New York Post

From a revamped Macy ’s to the Shops at Hudson Yards, 34th Street is in the midst of a retail renaissanc­e,

New stores and projects keep visitors coming back to the famed strip of shops

- By LOIS WEISS

HUDSON Yards may be getting the spotlight, but its West 34th Street neighbors are basking in the glow.

“Thirty-fourth Street is well-positioned to be the link between Fifth Avenue, Midtown and Hudson Yards,” says Richard Hodos, vice chairman of CBRE.

Of course, 34th has been a shopping mecca since Macy’s opened at Sixth Avenue in 1902 and the Empire State Building opened on Fifth in 1931. But area megaprojec­ts like Hudson Yards and Manhattan West have given the street a surge of 21stcentur­y adrenaline.

“The street is one consistent contiguous block of commercial, entertainm­ent and retail,” says Gene Spiegelman of RIPCO Real Estate.

Amazon uses 7 W. 34th St. as a distributi­on warehouse, a bookstore and a coffee shop.

Farther west, a swath of stores mid-block owned by Jeff Sutton have additional air rights that are in

play, sources say. The UK clothing retailer Superdry at Nos. 21-25 has a few years left on its sublease from Apple. Shoe retailer Aldo at No. 27 has nearly a decade left on its lease, while Geox at No. 29 is remodeling.

Empire State Realty Trust (ESRT) is moving the AT&T store from its current spot at 16 W. 34th St., next to the Empire State Building observator­y entrance, to another 34th Street location, making a larger storefront available.

In Herald Square, change is evident. Forever 21 has moved out of No. 50 and will open in H&M’s old spot at Vornado’s 435 Seventh Ave. And although it has lost Forever 21, the owner of 50 W. 34th St., JEMB Realty, has extensive plans to upgrade the retail offering.

The residentia­l lobby of the building, also known as Herald Towers, will move from 34th Street to 33rd Street but JEMB is retaining its rare, full marquee that stretches across the sidewalk to the curb and can be used for tenant signage.

The building will then have 446 feet of frontage — with 200 feet along West 34th Street — before wrapping around Broadway and all the way onto West 33rd Street.

Marketed by Hodos with Michael Remer of CBRE, it has 102,912 square feet on four levels and can be divided into smaller areas. Larger windows are also planned.

“This is creating an opportunit­y to reimagine and redo this building at one of the best retail locations in North America,” Hodos says. “We are casting a very wide net internatio­nally.” Steven Stedman and Bryn Davies — from CBRE offices in the UK and Asia-Pacific, respective­ly — are also pitching the space.

Across Herald Square at Macy’s, Kenneth Horn of Alchemy Properties is advising the department store giant on the developmen­t of an office tower that could rise 800 feet above the store.

On the south side of 34th Street, Target is thriving at No. 112, a midblock building owned by ESRT that also houses Sephora and Foot Locker, says David Green of CBRE.

Along the south blockfront between Seventh and Eighth avenues, Vornado is planning to rework One Penn Plaza’s retail and public space. “Obviously, their plans are a plus,” says Dan Biederman, president of the 34th Street Partnershi­p.

The north side of this block “used to be the Wild West,” but now new developmen­ts are underway.

For example, developer Chetrit has plans approved for a 32-story hotel from Nos. 257 to 261 (formerly a Conway and a Burger King).

Next door, at 261-263 W. 34th St., Churchill Real Estate Holdings hired a Cushman & Wakefield team led by Stephen Soutendijk to market 12,063 square feet of retail in the 47,000-square-foot office building.

By owning both 265-267 W. 34th St. and 484-486 Eighth Ave., Vornado has assembled 125,000 square feet for an upcoming project.

“It will definitely be an upgrade,” says Dan Pisark, also of the Partnershi­p, about the newcomers.

Between Eighth and Ninth avenues, Vornado is also spearheadi­ng the redevelopm­ent of the former Farley post office into a mixed-use facility. It will have roughly 750,000 square feet of offices on one floor that tops the Moynihan Train Hall; the “new Penn Station” will have shops, food and train tracks below.

The number of pedestrian­s walking between Penn Station and Hudson Yards is expected to be “enormous . . . and they will have to go through the retail portion of Farley,” Vornado chairman Steve Roth bragged during the company’s April conference call.

Across Ninth Avenue, Brookfield is developing Manhattan West with several office towers, a hotel and an apartment building, as well as retail with a Whole Foods, a Peloton and others surroundin­g a green plaza.

The northeast corner of Tenth Avenue at 461 W. 34th St. has a new Courtyard Marriott. Across the street, First Republic bank will have offices above two branches.

Finally, Hudson Yards sits on the western side of Tenth Avenue. Along with retail from Dior to Dylan’s Candy Bar, there are eateries, The Shed arts center; the popular Vessel climbing attraction and one end of the High Line, a delightful strollway to even more shopping in the Meatpackin­g District.

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 ?? Shuttersto­ck/Andriy Blokhin; Neoscape (left); Francis Dzikowski/Related-Oxford (below) ??
Shuttersto­ck/Andriy Blokhin; Neoscape (left); Francis Dzikowski/Related-Oxford (below)
 ??  ?? Manhattan West will have a pedestrian plaza amid its stores and towers that links the Farley building (above), Penn Station and Hudson Yards.
Manhattan West will have a pedestrian plaza amid its stores and towers that links the Farley building (above), Penn Station and Hudson Yards.
 ??  ?? Macy’s (top) is a major anchor of West 34th Street; consumers can now stroll a few avenues west to the Shops at Hudson Yards (above).
Macy’s (top) is a major anchor of West 34th Street; consumers can now stroll a few avenues west to the Shops at Hudson Yards (above).
 ??  ?? JEMB is reimaginin­g 50 W. 34th St. to create 102,912 square feet of retailerfr­iendly space with larger store windows, a marquee for signage and 446 feet of frontage wrapping around Herald Square and West 33rd Street.
JEMB is reimaginin­g 50 W. 34th St. to create 102,912 square feet of retailerfr­iendly space with larger store windows, a marquee for signage and 446 feet of frontage wrapping around Herald Square and West 33rd Street.

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