Bronx-based materials supplier ReBuilders Source collects construction debris that might otherwise wind up in local landfills
Designed by Philly-based Alesker & Dundon Architecture LLC, $300 million, 45-story Trump Tower Philadelphia to seek LEED Silver rating
Increasing numbers of New Yorkers are falling behind on their energy bill payments
JPMorgan’s plans for Beer Belly Building headquarters at Ground Zero appear to be dead; bank is expected to move operations into Bear Stearns Building at 383 Madison Avenue in Midtown
Stevens Building at New Canaan Country School in Connecticut
Episode 5 of the gbNYC Audiocast reviews the ongoing redevelopment efforts at the former World Trade Center site in light of recent remarks from Larry Silverstein about construction progress at the site, as well as uncertainty over the future of KPF's Beer Belly Building in the aftermath of JPMorgan Chase's pending acquisition of the failing Bear Stearns. As you'll recall, in addition to the Freedom Tower, a number of high-profile towers that will pursue LEED certification are currently under construction at the site, including 200, 175, and 150 Greenwich Street, designed by Norman Foster, Richard Rogers, and Fumihiko Maki, respectively. Episode 5 discusses each of these towers in detail, as well as the Robert A.M.
According to a report that was released last month by the Burnham-Moores Center for Real Estate at the University of San Diego, Los Angeles is first among U.S. cities when it comes to LEED - or Energy Star-certified commercial office space. The CoStar Group provided the data upon which the report was based and ranked cities by the total amount of their square footage that has earned either the LEED or Energy Star designation; no breakdown appears to be readily available that segregates the figures according to individual rating system. Los Angeles topped the list with 100 buildings and 26.2 million square feet while Houston checked in at #2 with 46 buildings and 21.1 million square feet. Also in the top five were Washington, D.C. with 61 buildings and 19.8 million square feet, New York City with 11 buildings and 12.3 million square feet, and San Francisco with 30 buildings and 11.9 million square feet.
As we briefly noted late last week, Larry Silverstein has secured another tenant for LEED Gold 7 World Trade Center. Advertising firm Arnell Group will pay $70 per square foot for the entire 40,000 square feet on the building’s 37th floor. According to the New York Observer, only 440,000 square feet remain across 11 floors of the 1.7 million-square-foot, 52-story tower. 10 of the 11 floors are at the very top of the building, where Silverstein is asking $75 per square foot.