Goldman Sachs Tower

30 Hudson Street
GoldmanSachs2.JPG
Goldman Sachs Tower viewed from Liberty State Park
Alternative names Goldman Sachs Tower
General information
Type Commercial offices
Location Jersey City, New Jersey
Construction started 2001
Completed 2004
Height
Roof 238 m (781 ft)
Technical details
Floor count 42
Elevator count 36
Design and construction
Management Grubb & Ellis Management Services, Inc.
Main contractor Turner Construction
Architect Pelli Clarke Pelli
Adamson Associates Architects
Structural engineer Thornton Tomasetti
References
[1][2][3]

30 Hudson Street is a 42 storey, 238 m (781 ft) Goldman Sachs office tower in Jersey City, New Jersey. It is the tallest building in New Jersey, and the tallest in the United States that is not in its metropolitan area's largest city.

Contents

History

The tower was designed by Cesar Pelli, who also designed the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, One Canada Square in London and the Key Tower in Cleveland. The World Financial Center located just across the Hudson river was also designed by him. The tower, except for the black roof, resembles 1IFC, and to a lesser extent, 2IFC, two buildings of the IFC complex he designed in Hong Kong.

Completed in 2004, 30 Hudson Street is ranked at number 54 on the List of tallest buildings in the United States. It houses offices, a cafeteria, health unit and full service fitness facility including a physical therapy clinic. The property is managed by Grubb & Ellis Property Management. Provident Bank of New Jersey and Così (restaurant) are also located on the ground level, and open to the general public. The building is easily accessible by the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail at the Essex Street and Exchange Place stops.

The Goldman Sachs Tower is in Jersey City's Exchange Place area close to a PATH station about 200 yards (180 m) north and sits immediately on the waterfront overlooking the Hudson River and Lower Manhattan. The tower is easily visible from the New York City boroughs of Brooklyn , Manhattan and Staten Island. On a clear day, the building may be visible from as far away as Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey.

Originally the tower was meant to be the centerpiece of an entire Goldman Sachs campus at Exchange Place, which was to include a training center, a university, and a large hotel complex. Many of the company's Manhattan-based equity traders refused to move away from Wall Street, delaying the occupation of the building's top 13 floors, which had remained vacant until early 2008.

Once a derelict and mostly industrial part of Jersey City, the Exchange Place area forms part of New Jersey's Gold Coast, a revitalized strip of land along the formerly industrial west bank of the Hudson. Economic development in the 2000s spurred large-scale residential, commercial, and office development along the waterfront.

Although the location was largely rejected by the company's financial executives, 4,000 Goldman Sachs employees made the move to the building, including much of the company's real estate, technology, operations, and administrative departments. The company completed construction of another tower in 2010 at 200 West St. to house the bulk of their sales and trading departments just north of the World Financial Center, directly across the water from 30 Hudson in Lower Manhattan. The company plans to shuttle workers between the two buildings on private ferries when necessary, calling this their "Venice strategy".[4]

The building is certified under LEED-NC Version 2.0 of the U.S. Green Building Council.

Gallery

See also

References

Preceded by
101 Hudson Street
Tallest Building in Jersey City
2004–Present
238m
Succeeded by
none