Articles
"It’s Getting
Easier to Be Green", (c) William Neuman, The
New York Times, 8/13/06

Green Neighbors TriBeCa Green is diagonally across
Teardrop Park from the Solaire, bottom left, at
Battery Park City.
They are not yet as ubiquitous as the Toyota Prius,
the hybrid car popular among the ecologically
minded, but “green” apartment buildings have begun
popping up around Manhattan. At least six large
buildings designed to meet elevated standards for
energy efficiency and for the use of
environmentally friendly materials have opened in
the last three years, and several more are under
construction or being planned.
The green designation is conferred on buildings
that incorporate recycled or renewable materials
and that slash energy use and water consumption
with features like photovoltaic cells, internal
sewage treatment systems and roofs covered in soil
and vegetation.
Developers say they are building green because
they believe in it, but they also expect to gain a
competitive edge. If faced with the choice of
renting or buying two similar apartments, the
developers say, consumers increasingly will opt
for the one with green features, even if it comes
at a higher price.
“We think it’s important to do, and we think that
other buildings that don’t do this will become
obsolete, and our buildings will continue to
maintain their value,” said Douglas Durst, who
built 4 Times Square, a pioneering green office
building, in the late 1990’s. He is now building
his second green apartment tower.
But will New York apartment dwellers share the
enthusiasm of developers for going green?
Polly Brandmeyer and her husband, Michael, moved
into the country’s first green apartment tower,
the Solaire, a rental building at River Terrace
and Murray Street in Battery Park City, when the
building opened in 2003. They picked it because it
was in the neighborhood they wanted (they were
moving from two blocks away). They now pay about
$6,500 a month for a three-bedroom, three-bath
apartment, which is at the upper range of rents in
the area.
At the time, the Brandmeyers thought of a green
building as little more than a novelty.
“It’s funny,” Ms. Brandmeyer said, “because now
the green part of the building is the most
important to me. I think this should be the
standard. It’s night and day different, the
quality of living.”
Since moving in, the Brandmeyers have had two
children, Alexa, now 2, and Nicholas, 6 months.
Ms. Brandmeyer likes the fact that the air
entering the building is filtered and that fresh
air is constantly being circulated through her
apartment, especially with all the construction
around the nearby World Trade Center site. The
humidity in the apartment is also regulated, so
that the air does not get too dry, and she
considers it an advantage that the building uses
environmentally friendly cleaning products and
paints. “You don’t have fumes everywhere from when
they clean the carpets or paint an apartment,” Ms.
Brandmeyer said.
Tenants in the city’s six green apartment
buildings — five rental towers and a low-rise
condominium — generally seem to split into two
groups. One is made up of outright enthusiasts
like Ms. Brandmeyer. Members of the other group
say that while they may not always be able to tell
the difference between a green apartment and one
that is not, they like the idea of living in a
building that, in numerous ways, is designed to
tread a little more lightly on the planet.
“With the war in Iraq and gas prices over $3 a
gallon, when you’re living in this particular era,
you want to do what you can,” said Kelly Caldwell,
who rents a one-bedroom apartment at the Helena, a
37-story green building at 57th Street and 11th
Avenue. She would not say how much she pays in
rent, but a typical one-bedroom in the building is
$3,400 a month.
Ms. Caldwell, a freelance researcher, said the air
did not seem noticeably fresher or the water purer
in her apartment. But she does notice a big
difference once a month when the electric bill
comes.
In her previous apartment, which was about the
same size, she paid about $200 a month in the
summer for electricity. At the Helena, with its
energy-efficient design, her bills have been about
half that amount.
The road to a greener life has not always been
without bumps, however.
At 1400 on Fifth, a green condo at 115th Street in
Harlem that opened in late 2004, residents said
there had been problems with a heating and cooling
system that operates on water drawn from deep
geothermal wells.
Lark E. Mason Jr., an expert on Chinese antiques
who is seen regularly on “Antiques Roadshow” on
PBS, moved with his wife, Erica, into a
three-bedroom triplex apartment during the recent
heat wave, only to find that the air-conditioning
was not working properly. Grit from decomposed
rock in the water from the geothermal wells was
clogging the cooling units in some apartments, and
the Masons were told that the developer, Full
Spectrum of New York, planned to install filters
to remove the grit from the system.
Carlton A. Brown, the chief operating officer at
Full Spectrum, said that only some of the
apartments had been affected and that he expected
the filters to take care of the problem.
The Solaire’s 290 luxury rental units were built
by the Albanese Organization in accordance with
green building guidelines created by the Battery
Park City Authority, which now requires all new
office and residential buildings under its
jurisdiction to meet the criteria.
Next, in late 2004, came 1400 on Fifth, built with
support from the city’s Department of Housing
Preservation and Development. The building has 129
units, including 85 that were sold at below-market
rates to low- or moderate-income buyers.
Two more green buildings opened in 2005. The
Related Companies completed TriBeCa Green, a
274-unit rental building at 325 North End Avenue,
at Warren Street, across Teardrop Park from the
Solaire. And in Hell’s Kitchen, the Durst
Organization finished the Helena at 601 West 57th
Street, at 11th Avenue, with 597 units. That
building includes 120 units offered at
below-market rents.
