The Kaish & Taub Development Group Corporation of which Norman Kaish and Leonard Taub are principals has begun marketing for a 21-story residential condominium building it is developing at 160 East 22nd Street.
The building has been designed by Kutnicki Bernstein, which also designed 154 Attorney Street on the Lower East Side for Kaish & Taub.
The new project is on the southwest corner at Third Avenue and will feature many corner windows and balconies and will have a few setbacks.
The building, which also has an address of 280 Third Avenue, will have a 24-hour concierge, a screening room, and an "outdoor zen garden."
UBS Real Estate Investments Inc. of New York gave Gramercy Park Land LLC in care of Kaish & Taub a $30,500,000 mortgage on the property last August and construction is expected to begin next year.
Mr. Kaish told CityRealty.com today that the development is "as-of-right," that is, it requires no special permits or zoning variances. He said it will contain 110 to 120 apartments and that the project is still in design.
The building has been designed by Kutnicki Bernstein, which also designed 154 Attorney Street on the Lower East Side for Kaish & Taub.
The new project is on the southwest corner at Third Avenue and will feature many corner windows and balconies and will have a few setbacks.
The building, which also has an address of 280 Third Avenue, will have a 24-hour concierge, a screening room, and an "outdoor zen garden."
UBS Real Estate Investments Inc. of New York gave Gramercy Park Land LLC in care of Kaish & Taub a $30,500,000 mortgage on the property last August and construction is expected to begin next year.
Mr. Kaish told CityRealty.com today that the development is "as-of-right," that is, it requires no special permits or zoning variances. He said it will contain 110 to 120 apartments and that the project is still in design.
Architecture Critic
Carter Horsley
Since 1997, Carter B. Horsley has been the editorial director of CityRealty. He began his journalistic career at The New York Times in 1961 where he spent 26 years as a reporter specializing in real estate & architectural news. In 1987, he became the architecture critic and real estate editor of The New York Post.