Office-to-residential conversion building at risk of collapse in New York


An office building undergoing a residential conversion by Gensler in Midtown Manhattan is at risk of collapsing, according to reports.

According to the New York Times, fire officials received a call before 8 am Tuesday reporting falling bricks along the 200 block of East 42nd Street in New York.

Reports confirmed the problem stemmed from the construction at 219-235 East 42nd Street, a two-building office-to-residential conversion project that includes the 235 East 42nd, the 38-storey tall former headquarters of pharmaceutical company Pfizer.

Further inspection by officials found that two support columns inside the taller building at 235 East 42nd Street were “buckling” on the 21st floor and upper floors were “sagging”, according to the Times.

A PIX11 video report showed the state of the site as of Tuesday morning and noted that firefighters and emergency responders are “trying to figure the situation out as the investigation continues”, as of an hour ago.

Rendering of an office building
An office building in Midtown Manhattan, being converted into residential, was reported to be “buckling” and “sagging” on Tuesday morning. Image of Gensler plans for conversion by Streetsense

Construction workers were cleared from the building and also from two adjacent buildings for safety. No injuries have been reported.

Several buildings in the immediate vicinity have been evacuated.

Designed by Gensler, the building is the former Pfizer headquarters in Manhattan. Early last year, the studio revealed renderings of an office-to-residential conversion scheme for the building, developed by Metro Loft Development LLC.

It is the largest office-to-residential conversion project in the city, according to Gensler, and the project includes the addition of 19 storeys to the 10-storey tower at 219 East 42nd Street, with renovations to the larger tower at 235 East 42nd Street.

1,600 apartments and 100,000 square feet of amenities space are planned for the development, which has a completion date of 2027.

Metro Loft said it’s “aware of what happened”.

“We are aware of what happened and are working closely with the Department of Buildings to understand the full scope of the situation,” said the developer in a statement.

“The safety of our workers and the public has always been, and remains, our top priority.”

Structural changes are being made to both buildings under the scheme.

According to the website of Collaborative Construction Management, the smaller mid-block building was built in 1909 with cast iron and is set to be “threaded through with a new poured concrete 30-story addition”. This small structure was given a new facade in the 1960s.

The skyscraper at 235 East 42nd was built in the 1960s and designed by Emery Roth & Sons. Its original structure was steel and is set to have “both horizontal and vertical englargements” under the current scheme.

The tower is among several such residential-to-office conversions in the city, facilitated under recent incentives from local government. Others include an art deco skyscraper in Lower Manhattan converted into residential.

The photography is by Jim Henderson via Wikimedia unless otherwise stated.

The post Office-to-residential conversion building at risk of collapse in New York appeared first on Dezeen.



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All editorial content, photography, video, graphics, recordings, and original reporting published by this publication are protected under applicable copyright laws.

No part of this publication may be reproduced, republished, distributed, transmitted, displayed, or otherwise exploited without prior written permission.

For licensing, syndication, photography rights, music rights, recording rights, or republication inquiries, contact: licensing@seduiremedia.com