{"id":215716,"date":"2023-09-05T14:10:31","date_gmt":"2023-09-05T18:10:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/?post_type=id_project&p=215716"},"modified":"2023-10-18T10:45:20","modified_gmt":"2023-10-18T14:45:20","slug":"eagle-west-residential-complex-brooklyn","status":"publish","type":"id_project","link":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/projects\/eagle-west-residential-complex-brooklyn\/","title":{"rendered":"A Residential Complex Soars Over the Waterfront in Brooklyn"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
September 5, 2023<\/p>\n\n\n
Words: <\/span>Elizabeth Fazzare<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n As the East River snakes between the shores of four of New York\u2019s five boroughs, it shapes islets, tributaries, and peninsulas along its way. These surprisingly saltwater banks that have historically been ports for the domestic and international shipping routes docking in the Big Apple today are prime real estate\u2014so long as the buildings meet 100-year flood-plain requirements. Manhattan\u2019s were the first to be developed, with a close stock of steel-and-glass skyscrapers, brick public housing, and seawall-protected esplanade parks. Queens followed suit with a focus on residential towers, their unobstructed views of the Manhattan skyline affording enviable urban sunsets.<\/p>\n\n\n\n But it\u2019s Brooklyn, the city\u2019s second-priciest and most populous borough, that is making big waves in luxury waterfront living\u2014its in\u00adno\u00advative buildings giving residents a skyline of their own to boast. Since the 2005 residential rezoning of the Greenpoint and Williamsburg shores, towers, parks, and even some beaches have made northern Brooklyn one of the hottest markets for young professionals, generationally wealthy coeds, and even the odd celebrity (Adam Driver, Patrick Wilson). Now, on the bulbous landmass where it meets Queens at Newtown Creek is Eagle + West, a ground-up, 860,700-square-foot complex of high-end, market-rate, and affordable rental apartments by OMA<\/a> (architecture), Marmol Radziner<\/a> (public and amenity spaces), and Beyer Blinder Belle Architects and Planners<\/a> (apartment interiors) is helping contribute a renewed relationship to its misnomer estuary.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The project\u2019s site, the 22-acre Greenpoint Landing, has naturally sweeping vistas of its surrounding skylines and waterways, so its architectural challenge came in arranging its massive program\u2014745 apartments across two towers and a low-rise, plus two retail spaces, a parking garage, and 42,000 square feet of indoor\/outdoor amenities, including two pools, coworking spaces, a podcast studio, and a playground\u2014to respect its neighboring town houses, which top out at seven stories. Zoning allowed for both a 400- and a 300-foot-tall tower set 40 feet apart. OMA New York partner Jason Long increased that distance to 60 and imagined their profiles as \u201cfraternal twins,\u201d stepping back and toward each other in seven- to eight-story terraced and cantilevered blocks like puzzle pieces that don\u2019t quite fit. These 40- and 30-floor siblings are connected by a two-story, 210-foot-long Vierendeel truss-and-glass bridge that houses the indoor pool, a lounge for the outdoor pool, a fitness center, and a double-height reservable room for resident functions, all topped by a 1,000-square-foot green roof.<\/p>\n\n\n\n \u201cWe created a composition that changes as you move around it,\u201d Long says of Eagle + West\u2019s monumental massing, \u201cbecause it opens and closes in a series of different gateways as you look through the building, either toward the Manhattan skyline or out over Brooklyn.\u201d To mitigate the scale of the towers, fronting the lower density streetside is a seven-story structure of affordable-housing units with its own gym and event spaces. And where there is an entrance to a residential lobby (there are three), the facade is notched inward, like the triangular cantilevers overhead and the shadows cast by their facades, shingled in white precast concrete.<\/p>\n\n\n\n To complement the incredible waterway views, an indoor-outdoor living experience at Eagle + West was important. Beyer Blinder Belle, also the project\u2019s executive architect, conceived 150 unique apartment layouts for the range of studios to three-bedrooms, with oak flooring, concretelike countertops, porcelain-tile backsplashes, and two color palettes\u2014dawn and dusk\u2014to take advantage of their 8-foot-square picture windows. The diversity of options is \u201cabout not pigeonholing prospective tenants,\u201d BBB senior associate Kimberly Cornell explains, \u201cbecause everyone has a different sensibility.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\nA Residential Complex Soars Over the Waterfront in Brooklyn<\/h1>\n\n\n\n
Eagle + West Offers Luxury Waterfront Living in Greenpoint <\/h2>\n\n\n\n
Ample Amenities and Private Balconies<\/h3>\n\n\n\n