535 West End Avenue at 86th Street: the real value of closets

A new residence is being built on the corner of 86th Street and West End Avenue (by Extell), which can’t be ignored. It will be 22 stories and have one apartment per floor of about 8500 square feet each (!) I hope this finally gives people enough room for closets. Also, each unit will have extra sized kitchens making it very attractive for families that keep kosher, if that indeed is the builder’s intent on this avenue with a large Jewish population.

Each apartment will cost about $14,000,000. So much for a real estate slump, not here! I am sure the units will be sold and probably very quickly too.

This is an ideal location, close to Riverside Park on the Hudson River, one block from Broadway shopping and transportation, on WestEnd Avenue.

West End is a quiet, old world, elegant avenue lined with pre-war, doorman buildings. On Shabbat and Jewish holidays, families stroll to the local synagogues. The building height matches the surrounding buildings and the size and price of each unit is in it’s own category. There is nothing else like this to my knowledge on this avenue.

Most interesting is that diagonally across the street from this incredible building is the Church of St. Paul and St. Andrew, which is a small, liberal Methodist congregation dedicated to possitive interfaith and social action. It also houses the West Side Campaign Against Hunger, a supermarket style food pantry which helps provide food for about 900 needy families per year. Also, Congregation B’nai Jeshurun (West 88th Street) meets in this church for Saturday morning services and for holiday overflow services. The church building is in poor shape and the congregation hopes to renovate and sell it’s air rights to secure income for it’s future, a plan that has been opposed by some community groups.

Perhaps the future condo owners of 535 West End can be convinced to become respected community neighbors by keeping the needs of the pantry in mind. This season the shelves became quite bare and the local synagogues and churches asked their members to donate (checks not food) in order to restock the shelves. Helping to support this pantry certainly would cost the new owners only a fraction of the cost of a small closet and would do a great deal of good for the needy and for their respect in the neighborhood.

 PS: See the comments for more about the neighborhood and the UPDATE AND PHOTO on the March 20, 2008 posting.

January 17th, 2008 1:16 pm

Great post, Lily. Extell has reached out to the food pantry with a one-time gift–a good beginning. So perhaps your suggestions will go somewhere. Who knows? We all need to re-think what it means to be neighbors in these strange and changing times.

January 17th, 2008 1:26 pm

Thank you! KKarpen is the minister at St Paul and St Andrew’s.

NYCGuy
January 17th, 2008 4:39 pm

SPSA is currently housing an even smaller activist neighboring congregation, West-Park Presbyterian, which among other things, incubated God’s Love We Deliver, a nationally recognized meal program for homebound folks. It’s being in the midst of wealth belies the fact that it is around the corner from two well-regarded SROs with supportive services. Will this UWS tradition continue to flourish? Anyway, your scribbling & Kay Karpen reply led me to make an online contribution to the WS Campaign. W 86th St is also home to the 1st “shul with a pool” & the flagship congregation of Judaism’s Reconstructionist movement & the Bard Graduate Center for Design, a degree-granting institution & gallery. For many years, Nobel Laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer lived & wrote in a landmark turn-of-the-century apartment building a 1/2 block east of SPSA,
caddy corner from one of the SRO’s & across Amsterdam Ave from West-Park. The neighborhood’s mid-1980s denizens & some of its now lost hang-outs are rendered in ceramic tiles inside the 86th St subway station beneath Broadway - the work of Brandeis HS students made possible through a then visionary community board. Publisher William Randolph Hearst occupied the top floors of an apartment building 1-block west on Riverside Drive & Edgar Allan Poe parked his family two blocks south. All of thid just scratches the surface in the very immediate environs of one eclectic, Victorian eclesiastic, official NYC landmark on a 5-block long east-west thoroughfare. Oh yeas & if one looks west, there’s the Garden State!

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