Why New York is Building on TOP of its Skyscrapers
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 9 เม.ย. 2024
- New York is so full that it's now building on top of its existing high-rises.
Skip the waitlist and invest in blue-chip art for the very first time by signing up for Masterworks - www.masterworks.art/theb1m
This video contains paid promotion for Masterworks. Purchase shares in great masterpieces from artists like Pablo Picasso, Banksy, Andy Warhol, and more. See important Masterworks disclosures - www.masterworks.com/cd
Full story here - theb1m.com/video/why-new-york...
Research sources -
www.bloomberg.com/opinion/art...
nypost.com/2022/02/24/inside-...
www.curbed.com/2023/04/macklo...
www.ft.com/content/4e5af632-1...
www.nytimes.com/2018/07/20/re...
Additional footage and images courtesy of One Wall Street.
For more by The B1M subscribe now - bit.ly/the-b1m
We're raising awareness of construction's mental health crisis through our Get Construction Talking initiative. There’s a video series on our channel and you can find support or donate at - www.getconstructiontalking.org/
Follow Get Construction Talking
Instagram - / getconstructiontalking
Twitter - / getconsttalking
LinkedIn - / about
Listen to The World's Best Construction Podcast by The B1M
Apple - apple.co/3OssZsH
Spotify - spoti.fi/3om1NkB
Amazon Music - amzn.to/3znmBP4
View this video and more at - www.TheB1M.com/
Follow us on Twitter - / theb1m
Like us on Facebook - / theb1m
Follow us on TikTok - / theb1m
Follow us on LinkedIn - / the-b1m-ltd
Follow us on Instagram - / theb1m
The B1M Merch store - theb1m.creator-spring.com/
#construction #architecture #skyscraper
We welcome you sharing our content to inspire others, but please be nice and play by our rules - www.theb1m.com/guidelines-for-...
Our content may only be embedded onto third party websites by arrangement. We have established partnerships with domains to share our content and help it reach a wider audience. If you are interested in partnering with us please contact Video@TheB1M.com.
Ripping and/or editing this video is illegal and will result in legal action.
© 2024 The B1M Limited
Skip the waitlist and invest in blue-chip art for the very first time by signing up for Masterworks 👉www.masterworks.art/theb1m
Stop the stupid, distracting, unnecessary and annoying camera click sound bytes!
Incredibly disappointing that you're still pushing masterworks to your audience. Look into them and be better please.
Scammer money goes hard, huh?
افضل فيديوهات قصير عشره دقائق فقط
These guys are f**king cancer. Locking away artwork in freeports and treating it like a commodity. Humanity is circling the drain.
Converted into luxury apartments, the fate of every old building
Only to be empty for 95% of the year
Only tenants willing to pay the premium for this type of building
@@CrabappleKing pretty much. it will be used to park some rich dude's money.
I'd rather rich people outbid each other on luxury apartments than put pressure on the more affordable segments of the housing market.
@@41chemist19 the issue is that most developers want to build luxury apartments.
I’m so glad they went for the same style in architecture instead of a glass box.
Well they weren't allowed to change it as he said, but also even if they could she said she wouldn't.
They did put a glass box though, on street level and for this penthouse…? Like yea it has some cladding that’s the same beige but it’s really obviously an addition.
I would love to see this architecture make a return. I love gothic architecture.
The new floors are acutally glass boxes. And if it weren't a landmark of course they would not have changed the fassade because it would be expensive lol ...
@@maximum94yeah sure. Architects are lazy. If they could they would’ve made a glass box
In Chicago, the Blue Cross Blue Shield building had floors added on to it, but I remember reading that the building was originally designed to expand in case they needed more room.
Oh that's cool, that would be more expensive, nice of them to think of that
You have to wonder about the added weight.
i worked on that project it was indeed designed for the top to be added later.
One of my favorite buildings in Chicago
It is not as complex as you might expect. Steelframes can carry a lot of weight and back then they were rarely that optimised to safe weight but rather allow for uniform and fast construction.
