The Brooklyn Tower

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The Brooklyn Tower
9DekalbI.jpg
The Brooklyn Tower under construction on August 25, 2021
Alternative names9 DeKalb Avenue, 340 Flatbush Avenue Extension
General information
StatusTopped-out
TypeMixed-use
Architectural styleNeo Art Deco
Location9 DeKalb Avenue
Coordinates40°41′26″N 73°58′56″W / 40.69056°N 73.98222°W / 40.69056; -73.98222Coordinates: 40°41′26″N 73°58′56″W / 40.69056°N 73.98222°W / 40.69056; -73.98222
Construction started2018
Topped-outOctober 28, 2021
Estimated completion2022
Height
Roof1,066 feet (325 m)[1][a]
Technical details
Floor count93
Floor area555,734 sq ft (51,600 m2)
Design and construction
ArchitectSHoP Architects (residential tower)
Mowbray and Uffinger (original structure)
DeveloperJDS Development
Website
www.shoparc.com/projects/9-dekalb/
New York City Landmark
DesignatedJuly 19, 1994
Reference no.1907
Designated entityBank facade
New York City Landmark
DesignatedJuly 19, 1994
Reference no.1908
Designated entityBank interior

The Brooklyn Tower (originally referred to as 340 Flatbush Avenue Extension and subsequently 9 DeKalb Avenue) is a supertall mixed-use, primarily residential skyscraper under construction in the Downtown Brooklyn neighborhood of New York City. Developed by JDS Development Group, it is situated on the north side of DeKalb Avenue near Flatbush Avenue. The main portion of the skyscraper is a 93-story, 1,073-foot (327 m) tower designed by SHoP Architects. Preserved at the skyscraper's base is the Dime Savings Bank Building, which dates to the 1900s. When completed it will be the tallest structure in New York City outside Manhattan, as well as the first supertall building in Brooklyn.[2][3]

The bank building was built in 1906–1908 to designs by Mowbray and Uffinger; it was expanded by Halsey, McCormack and Helmer in 1931–1932. The bank was sold off in 2014, and the Brooklyn Tower was technically constructed as an addition to the Dime Savings Bank. The tower's superstructure topped out during October 2021.

Site[]

The Brooklyn Tower is at 9 DeKalb Avenue and 340 Flatbush Avenue Extension in the Downtown Brooklyn neighborhood of New York City.[4][5][6] The building's site occupies much of the triangular city block bounded by Fleet Street to the northwest, DeKalb Avenue to the south, and Flatbush Avenue Extension to the northeast. The southwest corner faces a pedestrian plaza at Albee Square, and the Brooklyn Tower wraps around a structure at 33 DeKalb Avenue to the southeast.[7] The site covers 46,367 square feet (4,307.6 m2), with a frontage of 219.92 feet (67.03 m) on Flatbush Avenue and a depth of 380.8 feet (116.1 m) from Flatbush Avenue to Fleet Street.[8]

The building is adjacent to other tall mixed-use developments, such as the three towers of City Point immediately to the west and One Willoughby Square one block west. The campus of LIU Brooklyn, including the Brooklyn Paramount Theater, is across Flatbush Avenue Extension to the east.[7] The building stands across from the DeKalb Avenue station of the New York City Subway's B​, ​Q​, and ​R trains.[9][10] The Brooklyn Tower is within several blocks of the former tallest buildings in Brooklyn, Brooklyn Point and 11 Hoyt. Both were surpassed by The Brooklyn Tower in July 2021 when its height reached 721 feet.[11][12]

Design[]

A rendering of the skyscraper in Downtown Brooklyn

The Brooklyn Tower was developed by Michael Stern's JDS Development Group.[13] The building has two components. The base includes the Dime Savings Bank building, designed by Mowbray and Uffinger.[14][15] The bank, built in 1906–1908 and expanded in 1931–1932, was designed in the Classical Revival style.[16][17] Next to the bank is a 1,066-foot (325 m) tower designed by SHoP Architects.[1][13][a]

Form[]

