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Trump Palace Townhouses, 205 East 68th Street: Review and Ratings
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Carter Horsley's Building Review Carter Horsley
Feb 16, 2016
76 CITYREALTY RATING
  • #25 in Lenox Hill

Carter's Review

This handsome, 8-story, mid-block building at 205 East 68th Street is part of the Trump Palace complex at 200 East 69th Street.

It has 95 condominium apartments.

It was developed in 1990 by Donald Trump and designed by Frank Williams.

Although is called the Trump Palace Townhouses, it does not actually have townhouses like the well-known Solow Townhouses nearby on 67th Street adjacent to Solow’s black-glass tower at 265 East 66th Street.

Bottom Line

Stylistically, this attractive building is related to the base of the 634-foot-high tower that is one of the city’s most attractive apartment towers.

Description

The building has an attractive entrance marquee and a very attractive and broad polished granite bandcourse above its second story.  The rest of the building is faced with rose-colored masonry and its top two floors are setback.  It has sidewalk landscaping.

The building is just to the east of the very large Trump Palace courtyard that is just to the east of the complex’s retail frontage on Third Avenue.

This building is also just to the west of the huge white-brick apartment house at 215 East 68th Street that was erected in 1962 by the Rudins and designed by Emery Roth and reclad in terra cotta with stripes by FXFowle.  That building has a large driveway and extensive and handsome sidewalk landscaping.  It has some corner windows.

Amenities

This building has a handsome lobby, 24-hour concierge and doorman, a bicycle room, a laundry, a fitness center, storage and a garage.

Apartments

Apartment 5D is a studio unit with a 21-foot-long living room and an enclosed kitchen.

History

The tallest building on the Upper East Side, the form and proportions of this 56-story tower are terrific.

Although its crenellated top recollects that of the famous Chanin Building on the southwest corner of 42nd Street and Lexington Avenue, the tower is far too sophisticated to be described as Post-Modern.

Its architect had previously designed the residential portion of one of the city's most important Post-Modern complexes, World Wide Plaza on a former site of Madison Square Garden in west Midtown. Here, the architects have sculpted a very interesting tower that is an aggressive and very specific intrusion into the skyline, one that represented a significant departure for its famous developer, who previously was preoccupied with glitz and slickness.

This is a brick building, to begin with. It has many traditional "courses" that cap, or separate, different divisions of the tower. Its shape is distinctly complex and not at all clean-cut.

Given the general anti-high-rise sentiment of the city at the time this was built, it is quite stunning that Trump was able to pull this project off. Third Avenue, of course, was no stranger to high-rise "luxury" towers in the 60's, including another Trump project several blocks to the south, but this stands in splendid isolation. As such, it toppled the Carlyle Hotel on Madison Avenue at 76th Street as the most prominent, unofficial landmark on the Upper East Side. More importantly, it greatly improved the Upper East Side skyline for Upper West Siders.

At about the same time that Trump was going ahead with this project, he switched architects on his large "Trump City" project on the Upper West Side overlooking the Hudson River from a modernist design that included a "world's tallest building" there, designed by Helmut Jahn, for Trump, to a Post-Modern enclave designed by Costas Kondylis that mimics some of the Art Deco twin-towered buildings of Central Park West.

While this tower's top, which is beautifully illuminated at night, is reminiscent of Art Deco, the building's base is more typical Trump, a generally conservative, corporate blandness with a bit of expensive flash.

The condominium apartment layouts are generally efficient, but not palatial, and most of their views are protected and sensational. The marketing here is generally aimed at an international market largely interested in conventional pied-a-terres, which can be combined for larger units, with plenty of amenities and convenience. The top several floors have only one unit each.

The building's brick is a yellowish-orange, which is an interesting experiment at keeping the large tower light in tone but also warm and inviting. The experiment, however, misses somewhat and the tower's color is, well, peachy. Furthermore, the brickwork does not appear to be the most expensive, or finely detailed. Nevertheless, a brick tower is welcome and the wealth of detailing on the other building elements is admirable.

Despite its size, there are only 285 apartments here, two-thirds of which are in the tower and the remainder in the “townhouse” structures, thereby affording residents in the tower considerable more "exclusivity" on their floor than many other recent large projects.

With its superb massing, this tower could only be improved if it had a travertine marble façade and surely Trump will eventually get around to erecting such a tower, but perhaps without such an excellent location.

The tower replaced the 10-story, New York Foundling Hospital that had been erected in 1959.

The tower was built "as-of-right," but Mr. Trump could not get a zoning variance he wanted to create a five-screen movie theater on the site.

"A lively pattern of windows and balconies," noted Robert A. M. Stern, David Fishman and Jacob Tilove noted in their great book, "New York 2000, Architecture and Urbanism Between The Bicentennial and The Millennium" (The Monacelli Press, 2006), "added interest to the telescopic tower, which proved to be just the kind of landmark Third Avenue needed, though Herbert Muschamp did not see its bravura in positive terms, agreeing in essence with Kenneth Koyen, a neighbor of the tower, who called it 'as appropriate as an asparagus spear on a golf green.' Muschamp took issue with several aspects of the design, beginning with the detailing of the base, which he castigated as 'tacky Art Deco trim.' He also felt that the brick walls, 'glamorous from a distance, look cheap up close.'"

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