Contact us for current pricing.
Most NYC landlord restrict us from listing the asking rental price.
Many landlords are offering significant concessions, construction allowances, and free rent.
Contact us for current pricing.
Most NYC landlord restrict us from listing the asking rental price.
Many landlords are offering significant concessions, construction allowances, and free rent.
5-to-20-year lease terms are available, providing your businesses with a stable and very impressive image in the coming years.
Available sizes for your corporate office requirement in this one-of-a-kind Class-A Office Tower range from 10,000 to 200,000 Square Feet.
Featured Space
Entire 19th Floor, 10,000 Square Feet Potential layouts…
Office Intensive:
• Two (2) CEO/senior executive windowed offices
• Twelve (12) executive windowed offices
• Two (2) large conference rooms seating ten (10) to sixteen (16) people
• Bullpen seating eight people in clustered workstations, or twelve (12) people using bench tables
• New kitchen with modern above-standard fixtures and cabinetry, and an open dining area
• Large Reception that can seat four (4) people in the waiting area
• IT Closet; telephone & data outlets will be delivered throughout the private offices and open bullpen area for easy wiring
Open Plan - High Density Seating:
• One (1) CEO/senior executive windowed office
• Three (3) executive/managerial windowed offices
• One (1) large conference room seating sixteen (16) people
• Bullpen area seating 50 to 60 people
• New kitchen with modern above-standard fixtures and cabinetry, and an open dining area
• Large Reception that can seat four (4) people in the waiting area
• IT Closet; telephone & data outlets will be delivered throughout the private offices and open bullpen area for easy wiring
History of The Flatiron Building
The Flatiron Building opened for light manufacturing and office tenants in 1902, after developer Harry Black of The Fuller Company decided to add to his now historic portfolio of New York City landmark property developments; The Plaza Hotel, Macy’s, and Penn Station. Mr. Black’s architect of choice for his new venture was Daniel H. Birnbaum of Chicago, who chose terra cotta ornamentation for the exterior of his ingenious design of a tall, skinny tower with a very unusual triangular shape. The new office building was the first office tower built in Midtown and in Midtown South that attracted turn of the century industries such as music publishers, dentists, doctors, and hat manufacturers that milled fashionably fine headwear for the many distinguished NYC haberdashery shops that sold to ladies following the latest exotic hat craze. In 1959 the multi-tenancy position of the building took a dramatic turn when St. Martin’s Publishing Company moved in taking several floors, followed by St. Martin’s parent corporation, McMillan Publishers occupancy of all 21 floors in 2004, for a total of over 200,000 square feet.
Fast forward to 2019, McMillan Publishers moved to the Financial District, leaving the owners, Sorgente Group of America, with a vacant, yet highly desirable office tower. The owners wisely decided to perform a $80M building overhaul that has taken almost three years to finish.
Previously the floors were heated by a cast-iron radiator system, but a new central HVAC system has now been installed, and the old wooden window frames have been replaced to achieve high-efficiency air conditioning and heat flow. In addition, a new sprinkler system has been installed, and the interior walls and dropped ceilings on all floors have been demolished. The floors are now wide-open spaces ready for the landlord to custom build for new tenants. Tenants can choose their desired flooring type (wood, stone tile, polished concrete, or carpet), lighting fixture specs, and layout of their choice with beautiful glass-walled offices and doors.
A new modernized 24/7 attended lobby staffed with multiple concierges is almost complete, welcoming your clients and staff to their new workplace in a bustling, vibrant, yet defiantly tranquil Manhattan office district.
The Flatiron District
The Flatiron District, an extremely popular and affluent neighborhood in Midtown South Manhattan was named in 1985 after the Flatiron Building (175 Fifth Avenue), a world-renowned, 21-story, 255,000 square foot Class-A office building recognized by its distinct and unique triangular shape, located at the juncture of Broadway, Fifth Avenue, and 23rd Street. The Flatiron District encompasses the area from 14th Street (Union Square Park) to 23rd Street (Madison Square Park) to the north, and east and west from Park Avenue South to Sixth Avenue.
Fifth Avenue and Broadway are the Flatiron District’s major thoroughfares, and both run southwards right in the middle of this beautiful neighborhood. The birthplace of Theodore Roosevelt, 28 East 20th Street in Flatiron, is a national historic site, and a grand bronze statue of President Roosevelt atop his stallion greets residents, office workers, and tourists as they enter Madison Square Park at 23rd Street.
The Flatiron District, originally a manufacturing area known as the Toy District, was also known later as Silicon Alley, a nickname for New York’s technology industry/sector. Late in the year 2000, a large influx of office tenants included industries such as publishers, ad agencies, and a host of computer and web-related start-up companies, created the “Silicon Valley” moniker. Tree-lined streets and graceful Beaux-art buildings designed at the turn of the century offers a fascinating charming neighborhood, offering everyone a dynamic and totally unique flair of residential, retail, and retail shopping options. Fine dining in the area includes Eataly, Craft, Boucherie Union Square, ABC Kitchen, Almond & Thai Villa and more.
Neighboring corporations include
IBM, Sony Corp of America, Yelp, IMAX Corporation, Chainalysis, Capital One, MasterCard, Tiffany & Co Corporate, and many more.
Transportation
Close proximity to both the Henry Hudson Expressway and The FDR Expressway.
Central subway access with a host of trains, all within a 3-block radius: N, R, Q, 4, 5, 6, D, B, A, C & E Trains