The original bank building is shaped like a hexagon, with chamfered corners at the north, southwest, and southeast.[19] When built, the bank's footprint measured 114 feet (35 m) on Fleet Street, 30 feet (9.1 m) on Albee Square, and 143 feet (44 m) on DeKalb Avenue.[20][21] This was subsequently expanded to 202.17 feet (61.62 m) on Fleet Street, 46.90 feet (14.30 m) on the portico facing Albee Square, and 173.44 feet (52.86 m) on DeKalb Avenue.[22] The Dime Savings Bank will be converted to a retail unit for the skyscraper.[5][23][24]

The residential entrance will face Fleet Street, while the retail entrance will be on Flatbush Avenue Extension.[25] Glass entrances to the tower units will be placed directly on both sides, leading to an atrium.[26] The tower is designed in a hexagonal shape, evoking the motif used in the bank's ground-floor rotunda.[27][28] At each of its six sides, the Brooklyn Tower has slight setbacks, which terminate in a crown.[28]

Facade[]

Dime Savings Bank[]

The Dime Savings Bank facade largely contains a water table made of pink granite, above which is a white-marble facade.[29] This design was intended to give an impression of stability.[20] The Dime Savings Bank was the first bank building in the United States to be clad in Pentelic marble.[21][30][31] Some 2,000 tons of Pentelic marble were required for the bank's construction.[32] The bank building is surmounted by a deep parapet, above which is the attic on the fifth story.[19] The only sections of the bank without a marble facade are the rear (north) wall, as well as an attic on the eastern end of DeKalb Avenue. Both are made of buff-colored brick that is laid in common bond.[33] The roof contains a smooth marble dome, which sits on a base of modillions and a hexagonal tholobate with acroteria.[33]

Main entrance detail

At the southwest corner of the building, a tetrastyle entrance portico faces the pedestrian plaza at Albee Square. Four Ionic columns support a frieze with the words "The Dime Savings Bank of Brooklyn" and an triangular pediment.[19][30] Behind the columns, a stoop leads from the plaza to a multi-story opening, framed by a marble surround with acanthus leaf, bezant, and bead molding motifs. The bottom of the opening contains two single doors, which are divided by a trumeau with several panels.[b] Directly above the doors are transom grilles, with panels depicting the god Mercury and various industry-related figures. Above this is an entablature, acroteria, and a large transom window. The opening is topped by a lintel with denticulation, flanked by scrolled brackets on either side.[19] The portico's underside, or soffit, contains hexagonal panels. The pediment contains the carved sculptural group "Morning and Evening of Life", with personifications of a youthful "Morning" and an elderly "Evening".[19][30] This pediment was designed by Lee Lawrie as part of the 1931–1932 renovation.[34]

The Fleet Street and DeKalb Avenue facades are nearly identical, with colonnades of Ionic-style fluted columns, which divide each facade into bays. Within each bay is a tall opening with glazed window panes. Above the lowest row of windows are bronze spandrel panels, decorated with motifs of heads and flowers. The tops of each opening contain carved garlands of fruit.[19] Above the colonnades, the attic level contains window openings, which are separated by pilasters and topped by a frieze with a Greek key pattern.[35]

The colonnades on both facades are flanked by end bays, each of which contains a metal-framed window between a pair of marble pilasters. Rams' heads and garlands of fruit are carved at the top of each end bay, and the capital of each pilaster contains a Greek key pattern. At the eastern end of the DeKalb Avenue facade, there is an archway flanked by one-quarter columns. At the bottom of the archway are aluminum-framed doors, above which is a transom with bronze panels. The doors and bronze panels are surrounded by a marble archway, above which is a sign with the building's name and a dime with a Mercury cap. The top of the archway contains a keystone with a Mercury head. An end bay exists to the east of the archway.[19]

Tower[]

The tower's exterior will be clad in stone, bronze, and stainless steel.[36] SHoP Architects took inspiration from the design of the Dime Savings Bank Building.[37][38] Gregg Pasquarelli, a principal at SHoP, has referred to the design as both "badass" and "quite elegant".[36] According to Pasquarelli, the tower was intended to be "deferential to the landmark, but not derivative".[24]

The base of the residential tower is clad in stone to complement the bank.[13] The spacing of the tower's vertical mullions is similar to the distance between each of the bank's columns.[38] The mullions are extruded from the glass curtain wall.[28] The facade is designed in such a way that, when the tower is viewed from a certain angle, two adjacent sides will appear as though they are a single plane. This was a reference to older Art Deco skyscrapers such as the Chrysler Building and Rockefeller Center.[38]