Early this year, Albanese completed its second
green rental in Battery Park City, the Verdesian,
with 250 units, at 211 North End Avenue, also on
Teardrop Park.
Becker & Becker also finished work this year on
the Octagon, a 500-unit rental building on
Roosevelt Island that incorporates a restored
octagonal tower from what was once the New York
City Lunatic Asylum; 100 units there are for
middle-income tenants.
Anybody can call a building green, so to impose
some accountability, the United States Green
Building Council created a rating system called
LEED, short for Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design, to measure the degree to
which buildings incorporate green practices and
materials. The Solaire, Helena and TriBeCa Green
have received gold ratings, the second-highest
rating. Developers for the other buildings said
they expect to receive either a gold rating or a
silver, one rung below gold.
Several more green apartment buildings are either
under construction or being planned. Five are in
Battery Park City. Millennium Partners is at work
on a 236-unit condo at Little West Street and
First Place; Albanese is planning a 250-unit condo
tower at 70 Little West Street; and the Sheldrake
Organization is putting up a 320-unit condo called
One Rockefeller Park, on River Terrace across
Murray Street from the Solaire. Milstein
Properties is planning two towers with a total of
421 condos on North End Avenue between Warren and
Murray Streets. The developers say that new design
refinements may qualify the Albanese and Sheldrake
buildings for platinum LEED ratings, the highest.
In Midtown, Durst and a partner, Sidney Fetner
Associates, are building a tower called the Epic
at 125 West 31st Street. It will have about 400
rental units, 20 percent of them at below-market
rates. The Dermot Companies are building the
Mosaic, with two towers of about 300 rental units
each, on 10th Avenue between 51st and 53rd
Streets.
And in Harlem, Full Spectrum and a development
partner are at work on another project, the
Kalahari, with 250 condos on 116th Street between
Fifth and Lenox Avenues. Half of the units will go
to moderate- or low-income buyers.
The buildings share many similar features. To
improve indoor air quality, they circulate
filtered air through the apartments. (The windows
open, but some tenants say they prefer the indoor
air.) They also use products that eliminate or
minimize volatile organic compounds, or V.O.C.’s,
such as formaldehyde, which can give off unwanted
gases. They choose paints that are low in V.O.C.’s
and carpets and cabinets with low-V.O.C.
adhesives. They also use many recycled products,
like carpets made from recycled materials or wood
flooring rescued from demolished buildings.
Energy saving is a key factor in building green,
and most buildings are expected to use at least 35
percent less energy than typical apartment towers.
Most of the buildings have photovoltaic cells to
generate electricity used in the lobbies and
hallways. The newest buildings have microturbines,
powered by natural gas, to generate electricity.
Green roofs improve insulation and cut rainwater
runoff.
To receive a LEED rating, completed buildings must
be evaluated, and points are awarded for their
green features.
Bruce S. Fowle’s firm, FXFowle Architects,
designed the Helena and the Epic. He said the
Helena includes an internal sewage-treatment
system that purifies wastewater and recycles it
for use in the building’s toilets, which gave the
project enough points to qualify for a gold
rating. The Epic will not have such a system,
although it will be comparable in other ways, like
its energy-saving features and environmentally
friendly materials. As a result, Mr. Fowle said,
it will probably receive a silver rating.
Mr. Brown of Full Spectrum said that he faced a
distinct challenge, because he was building
affordable housing and could not pass on the
additional costs of the green features. He
estimated that they added only 1 or 2 percent to
the cost of his buildings.
While the other green buildings provide some of
their electricity with costly photovoltaic cells,
Mr. Brown said he looked for cheaper ways to make
his buildings energy-efficient. The Kalahari, for
instance, will use a heat exchanger that will
recycle heat from air exhausted from the
apartments.
The city, which has been a partner in Mr. Brown’s
Harlem buildings, is taking further steps to make
green design available to those who cannot afford
a luxury apartment.
The Department of Housing Preservation and
Development is working with the New York chapter
of the American Institute of Architects to find a
development team to build a green affordable
housing complex with about 150 units at Brook
Avenue and East 156th Street in the Bronx. Young
families are one group that seem to be attracted
to green buildings. On a recent afternoon, a group
of mothers and their babies sat enjoying the shade
in Hudson River Park near TriBeCa Green, Related’s
green rental building, where several of them
lived. (The women said they paid $5,075 to $5,600
a month for their two-bedroom apartments.)
Prompted by a reporter, the conversation turned to
the pros and cons of green living.
Lisa Ellis, a management consultant, said that
when she and her husband, Greg, were apartment
hunting last fall they actually wondered if the
building’s green aspects might be more of a
drawback than an attraction. They worried that a
building that promoted itself as an environmental
paragon might give short shrift to basic
functional considerations, like water pressure.
But none of those fears have been realized. The
women in the group all agreed that the water
pressure in the building was very good and that
while they felt a certain duty to recycle, it was
no more of an obligation than in their previous
apartments.
Jacqui Brown, who moved from Toronto last year,
said she was glad she lived in a green building,
even if she does not necessarily notice its effect
on air quality or other aspects of her daily life.
When she and her husband went apartment hunting,
she said, they narrowed their choices to two
Related buildings in Battery Park City: TriBeCa
Green and a traditional building across the
street, called TriBeCa Park.
All other things being equal, Ms. Brown said, they
picked the green building.
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