Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Construction watch: 253 E. 7th St.



Just checking in on 253 E. Seventh St., where there are approved permits for a 6-story residential building here between Avenue C and Avenue D.

As previously noted, the Issac & Stern-designed condoplex will house six residences (each roughly 1,500 square feet) ...



Workers demolished the former four-story residence that stood here back in late 2015. A look through the blogger portal doesn't show much, if any, new building construction action...



Previously on EV Grieve:
Options for this lovely East 7th Street townhouse include demolition

New building in the works for 253 E. 7th St.

The disappearing 253 E. 7th St.

253 E. 7th St. is now a pile of bricks

Property at 253 E. 7th St. now for sale; perfect for a 'dream custom mansion townhouse'

New plans for a 6-story building at 253 E. 7th St.

New 6-story residential building OK'd for 7th Street

7 comments:

NOTORIOUS said...

Just wait until the bodies start rising to ground level again.

NOTORIOUS said...

Also, shouldn't the building come before the door? ;)

Anonymous said...

This is virtually across the street from my apartment. I think a nice building in this location will be an improvement than its current empty space. I think the appreciation and mystery of the east village draws from the dichotomy of the old and new. While modern isn't always embraced by others, it isn't necessarily bad either. What it tends to symbolize is progression, movement and change. Let's hope it turns out beautifully.

blue glass said...

can it be new and beautiful and affordable?

Gojira said...

The only reason that space is "currently empty" is because the Hottentot who bought the lovely little 4-story red brick building here tore it down and left a rubble-strewn lot in its place for, what, 18 months now?

Anonymous said...

that is a nice looking building for sure.

Jared said...

I hear work going on from that direction.
Their 7th floor elevator utility room will block my apartment's remaining patch of sky, its 15 minutes of direct light, and our best source of ambient light.