Interior[]

The Brooklyn Tower will include 93,000 square feet (8,600 m2),[23] 120,000 square feet (11,000 m2),[39] or 140,000 square feet (13,000 m2) of commercial space.[5] The interiors of the Brooklyn Tower's residential units are designed by .[40][41][25] Krista Ninivaggi was the architect for the amenity interiors, and HMWhite was the landscape architect.[40]

Ground floor[]

Interior of the banking room

The interior was originally clad in green marble.[42][43] Initially, the banking room was much smaller, with a counter screen enclosing a triangle at the center of the room.[20] The bank's original design included a gray Vermont marble floor and a cream-colored plaster wall.[44] The original design had a stained-glass dome in the roof of the main banking room, measuring 40 feet (12 m) across.[21][44] At the rear of the room was a vault door weighing 15 tons; a section of the floor had to be dropped every time the vault door opened.[21] There was also a board of directors' room at the rear of the banking room.[44] The subbasement had a shooting range for the bank's security guards, which is no longer in use.[24][26]

The modern banking room is approximately a triangle that measures 160 feet (49 m) on each side.[45] The banking room covers 16,750 square feet (1,556 m2), with a ceiling measuring 40 feet (12 m) tall.[24] Seven kinds of marble are used in the banking room.[24] The marble floor contains star and hexagonal motifs. When the bank was in operation, there were pink- and black-marble tellers' counters along the sides of the room. The lower section of the walls is made of plain sandstone, and it contains openings with scrolled keystones above them. The sandstone wall is topped by a frieze with medallions that depict silver dimes with winged caps. Above the frieze are fluted pilasters that flank the tall windows from outside. The coffered ceiling has similar star and hexagon motifs to the floor. Surrounding the ceiling is a band, containing stars inside circles and flowers inside rectangles. In addition, six bronze chandeliers are suspended from the ceiling.[45]

At the center of the banking room is a rotunda, which was added in the 1931-1932 expansion. The rotunda contains twelve red marble columns.[16][17][45] The capitals of each column are gilded and are designed in the Corinthian order, with medallions of dimes. The columns hold up a decorated, multicolored entablature, which surrounds a sky-blue circular dome at the center. There are also pink marble benches at the columns' bases. Underneath the dome is a three-faced bronze clock, which stands on a black-marble pedestal and is encircled by a marble bench.[45]

The banking room's southwest corner contains a pair of tall marble columns on either side of the main entrance.[46] The southeast corner includes a pair of marble columns, between which a marble staircase leads down to a triangular lobby and a vestibule on DeKalb Avenue. The DeKalb Avenue lobby has walls with marble wainscoting and scalloped pilasters, above which runs a cornice with a Greek-key pattern. Ornamental screens are placed across doorways that lead from the lobby to the basement. The entrance vestibule has marble walls with bronze grilles. Both spaces contain coffered ceilings.[47] Above the lobby and vestibule is the Ladies' Lounge, which overlooks the banking room. The lounge's floor is similar in design to the hexagonal floor of the banking room. The walls contain marble wainscoting and wallpaper, topped by a multicolored cornice.[47]

Amenities and tower units[]

The tower's fifth floor will include an outdoor terrace.[24][48] The terrace wraps around the tower's dome.[24] There will be three pools on the roof of the bank building.[26]

The tower will accommodate approximately 150 condominiums and 425 apartments for rent, encompassing roughly 466,000 square feet (43,300 m2).[5][c] The condominium apartments will start on the 52nd floor[26] and will all be placed more than 500 feet (150 m) above the street.[25][40] With a mix of residential units planned as rental properties, the developers applied for tax breaks through the state's 421-a tax exemption program in 2015, prior to that program's expiration, which would require dedicating at least twenty percent of the building's units as affordable housing.[15] As such, 30 percent of the Brooklyn Tower's total apartments will be allocated to affordable housing, to which prospective residents could apply using New York state's housing lottery system.[25][40]

Each unit uses marble, bronze, and stainless steel finishes, similar to the materials used on the tower's exterior. The units contain wooden doors with mahogany finishes and brass hardware, as well as brass sconces and black-granite doorways. The kitchens include bronze details and finishes, as well as appliances from Miele, including refrigerators, dishwashers, ovens, and washer-dryers. The bathrooms contain hexagonal floor tiles and walls made of marble, as well as glass sconces on medicine cabinets. Each condo unit has full-height windows measuring 11 feet (3.4 m) tall.[41]

