaires' Row buildings offer Central Park proximity and a Midtown address. We help buyers navigate these tradeoffs with the specificity that comes from having walked the units and knowing the buildings firsthand.

The Hudson Yards neighborhood continues to develop. The Shed arts center, the High Line, over 100 shops and restaurants, and direct 7-train subway access are all within a few minutes' walk. Hudson River Park and its waterfront paths are a short walk west. The area is not yet a traditional Manhattan neighborhood with decades of organic street life, and we are straightforward with clients about that. But for buyers who value a modern, self-contained environment with serious infrastructure and westside access, Hudson Yards delivers in a way no other Manhattan location currently matches.

Manhattan Miami has direct experience advising buyers and sellers at 35 Hudson Yards. We know which floor plans work best for different lifestyles, which exposures deliver the most compelling light, and how the building's pricing has performed since initial closings. If you are evaluating 35 Hudson Yards apartments or exploring the broader Hudson Yards luxury condo market, we welcome the conversation. This is a building and a neighborhood we know from the ground up -- literally.

The Residences

Unparalleled Living

Pricing

Residence Collection

1,500 - 3,200 sq ft

3,500 - 6,500 sq ft

6,500 - 10,000+ sq ft

Residences from $3,890,000

Amenities

World-Class Amenities at 35 Hudson Yards

22,000 square feet of private resident amenities complemented by the Equinox Hotel and Club ecosystem

{name=Fitness & Wellness, items=[Private residents-only fitness center, Stretching and yoga studio, Serene meditation room, 60,000 sq ft Equinox fitness club, E by Equinox club-within-a-club, Indoor and outdoor swimming pools, SoulCycle studio, Full-service Equinox spa]}

  • Private residents-only fitness center
  • Stretching and yoga studio
  • Serene meditation room
  • 60,000 sq ft Equinox fitness club
  • E by Equinox club-within-a-club
  • Indoor and outdoor swimming pools
  • SoulCycle studio
  • Full-service Equinox spa

{name=Entertainment & Social, items=[Cocktail lounge and bar overlooking The Vessel, Billiards lounge, Golf simulator lounge, Screening room with wet bar, Grand Terrace with Hudson River views, Grand Dining Room seating 50+ guests, Private dining room for 16 with catering, Library]}

  • Cocktail lounge and bar overlooking The Vessel
  • Billiards lounge
  • Golf simulator lounge
  • Screening room with wet bar
  • Grand Terrace with Hudson River views
  • Grand Dining Room seating 50+ guests
  • Private dining room for 16 with catering
  • Library

{name=Business & Family, items=[Business center and boardroom, Private office suites, Children's playroom, Conference facilities]}

  • Business center and boardroom
  • Private office suites
  • Children's playroom
  • Conference facilities

{name=Services & Dining, items=[24-hour concierge and doorman, Director of Residences, Lifestyle Director for personal assistance, In-residence dining and private chef services, Direct elevator access to ZZ's by Major Food Group, Electric Lemon restaurant by Stephen Starr, Preferred reservations at Hudson Yards restaurants, Smart home technology and LEED Gold sustainability]}

  • 24-hour concierge and doorman
  • Director of Residences
  • Lifestyle Director for personal assistance
  • In-residence dining and private chef services
  • Direct elevator access to ZZ's by Major Food Group
  • Electric Lemon restaurant by Stephen Starr
  • Preferred reservations at Hudson Yards restaurants
  • Smart home technology and LEED Gold sustainability
Design & Architecture

The Visionaries

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM)

Architect

Related Companies & Oxford Properties

Developer

The Neighborhood

Hudson Yards: Manhattan's Most Dynamic New Address

Hudson Yards is New York City's most ambitious urban development, transforming 28 acres of Manhattan's far west side into a thriving district of luxury residences, world-class dining, high-end retail, cutting-edge arts venues, and expansive public spaces. Located between 30th and 34th Streets west of Tenth Avenue, the neighborhood offers direct access to the High Line, proximity to Chelsea's gallery district, and convenient transit connections to all of Manhattan.

Arts & Culture

The Shed, a groundbreaking arts center commissioning work across all disciplines, and The Vessel, Thomas Heatherwick's iconic sculptural landmark with 154 interconnecting flights of stairs, anchor the cultural life of Hudson Yards. The adjacent High Line connects residents to Chelsea's world-renowned gallery district.

Dining & Entertainment

Over 25 restaurants and food venues fill Hudson Yards, from Chef Jose Andres' Mercado Little Spain food hall and Danny Meyer's Ci Siamo to Peak on the 101st floor of 30 Hudson Yards. The Edge observation deck, the highest outdoor sky deck in the Western Hemisphere, offers 360-degree views from 100 floors up.

Shopping & Retail

The Shops at Hudson Yards feature seven levels of premier retail with over 70 stores including Louis Vuitton, Cartier, Dior, Bulgari, and Neiman Marcus, alongside contemporary brands like Aritzia, Alo Yoga, and MUJI. It is Midtown Manhattan's preeminent luxury shopping destination.

