Break ground ceremony for 425 Park Avenue by Foster + Partners

425 Park Avenue
425 Park Avenue
Image © Foster + Partners

Lord Foster addressed a ceremony in New York, to celebrate the ground breaking of the new tower at 425 Park Avenue, the first full-block office building on Park Avenue for fifty years.

425 Park Avenue
Image © Foster + Partners

The design was the outcome of an international competition held in 2012. In addition to LEED Gold accreditation, the tower will also be the first in New York City to achieve WELL certification, in recognition of innovations to enhance the health and well-being of its future occupants.

425 Park Avenue
Image © Foster + Partners

425 Park Avenue is conceived as a flexible, enduring new addition to one of New York City’s most celebrated streets.

425 Park Avenue
Image © Foster + Partners

The tower’s form is a pure expression of its function, divided vertically into three distinct volumes: its base, knitted with the urban grain at street level; a recessed central section; and a slender column of premium offices at the top.

425 Park Avenue
Image © Foster + Partners

Each volume dovetails dramatic triple-height sky gardens: one of which will serve as a penthouse floor, and another a first-class amenity floor for the tower’s occupants, with dining and facilities for meetings and conferences.

425 Park Avenue
Image © Foster + Partners

Terraces offer views across Central Park and the prized amenity of open space in the heart of Manhattan. The social focus of the tower continues at street level, where entrance is via a dramatic triple-height atrium, with the potential for large-scale works of art.

425 Park Avenue
Image © Foster + Partners

Lord Foster said: ““425 Park Avenue is a significant location. The prime location is Park Avenue itself because it is probably unique in the world in terms of being an urban, modernist creation. It has a life, a scale.

425 Park Avenue
Image © Foster + Partners

The first thing that 425 has to do is contribute to that urbanity. In the spirit of those individual buildings – that include Seagram and Lever House – 425 has its own identity. It will contribute to the public domain both at ground level and the wider entity of the city.” Source by Foster + Partners, images via 425 Park Aveneu.

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