History[]

Bank building[]

The Dime Savings Bank of Brooklyn was chartered in 1859; its name referenced the fact that clients could originally create an account with as little as a dime.[30][51] The bank's home office moved several times in the late 19th century as the city of Brooklyn grew. By the 1900s, Brooklyn was part of the City of Greater New York, and transportation and businesses were expanding into the area east of Brooklyn Borough Hall (including what is now Albee Square).[51] A new home-office building for the Dime Savings Bank at DeKalb Avenue and Fleet Street was announced in September 1905.[52] The irregular site had cost $230,000 to acquire.[51] Work started in 1906 to designs by Mowbray and Uffinger.[16][53] John Thatcher and Sons were the general contractors on the project.[21][44] The bank's Pentelic marble was supplied by an English syndicate, which reopened the ancient marble quarries shortly before the bank was built.[21][32][31] The building cost $600,000, with the site alone costing $250,000. The New-York Tribune said the bank was the "first institution of importance to cross to the far side of DeKalb Avenue", at a time when the shopping district of Downtown Brooklyn was largely south of DeKalb Avenue.[21]

The Dime Savings Bank moved to its DeKalb Avenue building on December 19, 1908.[42][43] The Dime Savings Bank's home office was expanded in 1918 to designs by Russell S. Walker. The addition at 67–73 Fleet Street, measuring 71 by 57 feet (22 by 17 m), complemented the original design of the bank on DeKalb Avenue and Fleet Street.[54] The bank was significantly enlarged by Halsey, McCormack and Helmer in 1931-32.[16]

It was later owned by J.P. Morgan Chase and was used as a bank branch.[55] The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission hosted public hearings in June 1993 to determine whether to designate the Dime Savings Bank's facade and interior, along with three other banks in Brooklyn and two in Manhattan,[d] as city landmarks.[56] The bank building was designated a New York City Landmark on July 19, 1994.[57]

Planning[]

In 2004, the New York City Department of City Planning approved a significant rezoning for portions of Downtown Brooklyn, which resulted in significant expansion of office space and ground-floor retail, such as those at City Point.[58] The rezoning consists of "zoning map and zoning text changes, new public open spaces, pedestrian and transit improvements, urban renewal, [and] street mappings".[59]

Site acquisition[]

The tower, looking north from Flatbush Avenue and Fulton Street

JDS and Joseph Chetrit's Chetrit Group went into contract to buy 340 Flatbush Avenue Extension, a six-story office structure adjoining the Dime Savings Bank, in late 2013.[60][61] The sale was finalized in June 2014, with Chetrit and JDS paying $43.5 million.[62][63]

JDS and Chetrit also planned to acquire a two-story building at DeKalb and Flatbush Avenues, occupied by cheesecake restaurant Junior's, to use its air rights.[60] The deal would have amounted to approximately 20 stories of additional space in the new building.[64][65] The Junior's restaurant, which opened in 1950, was a popular restaurant within Brooklyn.[66] Alan Rosen, the owner of the Junior's building, placed it for sale in February 2014, with a stipulation that any buyer reopen a Junior's restaurant at the ground floor.[66][67] Rosen also received a higher offer, worth about $45 million, that would have required Junior's to leave the site. After complaints from customers who feared that the store would be closed, Rosen ultimately decided against selling his building in September 2014.[68][69][70]

Meanwhile, JPMorgan Chase had expressed interest in selling the Dime Savings Bank's air rights to JDS and Chetrit in April 2014. This would add about 385,000 square feet (35,800 m2) of developable space, or about 30 stories.[64][65] According to The New York Times, if JDS and Chetrit were able to acquire all the air rights on the block, then a skyscraper of more than 1,000 feet could be erected on the site.[60] Plans for the structure were first filed in the middle of that year, calling for a 70-story, 775-foot building designed by SHoP Architects.[61] The building marked the third collaboration between JDS and SHoP, after 111 West 57th Street and American Copper Buildings.[71][48]

Financing and approval[]