Transportation & Connectivity

The 34th Street–Hudson Yards station on the 7 train provides direct access to Times Square, Grand Central, and Flushing. Penn Station is a short walk east, connecting to NJ Transit, the LIRR, and Amtrak. The West Side Highway offers easy vehicular access, and ferry service is available at nearby Pier 79.

Explore More

Compare 35 Hudson Yards to Nearby Buildings

Buyers considering 35 Hudson Yards typically also evaluate these buildings

Baccarat Residences

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM)

Midtown

One Madison

Flatiron

25 Columbus Circle

Columbus Circle

80 Columbus Circle

Columbus Circle

1 Central Park West

Columbus Circle

277 Fifth Avenue

NoMad

Walker Tower

Chelsea

737 Park Avenue

Upper East Side

The Sheffield

Slater-Anderson Architects

Midtown West

The Aldyn

Ismael Leyva Architects

Upper West Side

Olympic Tower

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill

Midtown East

The Greenwich by Rafael Viñoly

Rafael Viñoly

Financial District

220 Central Park South

Robert A.M. Stern Architects

Billionaires' Row

The West Residence Club

Concrete Amsterdam / Ismael Leyva Architects

Hell's Kitchen

Central Park Tower

Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture

Billionaires' Row

720 West End Avenue

Emery Roth (1927) / Thomas Juul-Hansen / BP Architects

Upper West Side

111 West 57th Street

SHoP Architects

Billionaires' Row

15 Central Park West

Robert A.M. Stern Architects

Upper West Side

Monogram New York

Ismael Leyva Architects / Neri&Hu

Midtown East

53 West 53

Jean Nouvel

Billionaires' Row

One Wall Street

Ralph Walker (1931) / SLCE Architects

Financial District

One57

Christian de Portzamparc

Billionaires' Row

Waldorf Astoria Residences New York

Schultze & Weaver (1931) / SOM / Jean-Louis Deniot

Midtown East

432 Park Avenue

Rafael Viñoly Architects

Billionaires' Row

56 Leonard Street

Herzog & de Meuron

Tribeca

520 Park Avenue

Robert A.M. Stern Architects

Billionaires' Row

Deutsche Bank Center

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill

Columbus Circle

Selene New York

Morris Adjmi Architects

Midtown East

15 Hudson Yards

Diller Scofidio + Renfro

Hudson Yards

Mandarin Oriental Residences, New York

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill

Columbus Circle

70 Vestry

Robert A.M. Stern Architects

Tribeca

Aman New York

Jean-Michel Gathy / Denniston

Midtown

80 Clarkson

Snøhetta

West Village

Greenwich Lane

FXCollaborative

West Village

50 West 66th Street

Snøhetta

Upper West Side

150 Charles Street

Cookfox Architects

West Village

Mandarin Oriental Residences, Fifth Avenue

Marin Architects

Midtown

760 Madison

COOKFOX Architects

Upper East Side

The Plaza Residences

Henry Janeway Hardenbergh

Central Park South

One High Line

Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG)

Chelsea

111 Murray Street

Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF)

Tribeca

Four Seasons at 30 Park Place

Robert A.M. Stern Architects

Tribeca

740 Park Avenue

Rosario Candela and Arthur Loomis Harmon

Upper East Side

995 Fifth Avenue

Robert A.M. Stern Architects

Upper East Side

The Ritz-Carlton Residences New York NoMad

Rafael Viñoly Architects

NoMad

Madison Square Park Tower

Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF)

NoMad

212 Fifth Avenue

HELPERN Architects

NoMad

50 Central Park South

Alvaro Siza Vieira

Midtown

The Woolworth Tower Residences

Thierry Despont (interior conversion)

Tribeca

565 Broome SoHo

Renzo Piano Building Workshop

SoHo

160 Leroy Street

Herzog & de Meuron

West Village

443 Greenwich Street

CetraRuddy Architecture

Tribeca

The Cortland

Robert A.M. Stern Architects / Olson Kundig

West Chelsea

Explore Neighborhoods

Luxury Neighborhoods in Manhattan

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What does the Equinox Hotel partnership actually give residents at 35 Hudson Yards?

This is the question every buyer asks, and it deserves a real answer rather than a brochure summary. The Equinox Hotel occupies the lower floors of the building, and residents get access to its infrastructure in a way that goes beyond a typical hotel-branded condo. You have the largest Equinox fitness club ever built at 60,000 square feet -- indoor and outdoor pools, SoulCycle, full spa. You have direct elevator access to ZZ's by Major Food Group and Electric Lemon by Stephen Starr. And you have a dedicated Director of Residences who can arrange hotel-level services -- in-home dining, housekeeping, spa treatments -- billed to your account. We have had clients come from One57 specifically because the hotel-services integration there felt superficial by comparison. At 35 HY, Equinox actually runs the hospitality side of the building, and you feel it in the day-to-day experience.

How does 35 Hudson Yards compare to 15 Hudson Yards?

