261 Fifth Ave. – NOMAD
$55/SF – Available Immediately
2,460 SF – 15 Fl – Partial Floor – Sublease
2400 SF recent installation, new lighting, carpet, one office, conference room, and open space. Beautiful lobby, 2 year term.
Click to Contact Jeff Anderson or call 212-253-8710
Talent Beyond "just a broker," Jeffrey Anderson is a Credentialed Architect with a Masters in Urban Design.
The reason people set up shop in the world's most vibrant city? More opportunity than anyplace on earth. And if you look for it, there's also talent you won't find elsewhere, talent beyond "just a broker." Jeff Anderson is a credentialed architect with a master's in urban design. Jeff says his clients turn to him for more than leasing. "I've studied the work of architects who built the spaces I'm showing," Anderson says. "When clients find out my background they know I'm qualified to give them space advice." Anderson has found the right space for firms with very particular and sometimes non-negotiable specifications, including law practices, international shipping companies, financial services, media, and tech companies.
NoMad ("NOrth of MADison Square
Park") is a neighborhood centered around the Madison Square North
Historic District in the borough of Manhattan in New York City.
The name NoMad, which has been in use since 1999, is derived from the
area's location north and west of Madison Square Park. The neighborhood
extends roughly from 25th Street to 30th Street between the Avenue of
the Americas (Sixth Avenue) and Lexington Avenue. NoMad is bounded on
the west by Chelsea, on the northwest by Midtown South, on the
northeast by Murray Hill on the east by Rose Hill, and on the south by
the Flatiron District. It encompasses Little India, as well as a
variety of businesses of all sizes in landmarked office buildings.
The Breslin Hotel, built in 1904, was transformed in 2009 into the Ace
Hotel, a 300-room hotel whose restaurant has attracted a trendy crowd.
Slated to open in 2011, the NoMaD Hotel at 28th Street and Broadway,
will occupy the Johnston Building, a landmark 1900 French Renaissance
limestone space. Named for one of New York's most oldest families, the
19-floor Gansevoort Park, is at Park Avenue and 29th Street.
Today it has a numerous restaurants serving a wide range of cuisines,
including San Rocco, Hill Country Barbecue, Bamiyan Afghan Restaurant,
Antique Cafe, SD26, A Voce, Country, Ben & Jack's Steakhouse and
Illi. Eataly, a 44,000-square-foot Italian food market comprising
Italian restaurants, cafes and wine and food shops opened in Summer
2010.
Some text and images from List of Manhattan Neighborhoods at Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.