An excited engineer- you don't see that everyday. It's cool to see someone describing his work with obvious enthusiasm
You might be quite surprised how many engineers are passionate and excited about their job everyday, 👍
I would say architectural engineers are right up there with vets in terms of jobs where the expectation doesn't meant reality at all.
As an upcoming vet, you think you're there to cure sick puppies and kittens but instead find out you either have to disable their genitals, get bitten from them being in fear, and put down the ones that the owners can't afford to keep alive since the job just doesn't pay the school debt.
Architectural engineers envision creating elaborate landmarks that serve both form and function and stand the test of time, only to have your vision is crushed by someone who wants to cut corners or a government with so many regulations that it's practically impossible to achieve what you want, let alone in any reasonable amount of time.
That’s Mark Plechaty, Bachelor of Science in civil engineering from the University of Buffalo and has been the primary designer and project manager on over 40 major structures, including numerous tall towers in New York City, 125 Greenwich, 101 Murray, and 520 Fifth Avenue.
I would love a video about tower cranes and why they are so expensive to install
And how they don’t fall over!!!
Me too, would love to see B1M doing videos on big construction machinery
it doesnt cover the cost part but this a good video on the basics of how own is assembled th-cam.com/video/oSyC8pxJdeQ/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=ArtofEngineering
I bet Grady at Practical Engineering would be open to that idea.
Ima look this up cus I feel like you just dropped a gem
there is a lot of space in NYC but if you are talking about downtown Manhattan, then there isn't. Also, this isn't for housing, this is more for speculate investment. Most of those apartments will be sitting empty 90% of the time.
Getouttahea with that tired NIMBY trope. More housing where it's in high demand is only a good thing, no matter who buys it. We have so, so, SO much demand for housing... and we'd have even more if we built enough new housing to actually lower prices.
No space?! Build up! Sky would be the limit, but for stupid zoning.
Actually, many of those buildings are IDEAL for residences bc of the smaller floor-plates - - much more prevalent in pre-WW skyscrapers (especially downtown bc of the tiny winding streets that date back to New Amsterdam).
Same in London btw.
don't lie you are parroting some buzzfeed thing the rest of us also saw. Cmon bro you're better than that
What you don’t hear about. In a troubling incident on Friday, September 18, 2020, security guard Troy Evans died after falling six stories into an underground construction shaft. The incident was reported at around 2:00 p.m. at 1 Wall Street in Manhattan. The 55-year-old was inside the partially-constructed building when he fell six stories through a ventilator duct shaft into the sub-basement. RIP Troy people put their lives on the line literally to build these skyscrapers.
Omg get a grip people having been dying building structures for thousands of years just look at the difference between now and when they built these medival cathedrals you’ll understand how safe it is compared today
This is why there are savety precautions and directions, imagine how many deaths there would be if there werent any savety measures. That one awful death would become a dozen. Besides, its a calculated risk, when working on a construction site you have to be careful. And we have to ask ourselves, how did he even manage to get into said ventilation duct shaft he fell into?
I remember the works of Isaac Asimov, who wrote about Caves of Steel in NYC. In those books, they changed office buildings to residential but did not relocate the restrooms at all. Communical restrooms became a cultural thing. In the Mens Personal, no words were ever spoken. Quite the opposite is true in women's facilities. The only thing I didn't see in those books were showers. Also, the buildings themselves were now all connected with very little access to anything outside. They are 1970s books, but they are still good reading today.
Your comment reminded me of the animated film 'Heavy Metal'. In one of the stories, the narrator talked about how the UN Building was turned into low rent housing.
That kind of living is pretty much illegal outside of dorms though. Honestly if the rent was cheaper and there was a cleaner it would probably get a decent amount of people still trying to live there.
Communal bathrooms were the norm forever until building codes. That's how we use to house thousands of immigrants though so you know.........
@@Bonserak23I can imagine building codes being adjusted to pave the way for streamlined office conversions. But it would definitely still be a heavy lift. Still. People are already squeezing into one closet rooms in the heart of NYC with communal bathrooms. There would be many takers
ANYTHING written by Dr. Asamov is worth reading!
