Check Out the Views From 1,438 Feet in the Air at 111 West 57th Street

October 26, 2015

Last week, 6sqft brought you an up close and personal look at 111 West 57th Street’s exterior facade mock-up, and now Property Markets Group (PMG), who is co-developing the super-tower with JDS Development Group, posted a nifty interactive panorama of the building’s out-of-this-world views.

Rising from the heart of Billionaires’ Row (New York’s very own Mount Olympus and preferred residence of our anonymous overlords), the building is 80 stories and 1,438 feet high and is nearly perfectly on axis to Central Park–an egotistical perk that Extell’s Central Park Tower and Macklowe/CIM Group’s 432 Park aren’t granted despite having higher apartments.

111 West 57th, PMG, JDS, Michael Stern, Manhattan skyline, SHoP Architects
On-center views of Central Park and beyond from 111 West 57th. George Washington Bridge and Hudson River to the west, planes taking off from LaGuardia in the east.

The panorama and aerial photography was produced by SkyPan International. Users can window shop 360-degree views from the tower at 75-foot intervals down to 245 feet in height. The tower will host just 60 full-floor homes, many of which will be duplexes that will provide tractor-trailer-clearing ceiling heights. Prices will start at $16 million and the approved offering plan projects a total sellout of $1.45 billion. Excavation is well underway at the oh-so-narrow lot, and completion is expected some time in 2018.

111 West 57th Street, terra cotta, SHoP Architects, BKSK, skyscraper, skylines, JDS Development, WSP (1)

Below are a few captures from the tower’s uppermost levels, which are roughly 1,150 feet above the city–some 200 feet higher than the highest units at nearby Billionaires’ Row king One57. All five boroughs can be seen from the perch, along with what seems every major Manhattan landmark. Homes in this rarefied air are expected to sell for more than $100 million.

111 West 57th, PMG, JDS, Michael Stern, Manhattan skyline, SHoP Architects
Midtown and Rockefeller Center in the foreground; downtown, Jersey City, Brooklyn and the harbor beyond.

111 West 57th, PMG, JDS, Michael Stern, Manhattan skyline, SHoP Architects
Looking down at the Museum of Modern Art, Sixth Avenue, and Fifth Avenue.

111 West 57th, PMG, JDS, Michael Stern, Manhattan skyline, SHoP Architects
Looking down on Gary Barnett’s One57. Barnett is constructing the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere (to the roof) nearby. The domed CitySpire and the angled Metropolitan Tower once held the highest apartments in the city and their height outraged locals when built in the 1980s.

111 West 57th, PMG, JDS, Michael Stern, Manhattan skyline, SHoP Architects
The Upper East Side, East River, Queens and the Bronx

111 West 57th, PMG, JDS, Michael Stern, Manhattan skyline, SHoP Architects
Grand Army Plaza and the Upper East Side’s ‘Gold Coast.’ The Apple computer store cube becomes ice-cube-sized at this height.

111 West 57th, PMG, JDS, Michael Stern, Manhattan skyline, SHoP Architects
While 432 Park Avenue provides a handful of apartments higher than 111 West 57th Street, 111 is taller due to a 200-foot crown that SHoP Architects’ partner Gregg Pasquarelli says is basically a glass and bronze sculpture

111 West 57th, PMG, JDS, Michael Stern, Manhattan skyline, SHoP Architects
Gaze down at viewers at the Top of the Rock observation deck. 111 West 57th Street’s top floors will also look down upon the highest floors of the Chrysler Building and Empire State Building

Stay updated on 111 West 57th Street at CityRealty, and browse hundreds of new developments here.

And browse the full panorama for even more views right this way >>

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