One Lincoln Plaza

20 West 64th Street
PRICING INFORMATION FOR One Lincoln Plaza
One Bedroom from $1,395,000 (updated February 22, 2012)

FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT One Lincoln Plaza
Contact us about buying or selling an apartment in One Lincoln Plaza .
Email Us OR Call (212) 755-5544



One Lincoln Plaza - 20 West 64th Street: CARTER'S REVIEW


There are certain "key" buildings that set the tone for a neighborhood and One Lincoln Plaza at 20 West 64th Street was the first major new apartment house to be erected after the opening of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in the 1960s.

Erected in 1971, this 43-story building occupies the entire frontage on Broadway between 63rd and 64th Streets and its angled tower is set back on a low-rise base that frames a landscaped, mid-block plaza. It was developed by the Milstein organization that would build a slightly smaller apartment tower one block to the south that is notable for its multiple bay windows and very attractive mid-block landscaped plaza.

This tower is distinguished by its two-tone façade of beige and dark brown brick that provides vertical accents to the tower, scores of satellite dishes around its rooftop bulkhead, and its bent, angled form.

The tower is directly across Broadway from the large plaza with a fountain at the center of Lincoln Center and therefore many of its apartments have superb views to the west.

To the east, however, a new luxury apartment tower was erected in 2001 in the nook of its bent angled tower thereby obstructing some of this tower's direct views to the east and Central Park. That tower, which uses air rights over the mid-block, Romanesque-style YMCA building, is very handsome and was designed by Beyer, Blinder, Belle.

Some planners and design critics were disappointed in the quality of this building when it first opened as it is the most visible building in the area for those attending cultural events at Lincoln Center.

Despite its extensive use of travertine marble, Lincoln Center's major buildings themselves were received with less than total enthusiasm by the same such planners and critics, who felt, generally, that the overall design of the center was more banal than breath-taking. Nonetheless, the center has proven to be very successful and eventually spurred a great deal of new residential construction, especially at its north end where several towers have been built with significant multi-level, large retail spaces.

This neighborhood has many restaurants and stores and is one of the city's most bustling and has excellent public transportation.

This building has a roof deck, a health club, a concierge, a garden, and a garage but no balconies. Some restaurants in its base have sidewalk caf?s. It is only a few blocks north of Columbus Circle where the Time-Warner Center replaced the former New York Coliseum and that twin-towered, mixed-use building features a large and very impressive Whole Foods store in its basement.

The building contains 663 residential condominium apartments.

While the overall appearance of this building is prosaic, its form is excellent and it holds the angled streetline of Broadway well.

In their wonderful book, "New York 1960, Architecture and Urbanism Between The Second World War and the Bicentennial," Robert A. M. Stern, Thomas Mellins and David Fishman provided the following commentary relating to this site:

"In November 1966, following the completion of the Metropolitan Opera House, the architect William F. R. Ballard, who served as chairman of the City Planning Commission, proposed the construction of a monumental mall connecting Lincoln Center's main plaza with Central Park to the east. The landscaped mall was intended to fully occupy the block bounded by Broadway, Central Park West, Sixty-third and Sixty-fourth streets; a 1,000-car garage would be located beneath it. The mall had the support of Wallace Harrison who, along with other members of his advisory committee, had ten years earlier advocated the organization of Lincoln Center around a central plaza, which they hoped would ultimately be approached by a grand allee leading from Central Park....Ballard's plan...called on the city to acquire the property as parkland through eminent domain and would have necessitated the demolition of three architecturally significant buildings: the Ethical Culture Society School (Robert D. Kohn and Carrere & Hastings, 1902), on the northwest corner of Central Park West and Sixty-third Street; the adjacent Ethical Culture Society Hall (Robert D. Kohn, 1911), on the southwest corner of Central Park West and Sixty-fourth Street; and the West Side Branch of the YMCA (Dwight James Baum, 1930), at 5 West Sixty-third Street....vehement opposition soon arose from the society, as well as from the YMCA and from the New York Academy of Science, which owned the western portion of the block and had already cleared the site to make way for a twenty-one-story headquarters building. Shortly after Ballard's proposal was announced, the industrial firm of Raymond Loewy/William Snaith, Inc., presented an alternate plan to Mayor Lindsay...[that] called for a complex of tall buildings to be erected between Broadway and Central Park West, Sixty-third and Sixty-fourth Streets. Widely spaced to provide unobstructed sightlines between Lincoln Center and the park, the buildings were to be set amid landscaped plazas with stores and cafes and linked by second-level pedestrian walkways that would span Broadway and Central Park West as well as provide access to Central Park. Snaith noted that the threatened institutions could be rehoused in new buildings on the site or that the proposed complex could be constructed around the existing buildings."

In 1969, the city enacted a 15-block special zoning district for the area and the first building to be built under its provisions was One Lincoln Plaza on the New York Academy of Science site that had since been acquired by Seymour Milstein.

The authors noted that "Once the special district became law, Milstein, 'playing skillfully on the institutional jealousies between City agencies,' convinced the Board of Standards and Appeals to give him an additional 20 percent floor bonus over the bonus already allowed by the special district....The facades of Milstein's forty-three story tower were visually active though banal, combining beige and dark-brown brick; the building was far more significant as a reflection of the area's changing economic fortunes than as architecture....One Lincoln Plaza incorporated an eight-story base containing office space for the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), as well as other tenants, and a commercial arcade facing Broadway....Norval White and Elliot Willensky called the building 'a spastic work' whose 'overwhelming skewed prism has no redeeming social significance."

Subsequently, new high-rise residential construction just to the north on Broadway has significantly lessened the impact of this building on the neighborhood.



BUILDING SUMMARY
  • Condominium
  • Built in 1974
  • Located in Lincoln Center
  • 663 apartments
  • 43 floors
  • Approx. avg. price per sq ft: $1,473
FEATURES & AMENITIES
  • FT Doorman
  • Hi Rise
  • Post War
  • Central AC
  • Full Service Garage
  • Garden
  • Health Club
  • Pool
  • Roof Deck
  • Washer/Dryer in building
  • Elevator
  • Valet Parking
PROS & CONS
PROS
  • Many spectacular views over Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
  • Concierge
  • Landscaped mid-block plaza
  • Garage
  • Roof deck
  • Health club
  • Excellent public transportation
  • Excellent local shopping and many restaurants nearby
  • One block from Central Park

CONS
  • Many apartments
  • Considerable traffic
  • Many views to east obstructed by new tower in 2001
  • No balconies

SPONSORED BY

Comments or questions? · Phone: 212.755.5544
Copyright © 1994-2012 CITY REALTY.COM INC. All Rights Reserved.
568 Broadway, Suite 802 New York, NY 10012
Terms of Use · Our Privacy Policy · About CITY REALTY.COM · Advertise With Us · Site Map
Developed by REOL Services


An equal housing opportunity.

All data is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed accurate by the REBNY / RLS or CityRealty. See Terms of Service for additional restrictions. All information furnished regarding New York City property for sale, rental or financing is from sources deemed reliable, but no warranty or representation is made as to the accuracy thereof and same is submitted subject to errors, omissions, change of price, rental or other conditions, prior sale, lease or financing or withdrawal without notice. All dimensions are approximate. For exact dimensions, you must hire your own architect or engineer. The number of bedrooms listed on this website is not a legal conclusion. Each person should consult with his/her own attorney, architect or zoning expert to make a determination as to the number of rooms in the unit that may be legally used as a bedroom.