We get this question constantly because buyers are often looking at both. Here is how we break it down. 35 HY is the premium play: fewer units (137 vs. 285), higher starting floor (53rd vs. lower), higher price per foot, and the Equinox Hotel integration. 15 HY, designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro, is architecturally more daring -- that cloverleaf shape is striking -- and it has Skytop at 900 feet, which is genuinely one of the best amenity spaces in the city. The price point at 15 HY is more accessible, starting around $2.5 million for a one-bedroom versus $4 million for a two-bedroom at 35 HY. We have walked units in both buildings extensively. If a client values exclusivity, hotel services, and that immediate high-floor view from every unit, 35 HY wins. If they want architectural character, a broader range of layouts, and a lower entry price, 15 HY is the better fit.

What is the price range for condos at 35 Hudson Yards?

Two-bedrooms start around $4 million, three-bedrooms run $6 to $12 million depending on floor and exposure, and the larger penthouses go north of $30 million. On a per-square-foot basis, expect roughly $2,200 to $2,800, with the upper floors and premium exposures pushing above that. One important detail: the building carries a 20-year 421-a tax abatement that started in 2019, so there are still roughly 13 years of significant tax savings remaining. That meaningfully reduces your carrying costs compared to buildings without an abatement. We always model out the true monthly cost for our clients, because the abatement changes the math in 35 HY's favor more than people realize.

What are the views like at 35 Hudson Yards?

This is where the building's structural advantage really shows. Because residences start on the 53rd floor, there is no such thing as a low-floor unit with a compromised view. West-facing units get the Hudson River, sunsets, and the George Washington Bridge in the distance. East-facing units look back at the midtown skyline -- Empire State Building, One Vanderbilt, the full panorama. South exposures pick up the Statue of Liberty and downtown. We have been in units at different times of day, and the western light in the late afternoon is particularly dramatic. At 35 HY, the views are not a feature of the penthouse -- they are a feature of every unit in the building. That is not something you can say about most of the Billionaires' Row towers, where lower floors face neighboring buildings.

What are the floor plans like at 35 Hudson Yards?

The building offers 137 residences from two-bedrooms around 1,500 square feet up to six-bedrooms exceeding 10,000 square feet. Ceilings approach eleven feet, which is generous. The layouts feature proper entry foyers, separated living and sleeping areas, and floor-to-ceiling glass. Having been through multiple unit types, we would say the three- and four-bedrooms are the sweet spot in terms of layout efficiency -- the flow between the living spaces and the primary suite feels well resolved. The larger penthouses are genuinely palatial but, as with any very large unit, some of the interior rooms can feel removed from the window line. We always walk the specific unit with a client rather than relying on floor plans, because orientation and light quality vary meaningfully by line.

What are the monthly costs at 35 Hudson Yards?

Common charges run in the range of $3 to $5 per square foot per month depending on the unit, so a typical three-bedroom might carry $5,000 to $8,000 monthly in common charges. Real estate taxes are dramatically reduced thanks to the 421-a abatement -- during the full exemption period, you could see an 80 to 95 percent reduction. That is a significant savings. We tell clients to factor in the abatement timeline though, because as it phases out over the last eight years, your taxes will step up annually. We model the full 20-year trajectory for every buyer we advise so there are no surprises down the road.

Is Hudson Yards a real neighborhood yet?

This is the question we are most candid about, because the answer is nuanced. Hudson Yards has world-class retail, dining, and cultural programming -- The Shed, the High Line, Edge, Mercado Little Spain, the shops. It is genuinely convenient. The 7 train is right there, Hudson River Park is a short walk west, and the westside highway access is a plus for people who drive. But it does not yet feel like a neighborhood in the way the Upper West Side or Tribeca or the West Village does. There is no corner bodega, no neighborhood Italian restaurant that has been there for 30 years. It still reads as planned and commercial in places. That is changing -- the residential population is growing, and the area around the High Line has real energy -- but we think honesty matters here. If a client wants a neighborhood with history and street-level character, Hudson Yards is not there yet. If they want a polished, self-contained, modern environment with serious infrastructure, it delivers.

Who designed 35 Hudson Yards and why does SOM matter?

David Childs of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill is the architect. SOM is one of the most important architecture firms in the world -- they designed One World Trade Center, 7 World Trade Center, and the Burj Khalifa. Childs specifically has a track record of buildings that age well and hold their market position. His choice to clad 35 HY in limestone rather than pure glass was deliberate: it gives the building a weight and permanence that sets it apart from the other Hudson Yards towers. Tony Ingrao did the interior design, and his material selections -- the Smallbone kitchens, the quartzite, the stone work in the bathrooms -- reflect a level of craft that we think will still feel current in 20 years. We have seen plenty of luxury buildings where the finishes look dated within a decade. We do not expect that here.

Get in Touch

Your 35 Hudson Yards Awaits

Our specialists will provide personalized pricing, floor plans, and exclusive developer incentives.

Address

35 Hudson Yards, New York, NY 10001

Inquire Now