56 Leonard Street
Herzog & de Meuron
New York, New York, USA
Photo © Herzog & de Meuron, Basel,
2008
The 57-story residential building is located at the
intersection of Church Street and Leonard Street in the Tribeca
Historic District of downtown Manhattan.
Inspired by the permeability and spatial qualities of Modernist
houses and the great American dream of a customized home, Herzog
& de Meuron has replaced the usual extrusion of standardized
skyscraper floor plates with a staggered progression of structural
slabs turning slightly off axis by degrees as they ascend, creating
constant variety among the apartment floor plans.
This structural arrangement of floor plates create an
irregular flurry of cantilevered terraces up and down the building,
making plays of light and shadow that give the tower a shimmering,
animated appearance on the skyline.

Photo © Herzog & de Meuron,
Basel, 2008
We approached the design process from the inside out, from the homes themselves. But we also considered the outside in terms of the Tribeca neighborhood.
/Herzog & de MeuronHere you have the small townhouses, the old manufacturing buildings, and the high-rise buildings, but also a lot of little corners and surprising things between. The different scales characterize the neighborhood and we wanted to establish a dialogue among them. For us, creating a building is a research process. We call it a journey.

Photo © Herzog & de Meuron,
Basel, 2008
The building contains five key zones ascending from street to
sky: lobby, townhouse residences, amenities, tower residences, and
penthouses.
Appearing to rest upon Anish Kapoor's sculpture, a massive,
reflective stainless steel piece, the building base will have the
appearance of a stack of cantilevering volumes with varying degrees
of transparency and opacity.

Photo © Herzog & de Meuron,
Basel, 2008
The lobby zone contains a dramatic double - height lobby with an
entrance on Leonard Street adjacent to a verdant exterior vertical
garden to the west.
Above the 18-foot-high lobby are several floors of
townhouse residences, that relate very directly to the immediate
scale and panorama of the neighborhood, and two full floors of
amenities spaces custom-designed to the last detail by Herzog &
de Meuron.

Photo © Herzog & de Meuron,
Basel, 2008Lounge

Photo © Herzog & de Meuron,
Basel, 2008 Screening
Room
These spaces include a 75-foot infinity edge pool, one of
Manhattan's largest, surrounded by a black terrazzo deck inlaid
with spherical glass aggregate. An adjoining outdoor sundeck
cantilevers 20 feet over the block to provide extraordinary Tribeca
views and a sense of connection to the district.

Photo © Herzog & de Meuron,
Basel, 2008
The building's residences are located above with balconies and
terraces arranged in varied schemes that provide uninterrupted
views of the city.
The dramatic nine-story crown containing its apex
penthouses, will appear on the Manhattan skyline as a chimerical
geometric sculpture of stacked, glimmering glass volumes. Soaring
window walls open onto panoramas of the city and sky.

Photo © Herzog & de Meuron,
Basel, 2008
/Herzog & de MeuronWe approached the design process from the inside out, from the homes themselves. But we also considered the outside in terms of the Tribeca neighborhood. Here you have the small townhouses, the old manufacturing buildings, and the high-rise buildings, but also a lot of little corners and surprising things between. The different scales characterize the neighborhood and we wanted to establish a dialogue among them. For us, creating a building is a research process. We call it a journey.
The 57-story residential building is located at the intersection
of Church Street and Leonard Street in the Tribeca Historic
District of downtown Manhattan.
Facts about 56 Leonard Street
Site area:
12,500 ft2
Building Footprint: 12,500 ft2
Gross floor area: 425,000 ft2
Architects:
Herzog & de Meuron
Partners:
Jacques Herzog
Pierre de Meuron
Ascan Mergenthaler
Project Architects:
Vladimir Pajkic (Associate)
Philip Schmerbeck
Mehmet Noyan
Project Team:
Zachary Vourlas
Jason Whiteley
Daniela Zimmer
Mark Chan
Simon Filler
Sara Jacinto
Jin Tack Lim
Mark Loughnan (Associate)
Jaroslav Mach
Donald Mak
Hugo Moura
Jeremy Purcell
James Richards
Heeri Song
Charles Stone (Associate)
Executive Architects:
Costas Kondylis and Partners
Construction Management:
Hunter Roberts
Client:
Alexico Group LLC
Last updated: December 13, 2012
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