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375 Hudson Street

All pages needing cleanupBuildings and structures in ManhattanLeadership in Energy and Environmental Design certified buildingsLeadership in Energy and Environmental Design gold certified buildingsVague or ambiguous time from September 2021
Wikipedia introduction cleanup from May 2021
Houston St Hudson St td 02 375 Hudson Street
Houston St Hudson St td 02 375 Hudson Street

375 Hudson Street is an 18-story office building located in the West Village, New York City. Commissioned and managed by Hudson Square Properties, 375 Hudson St. was built between 1987 and 1989. It was constructed with steel, and the building's main purpose is to hold office spaces. The office building holds over 1.12 million square feet across 18-floors and is the first LEED Gold certified for environmentally conscious building in New York City.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article 375 Hudson Street (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

375 Hudson Street
Hudson Street, New York Manhattan

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Wikipedia: 375 Hudson StreetContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.728611111111 ° E -74.007777777778 °
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Address

375 Hudson Street

Hudson Street 375
10014 New York, Manhattan
New York, United States
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Houston St Hudson St td 02 375 Hudson Street
Houston St Hudson St td 02 375 Hudson Street
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Nearby Places

St. John's Terminal
St. John's Terminal

St. John's Terminal, also known as 550 Washington Street, is a building on Washington Street in the Hudson Square neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. Designed by Edward A. Doughtery, it was built in 1934 by the New York Central Railroad as a terminus of the High Line, an elevated freight line along Manhattan's West Side used for transporting manufacturing-related goods. The terminal could accommodate 227 train cars. The three floors, measuring 205,000 square feet (19,000 m2) each, were the largest in New York City at the time of their construction. The building was used as a freight terminal until 1960, when the freight line was decommissioned. Afterward, the building was acquired by Eugene M. Grant and Lionel Bauman, who turned the structure into a warehouse and office building. The space was used by tenants such as banks Merrill Lynch & Co. and Manufacturers Hanover Corporation, the latter of which constructed a fourth story in 1966. The terminal was largely used by Merrill Lynch by the early 1990s. Afterward, St. John's Terminal was used for corporate real estate and offices. Eugene Grant sold a majority ownership stake in the building to a joint venture of Atlas Capital Group, Fortress Investment Group, and Westbrook Partners in 2013. The developers initially planned a mixed-use development on the site, with residences, retail, and offices, using air rights purchased from the adjoining Pier 40. Though the plans were modified in response to community input, the plans stalled in 2017, and Oxford Properties and Canada Pension Plan bought the southern three-quarters of the site in early 2018. Oxford and CPP hired Cookfox to design an office redevelopment with nine additional stories above the original three floors. The building was purchased in 2021 by Google, which plans to occupy the building as part of a Hudson Square campus. As of 2021, the redevelopment is scheduled to be completed in 2023.