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OFFICE / ROOFTOP / WAREHOUSE SETTINGS

386 PARK AVE SOUTH

LOBBY AVAILABLE

NoMad today stands as a unique setting that escapes New York City’s major tourist attractions,  offering a pedestrian scale without compromising the vertical spectacle that defines the city. The neighborhood is home to some of the world’s best hotels, restaurants, and retail stores. During a lunchtime stroll, you could shop at Marimekko and Maison Kitsuné, check out the latest exhibition at the Museum of Sex or the latest discovery at the Museum of Mathematics. NoMad also promises some of the most interesting culture in the city, from large-scale exhibitions at the 69th Regiment Armory to small events at Neue Haus. 

515 NINTH AVE 

ROOTOP AVAILABLE

"Hudson Yards" takes its name from the MTA rail yard along the Hudson River between 30th Street and 33rd Street, part of a Penn Central rail yard that once extended to 39th Street. The portion of the MTA yard between the river and Eleventh Avenue is called the Western Rail Yard, and the portion between Eleventh Avenue and Tenth Avenue is called the Eastern Rail Yard. The Hudson Yards area includes parts of the Garment Center, the Javits Convention Center, Madison Square Garden, the Port Authority Bus Terminal, the Farley Post Office, and the Lincoln Tunnel.[6] Most of the Hudson Yards redevelopment area is also known as Hell's Kitchen South. The special purpose district covering the area, the Special Hudson Yards District, includes a "Hell's Kitchen subdistrict," encompassing the core residential area existing prior to redevelopment of the surrounding area.

271 CANAL ST.

LOFT STYLE OFFICE / WAREHOUSE AVAILABLE

Canal Street is a bustling commercial district, crowded with comparatively low-rent open storefronts, and street vendors to the west; banks and jewelry shops to the east. For a generation after World War II, the former segment hosted many stores selling exotic high-tech components to would-be inventors and engineers.  Canal Street is also the main Chinese jewelry business district of Chinatown.  Tourists as well as locals pack its sidewalks every day to frequent the open-air stalls and bare-bones stores selling items such as perfume, purses, hardware, and industrial plastics at low prices. 

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