Roof space in so many places is wasted. Like it could be a nice community nature space or something else.
A good example is some of Singapore buildings
If you're into that post apocalyptic city look...
Adds a lot of weight, depending what your doing, NYC is cold most of the year and rains more than Seattle, Seattle just has more cloudy days.
Chicago has done many garden roofs on their municipal buildings.
A lot of Boston is built directly on top of the original European buildings, you just can’t really see it from far away or above
japan is really good at that aswell they have entire parks on top of buildings
Without the pricey real estate location, this just would not be possible. The cost on these types of conversions is astronomical. It looks like they did a fantastic job.
20 million renovation cost. 100 million profit
Great video Fred & B1M team! 😎👍🏼👍🏼
1 suggestion - - it would be even better if you held some of the visuals longer (the floor plans, exterior drone shots, etc); I think many viewers like to study the work + changes, engineering challenges, designs, improvements, vistas, etc.
Presumably one can pause the video, but your point is well taken.
They are in a tearing hurry to finish the video .
The research, time, care, explanation, visuals, and connection to the audience with each of these subjects are what make this one of my absolute favorite channels. Fred’s narration adds a lot of intrigue into the subjects, and gives the videos an overall comfortable feel. Well done on every level.
Agreed! Too bad the comments don't measure up to the channel.
Masterworks:
Wealth creation for billionaires but not so much for the rest of us!
💸💸💸😂😂😂
He is a cnt. Deleing all comments regarding this. He knows what he is doing, but he loves that bag more.
@@nkjoself2040 slick advertising equals loose subscribers
I’ve seen a lot of comments similar to this in the past and now they’re no where to be seen 😂😂😂
What do you expect? The dude literally sells a mug with his own face on it 😂
It used to be that way. Especially after the pandemic. But things have drastically changed. www.nyc.gov/site/hpd/news/007-24/new-york-city-s-vacancy-rate-reaches-historic-low-1-4-percent-demanding-urgent-action-new#/0
Great use of a building that would have sat there as a vacant office, and keeping the new section in line with the old style was well done and looks great also.
Masterworks again?
Why not just build a new New York on top of New York?
Now we're talking
revolutionary!!
Futurama did it
Wouldn’t that be New New York?
Like they did in Futurama?
you are one of my favourite channels on YT, consistently informative and fascinating. Always look forward to a new episode.
More stuff for the rich. Meanwhile, average folks can’t buy a house thanks to prices and interest rates. Good ol’ America.
I think a video highlighting just why commercial -> residential conversions are much more difficult than we naively think would be interesting.
I worked for Irving Trust in the early 80's. The subway underneath was mentioned; does it still have an entrance directly into the building? Even though it had not been cleaned, the Red Room was quite beautiful back then.
Coruscant here we come
Never mind crushing the floors below, what holds all those floors up are the foundations - which were designed to hold up the original number of floors with their original floor plan.
Great video!!! LOVE the addition of extra floors!! .. it makes the building more profitable a MASIVE benefit to every one living there!!!
Also BRAVO to management and all the tradesmen!! for going above and beyond!! ... to keep the heritage aspects of he building!! .. great job!!
Very fascinating project for sure!
First steps to Coruscant ;b
Imagine living and working in the same building?
Your commute time would be five minutes. Home for lunch!
😂
I already do multiple days a week ;) thanks Covid !
Or your boss coming to knock on your door on your day off!
Sounds terrible. I don't want be anywhere near my job
hi TheB1M, would like to see more tech info on the plastic bubble method of reducing weight in the floor slab please.
Yeah I don't understand why they do this. Wouldn't it just reduce how strong the floor is? Why use them and not just use less concrete if the weight of the floor is a problem?
Bubbles burst!
A floor is actually just like a beam, the concrete wants to be pressed together at the top and pulled apart at the bottom. In the hard of the beam the forces are zero. So if you keep just enough material in the middle to hold the top and bottom together, you will save a lot of weight and maintain strength.