In December 2015, Fortress Investment Group provided a $115 million loan to JDS and Chetrit Group for the purchase of the site and for the refinancing of debt associated with the Dime Savings Bank property.[72] At the time, the bank was expected to be sold for over $100 million.[73] Ultimately, JDS and Chetrit acquired the Dime Savings Bank from JPMorgan Chase for $90 million the same month, using the money from the refinancing.[74][75]

In early 2016, new plans were released with a slight height extension and reduced space for retail.[76] The tower was to be 1,066 feet tall.[77] Brooklyn Community Board 2's land-use committee quickly endorsed the project.[27][78] Proposed modifications to the existing Dime Savings Bank structure were approved by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in April 2016, indicating support for the building's construction.[79][80] Changes include the removal of non-original additions to the bank, repairing damage to the bank's marble and copper elements,[81] and demolishing part of the bank's rear to make way for the new residential addition.[15] When the plans were approved, some observers objected to the height and to the shadows cast by the new building.[82] However, the community as a whole presented little opposition to the plans.[27]

In February 2017, Bank OZK and Melody Finance issued a $135 million bridge and pre-development loan for the project.[83] The loan replaced Fortress's debt[83] and previous funding from the Kushner Companies.[84] Work on 9 DeKalb Avenue's foundation began that June.[85] JDS invested an additional $60 million in equity in August 2018 to purchase Chetrit's stake in the property, obtaining full ownership of the project.[23]

Construction[]

Construction of the above-ground superstructure began in mid-2018.[86] In November 2018, Silverstein Properties' debt fund Silverstein Capital was reported to be nearing a $240 million mezzanine loan for the project, in addition to $400 million in additional debt from a senior lender.[87] The loan closed in April 2019, along with $424.1 million in construction financing from Otéra Capital. This represented a total loan of $664.1 million.[39][88]

The concrete core had reached 28 stories by November 2020,[89] and the curtain wall was installed starting the next month.[28] The skyscraper reached its halfway point in April 2021.[90] As of July 2021. the Brooklyn Tower had surpassed 721 feet, making it the tallest building in Brooklyn.[11][12] The building topped out on October 28, 2021.[91][92] By then, sales were projected to start in early 2022, with a temporary certificate of occupancy being issued by the end of 2022.[25]

See also[]

References[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ a b Documents filed with the Federal Aviation Administration give the height as 1,073 feet (327 m).[18]
  2. ^ The lowest panel depicts the Brooklyn Bridge and modern skyscrapers, with the bank building in front. Above it is a full-figure depiction of the god Mercury, as well as a depiction of Mercury's head. The top panel contains the words "No. 9", the building's address on DeKalb Avenue.
  3. ^ The number of rental apartments has alternatively been cited as 400[49] or 450.[27][50]
  4. ^ The others were the Williamsburgh Savings Bank Tower, Williamsburgh Savings Bank Building (175 Broadway), Brooklyn Trust Company, Bowery Savings Bank Building (130 Bowery), and Bowery Savings Bank Building (110 East 42nd Street).[56]

Citations[]

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  3. ^ Staff, Curbed (November 9, 2015). "First Look at Downtown Brooklyn's 1,000-Foot Supertall Tower". Curbed NY. Retrieved December 25, 2015.
  4. ^ Clarke, Katherine (February 24, 2017). "JDS, Chetrit land $135M loan for Brooklyn's tallest tower". The Real Deal New York. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
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  23. ^ a b c Balbi, Danielle; Bockmann, Rich (August 3, 2018). "Chetrit Group out at 9 Dekalb Avenue, Brooklyn's tallest development". The Real Deal New York. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g Chen, Stefanos (April 19, 2019). "Historic Bank Buildings Get a Second Act". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  25. ^ a b c d e Robinson, Leonard A. (October 28, 2021). "9 DeKalb Avenue is officially Brooklyn's sole 'supertall' building". New York Business Journal. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
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  46. ^ Landmarks Preservation Commission Interior 1994, pp. 7–8.
  47. ^ a b Landmarks Preservation Commission Interior 1994, p. 8.
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  51. ^ a b c Landmarks Preservation Commission 1994, p. 3.
  52. ^ "Take Devlin Liabilities; Wall Street Syndicate to Pay $4,000,000 for Topeka Bank Assets". The New York Times. September 15, 1905. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
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Sources[]

External links[]

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