flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

Woolworth Tower Residences: What a view!

Reconstruction Awards

Woolworth Tower Residences: What a view!

The one-time tallest building in the world is now home to an exclusive residential clientele.


By Robert Cassidy, Executive Editor | November 11, 2019
Five-story penthouse

The copper-clad spire of the five-story Pinnacle Penthouse has a private elevator, two sets of stairs, and a great room with a 24-foot vaulted ceiling and a 360-degree view of Manhattan. All photos: Ralph D'Angelo / Cig Digital Inc.

Upon its completion, in 1913, the Woolworth Building was the tallest building in the world. Designed by Cass Gilbert (1859-1934), the 62-story, 792-foot Neo-Gothic skyscraper at 233 Broadway, New York, held that honor until 1930.

Now, more than a century later, it is being cited for the extraordinary effort by construction manager CNY and its project team in converting its upper tower into 31 luxury residences and one enormous penthouse, a five-story “townhome in the sky.”

The CNY team restored the landmark terra cotta façade, including turrets, decorative features, and metalwork; replaced and upgraded the MEP infrastructure; constructed a new separate entrance, lobby, and two new private elevators to serve the new residences on floors 29 to 50; and added a host of modern amenities: wine storage, a yoga studio, swimming pool, Jacuzzi, sauna, secure bicycle storage, a fitness center, and a lounge-gaming center with a pantry.

 

Wrap around observatory deckA two-story spiral stair leads to a wraparound observatory deck. 

 

All this work had to be done in three around-the-clock shifts without the use of a crane or hoist tower on the outside of the building. Everything had to be hoisted up through existing shaftways within the guts of the building, even as the lower 28 floors were occupied with commercial tenants.

The only available access to the upper floors was through two decommissioned side-by-side elevators in which a temporary hoist cab that measured a mere 4½x9x9 feet was installed.

Oversized equipment like fans, cooling tower components, and pumps were purchased as knockdowns, enabling them to be fabricated, disassembled into smaller pieces, hoisted up, and reassembled in place. Steel section beams were cut into six-foot sections, hoisted to the 50th floor, winched up four more stories to the penthouse using a chain fall and pulleys, and reassembled and welded.

This amazing feat of structural and mechanical engineering and construction was achieved by removing four elevators, truncating three more, and gutting the core to construct two new large-core elevator shafts and stairwells—an operation that took two years to complete.

 

Lobby

 

Construction of the five-story penthouse, known as the Pinnacle, required major demolition and gut renovation. The space originally housed the building’s MEP/FP systems and domestic water tanks. To replace these outdated systems, the project team had to field design and install a new 15,000-gallon water tank beneath the roof, a new fire pump 10 stories down, and a 3,500-gallon tank 20 stories down. Only then could the old tanks and equipment be removed. A new circular stairwell was constructed through the center of the donut-shaped tank.

As befits a National Historic Landmark (1966) and New York City Landmark (1983), no two floors and no two rooms in the Woolworth were exactly the same. The distinct floor-to-floor heights, differing beam depths at the ceilings, and drifting historical columns at the core complicated the stacking of the units. The diminishing size of the floor plates in the tower, coupled with the unique requirements of extremely discriminating buyers, added to the complexity of the design.

 

plaster ceiling panelsRestored hundred-pound plaster ceiling panels were installed in the lobby. 

 

Sculptural arches, gargoyles, and terra cotta rosebuds were restored as a critical component of the customized framing of every window. About 7,500 tons of cream terra cotta with blue and yellow glazed accents were meticulously preserved or recreated, using over 30 different molds to match the landmark color aesthetic, at a cost of $23 million.

To revive the original 55x15-foot basement lap pool, CNY had to remove, inventory, and reposition 34 solid marble coping stones weighing 800 lbs each.

As a finishing touch, CNY relocated the original coffered ceiling in F.W. Woolworth’s office on the 40th floor—400 sf of 3x3-foot, 100-pound blue, white, and gilded/bronzed plaster panels—to a dedicated residential entrance lobby.

 

PLATINUM AWARD WINNER

BUILDING TEAM CNY (submitting firm, CM) BlackRock (owner) The Office of Thierry W Despont Ltd. (architect, interior architect) SLCE Architects LLP (architect of record) Gilsanz Murray Steficek LLP (SE) AKF Engineers LLP (MEP) DETAILS 150,211 sf Total cost Confidential at owner’s request Construction time January 2016 to December 2018 Delivery method CM

Related Stories

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 8, 2019

2019 Reconstruction Awards: The 1060 Project at Wrigley Field

Venerable Wrigley Field is raised up in a top-to-bottom restoration that took five years to complete.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 6, 2019

2019 Reconstruction Awards: Betting on a city's future

Can a new resort and casino pump life into a city once renowned as the nation’s arms maker?

Reconstruction Awards | Dec 4, 2018

BD+C's 2018 Reconstruction Award Winners

Cincinnati Music Hall, MASS MoCA Building 6, and 20 Times Square are just a few of the projects recognized as 2018 Reconstruction Award winners.

Reconstruction Awards | Dec 3, 2018

2018 Reconstruction Awards: Honorable mentions

These four projects won honorable mentions in BD+C's 2018 Reconstruction Awards.

Reconstruction Awards | Dec 3, 2018

Elgin Tower: Elgin's heart beats again

A project team brings this Chicago suburb’s landmark tower back to life.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 30, 2018

Hawaiian Dredging Construction Company Building: GC to the rescue

Hawaii’s largest contractor saves one of the state’s prized architectural landmarks—and now calls it home.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 30, 2018

5 Beekman Hotel and Residences: Back in business

A landmark office tower becomes one of N.Y.’s hottest lifestyle hotel destinations.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 29, 2018

700 Constitution: Healthy living

Hospital turned apartment brings luxury living to a D.C. neighborhood – and saves a valued piece of architecture.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 28, 2018

IBEW Local 134 Union Hall: Union lights a 'beacon'

Electrical workers’ local converts an abandoned Chicago school into a brightly lit union hall.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 27, 2018

Bedford Square: Revivifying urbanity

A suburban mixed-use redevelopment restores ‘the lost art of living closely.'

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category


Giants 400

BD+C Awards Programs

Entry information and past winners for Building Design+Construction's two major awards programs: 40 Under 40 and Giants 400



halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021