Curious why they don't do this on floor slabs everywhere, even on regular buildings. Sounds like great savings.
Commieblocks prefabricated slabs came with cylindrical lengthwise holes...
@@u1zha In the Netherlands, almost all modern houses are built with “kanaalplaten”. These are prefabricated floor slabs with channels across the width of the slab. However, these have a one-sided span. Bubbledeck floors have a span on all sides, so you can increase the span.
Very good video! Your interviews with the actual players were placed perfectly.
My buddy and I just walked by there in Feb. He said he had watched the construction but did not know the details. Now we do . I sent him the link
Very enjoyable as always 👍
Fred, the filming done by the team was stunning. Well done. 👏🏼
Thank you for the video. A good use for a classic building
this channel is masterclass! Very well presented and the videos are so artistic, enjoyable and informative. Great Job!
This channel is the best. As an architect and project manager from India, i learn so much from you guys. Keep up the good work. Cheers!!
Fantastic video as always!
Excellent !!! A great conversion!
Love your work.
Amazing video on adaptive reuse🔥🔥🔥🔥
your narration is crazy, that's the best part of all the videos!!!!!!! crazyyyy :)
Great work!!👏
Impressive! The red deco room is amazing.
Good to see NY is taking design notes from Kowloon City.
Absolutely Amazing Construction and Craftsmanship to convert this building to Residential!
engineering is amazing and reaching new heights every time.
In February 2020, Macys at Harold Square announced it was considering placing a 900 foot skyscraper on top of its flagship store. It plans it as office space that they could rent out (not for their own use for the store). I don't know if it will materialize or not. They would need to update the underground subway lines as well to achieve it--for millions more.
Excellent content
Oh how I wish that some developer would finish the original grand plan of a 100 story skyscraper for the Metropolitan Life North Building at 11-25 Madison Avenue.
The current building stands at a mere 30 stories.
If it were completed as originally planned, it would have stood taller than the ESB !!
Imagine this Art Deco Masterpiece having a roof height of 1,286 ft (392 meters) and a pinnacle height of 1,460 ft (445 meters) !!!
It's Never Too Late I guess ...,
An over build like this was also recently done in steel on the Tiffany's Building. Managed to avoid the tower crane problem by putting a mobile crane right on top of the structure!
In the movie The Fifth Element, New York is kind of like this. New skyscrapers are stacked on top of old ones. Life imitates Hollywood!
Was fully expecting something along the lines of 'now let's move from artworks back to art deco' after the Masterworks bit.
A similar thing was done to two high rises in Brisbane Australia where they were joined together then had floors added to them
Every building in the New York area should be in inspected on a serious note.
That lobby is AMAZING.
Wow! Amazing what ingeneers can do
This is interesting. In Thailand, there are a few towers that were constructed up to half their intended height and then construction was halted due to the financial crisis.
For some of these, the owners didn't bother continuing to the original height but instead just added a facade and called it a day.
Inspired by the video, I hope to one day see these towers reach their planned heights.
The transformation of One Wall Street is a remarkable example of how cities can adapt to changing needs by reimagining existing spaces. This project not only preserves a historic structure but also addresses urban housing demands creatively and sustainably.
The Surfside Condominium that collapsed in Florida had an added penthouse that was not part of the original design.
So nice to see a project that preserves history and beauty, even if it's only for the very wealthy.
Fred, you're the best I've ever seen when you merge your sponsor with your videos. Seamless, simply Seamless. Oh, and amazing engineering... 😏
They added to the old post office in Vancouver BC. It was pretty cool.
That segway though. Smooth. 👍
Hell yea more luxury apartments that no real people can afford
I come from Napier the Art Deco capital of the world so the fact they kept the Art Deco inspired mosaics rejuvenates and honor's New York's Past.
wow..Informativve and interesting, as always. On these videos where you just narrate i wish you would do some video so it makes it seem you are more involved.
