Brookfield Properties

And Then There Were Four: Brookfield Out of West Side Rail Yards Race

Rendering from Brookfield's bid
Rendering from Brookfield's bid

Revised bids for the West Side rail yards were due today, and Brookfield Properties did not submit a response, leaving four of the city’s biggest developers in a battle for control of the 26-acre site west of Pennsylvania Station.

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which owns the site, put out a statement a few minutes ago saying that the agency had received four revised proposals, with no bid from Brookfield. The timeline, which puts selection of a developer in April, remains the same, the MTA said.  read more »

Brookfield Taps SOM for Other West Side Rail Yards [UPDATED]

Skidmore Owings and Merrill.

Brookfield Properties seems to like the architectural veterans over at Skidmore Owings and Merrill these days. Brookfield brought on the longtime firm to design its two signature towers in its bid for the West Side rail yards, and now the mega-office landlord has released an SOM-designed rendering for two office towers on a superblock to the east, bounded by 31st and 33rd streets, and Ninth and 10th Avenues (which are rather reminiscent of the designs for the rail yards to the east). The site currently opens to rail tracks that lead into Pennsylvania Station.

The Times’ Charles Bagli had a piece today on Brookfield’s development, and while the print edition had a small rendering, the online version went without it. Accordingly, I called over to the folks at Brookfield, and they gave us the pretty picture to the right.  read more »

Brookfield Says It’s Making Progress With Merrill, West Side Development

Ric Clark.
James Hamilton.
Ric Clark.

Brookfield Properties seems to be moving along with a renewal with Merrill Lynch at the World Financial Center, which, at least as of last month was likely to mean a five-year lease. On a conference call with investors today, a Brookfield executive said the company was in “active and productive discussions with Merrill,” though didn’t expand beyond that.  read more »

Goldman Sachs Waiting It Out in One New York Plaza

Crain's reports that Goldman Sachs has extended its lease of 517,000 square feet at Brookfield Properties' One New York Plaza for 15 months as it awaits the completion of its new headquarters on West Street in Lower Manhattan. The headquarters is supposed to be done by late 2009.

A Little Critic Love for Underdog Rail Yard Bids

Ric Clark.
James Hamilton.
Ric Clark.

Wall Street Journal architect critic Ada Louise Huxtable likes the West Side rail yard bids of Brookfield Properties and Extell Development Corporation. In general, Ms. Huxtable doesn't like any of the five bids, but those of Brookfield and Extell at least, she writes, "are worth talking about."  read more »

Former EDC Guy Goes Back for Rail Yards Bid

Any good development firm worth its salt has got to have a former City Hall staffer or two on hand to navigate the bureaucracy. Last month, Brookfield Properties sent its latest government hire, Joshua Sirefman, into a meeting to help present the company’s multi-billion dollar plan for the West Side rail yards to a joint city-Metropolitan Transportation Authority selection committee.  read more »

Brookfield's Ric Clark: 'Once in a Century' Chance on the West Side

Patrick McMullan

Ric Clark, president and CEO of Brookfield Properties, sat down last week with The Observer to expound on topics such as Merrill Lynch possibly moving out of Brookfield's World Financial Center and the firm's plans to develop a superblock along Ninth Avenue.

We'll have the complete interview in Wednesday's paper, but here's Mr. Clark talking about Brookfield's bid for the West Side rail yards. His firm is up against five others for the biggest slice of undeveloped Manhattan in many years.

About the bids for the West Side yards—How did you approach designing the future of this 26-acre site?  read more »

Brookfield's West Side Bid Wins a Popular Vote

Courtesy of Brookfield Properties.

Blog Curbed has the results of its poll last week on the five bids to develop the West Side rail yards. Brookfield Properties' bid (partly rendered above) won with over 40 percent of the nearly 4,000 votes.

The Observer's Matthew Schuerman reported last week that Brookfield's bid had emerged as a crowd favorite, including among those who visited the midtown exhibit showing all five.

...[J]udging from the early reaction among visitors to the exhibit space, Brookfield has also gained a lot of fans, both via online message boards and among visitors to the exhibit, for a plan that they say looks the most like the rest of New York.

Brookfield's early popularity with the masses is no guarantee it will get to build on the 26-acre site. The site's owner, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, has the final say within the next few months, along with input from the Bloomberg administration.

The Observer will have an interview with Brookfield's chief executive Ric Clark in Wednesday's paper.

Brookfield Crowd Favorite in Race for West Side Rail Yards

Stephen Ross.
Stephen Ross.

Just juddging from the early reaction among visitors to the exhibit space.  read more »

West Side Rail Yards Proposal No. 3: Brookfield Reinstates the Streets

Courtesy of Brookfield Properties

Brookfield Properties, a giant landlord that keeps a lower profile than some of the city’s single-engine developers, did not come into the West Side Rail Yards competition with an anchor tenant. It did, however, come in with a whole bevy of design firms—seven in all—that proceeded to break just about every rule or convention that was set out for them.

The result is a plan that—forgive the hypothetical—Jane Jacobs would like (online here). It reinstitutes part of the street grid on the two massive superblocks between 30th and 33rd streets. Hotels create a street wall along 11th Avenue where other plans prescribe a park. The intent, according to Brookfield, is to link the new neighborhood with the rest of the city—including with a parcel Brookfield is developing on the eastern side of 10th Avenue.  read more »