Really a beautiful building
Hi B1M, enthusiastic subscriber here - have loved your channel for quite some time. Just a small suggestion - while I know getting a camera crew to NYC is not possible for a short video, it would have been nice to see more interior shots of the building - from common areas to apartments. While info-graphics and interviews are great, I do wish there was more actual corresponding photos and video. Zoom call video feeds aren’t the most riveting 😉. Much thanks, keep up the good work.
Always Waiting for your Video My Bro
Ah thank so much!!
What about that one building (i forgot the name) that had plans of being the tallest in the world at that time but ended up being only like 1/3 of its total height? That one WAS DESIGNED to hold the weight of a tower on top of it so... why not do it? Just finish the building as it was originally designed! That would be so cool imo. IF they stay true to the original design that is ofc.
Plenty of those in NYC. Grand Central Terminal was designed to support a tower (no towers on Grand Central Terminal please...), so was 23 Wall Street
I've noticed this has been happening in London last couple years, not to this extent mainly just 1 floor added to a 4/5 story block
Soon only the rich will see the sunlight
That will be a win for homeless people
@@YandereDevSings💀
“Stories were added” seems to be about a third of disaster videos about buildings that collapsed, like the Hard Rock Casino in New Orleans, various buildings around the world.
Great video as always! It is odd that Hildreth Meiere is named in the caption but not mentioned in the voice over. Was that a conscious choice @TheB1M?
Thank God they kept the Art Deco feel of the building.
Thank god it doesn’t look like a giant dong for once
Cool
A whole new meaning to working from home. Convert the office into your home.
If you have tens of millions of dollars.
I see a similar change at 4 New York Plaza, a massive overall😅 is currently underway where the building is transitioning from an office block to residential apartments.
If this can work, then this is for me is the write way to go, as long as it's done in a way that benefits and fits the building and respects architecture of the building.
“It was nothing insurmountable” he could’ve just said it was a fun challenging task 😅
I like repurposing and getting more from available land.
Those 6 extra floors...I'm curious to the building cost, the real estate value created, and the number of people that will ACTUALLY call it their one and only home. There is a shortage of affordable housing. Housing for the wealthy is plentiful. Perhaps Wall Street is the one place where it's not, making them go through all that trouble to convert this building?
Ffs when will people get it affordable housing does not fit into Manhattan that’s for the outskirts Brooklyn and queens etc not the city centre it’s always going to be expensive simple
Love you Bro
Not crushing the floors below is job # 1 IMHO. If you get that one wrong, you’re going to have a lot of explaining to do to the building owner. I’m glad they figured it out.
hey you guys you could do a comparative video on the old North Sydney CBD,,,a row of 6 office buildings all converted to residential and now some of the most wanted in the state
do a video on the repositioning of PENN 2 next!
The floor type used in this construction is called bubble deck flooring!
Can you cover a video on Chongqing city in China?
Especially the rooftop on the 22nd floor which seems like the ground until you get to the edge?
I worked at One Wall Street for 12 years from 1998 to 2010. I don’t know how I feel about this.
Wow! Its so incredible i love it.
nice video b1m
Thanks!
I realized this is very possible for many buildings in different cities that can go up higher than the original.
Should have done a video on 488 University Ave in Toronto they added 37 floors to an existing office.
That's happening all around Manhattan. office Buildings are empty.
Can you do a video about New York City's aqueducts?
Must of the people that buy expensive arts, those people dont love art. Its just business, just tangible assets.
Wow, great job. Repurposing is so much better than demolition, only I bet these places end up being slightly pricey 😳
Most of the skyscrapers in New York are in a small part of south Manhattan, for the northern half of the island the median height of buildings is lower then Paris which has outlawed buildings above 7 floors.
When they mentioned cleaning the Mosiacs, cigarette smoke came to mind!
Best thing about building a roof top is that at the end of day, you get another rooftop! It's free real estate!
New York becoming a real life Coruscant 😂
Doesn't feel like a lot of housing given how big that building is.