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Wednesday, October 15, 2025 |
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New Headquarters in Lower Manhattan Announced |
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NEW YORK.-Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, Governor George E. Pataki and Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver announced today that the State and City have reached an agreement with Goldman Sachs to move forward with plans for a new world headquarters building on Site 26, the last remaining commercial parcel in Battery Park City. Goldman Sachs is committing to maintaining more than 9,000 employees and a significant part of its trading operations in Lower Manhattan through 2028. In addition, Goldman Sachs anticipates creating approximately 4,000 new jobs by 2019. Construction of the 43-story office tower is expected to begin later this year with initial occupancy scheduled in 2009. The total cost of the project is estimated to exceed $2 billion.
“Goldman Sachs’ decision to build their new headquarters in Battery Park City means keeping and creating thousands of permanent and construction jobs in Lower Manhattan,” said Mayor Bloomberg. “This project is a shot in the arm for the development of Downtown and means billions of dollars in tax revenue for New York City and State. I am particularly pleased that the City, State and Goldman Sachs were able to produce an agreement that maintains Lower Manhattan as the financial capital of the world and generates so many jobs and so much revenue for
New York.”
“Goldman Sachs’ decision to construct their state-of-the-art environmentally-friendly world headquarters in Lower Manhattan is a powerful demonstration of confidence in Downtown’s revitalization from a leader in the financial services community,” said Governor George E. Pataki. “Goldman Sachs’ plans to locate across from the World Trade Center site and expectation of creating thousands of jobs in the next decade sends a powerful message that not only is the rebuilding on track, but that Lower Manhattan’s destiny as a world-class central business district will be achieved. Goldman Sachs’ over $2 billion investment is a critical element of the over $9.9 billion Lower Manhattan construction boom that will take place within the next six months and within a three-block radius of the World Trade Center site. I congratulate Goldman Sachs on its decision to continue to make Lower Manhattan its home.”
“This is exactly the kind of agreement I envisioned when I called for and negotiated a Marshall Plan for Lower Manhattan earlier this summer,” Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver said. “I am certain that this announcement by Goldman Sachs will provide a much-needed boost to the overall rebuilding efforts of Lower Manhattan. Not only will it return the thousands of shoppers and diners who have been missing from the Lower Manhattan economy for almost four years, I am confident that today’s announcement will pave the way for future agreements that will ultimately lead to a successful rebuilding of our remarkable community. I applaud the efforts of all those who helped make this important agreement possible, in particular Chairman Henry Paulson and the entire Goldman Sachs organization for their commitment to Lower Manhattan.”
The building is being designed to achieve LEED Gold certification by using the latest green building technologies. It is expected to be one of the largest commercial office buildings in the country to achieve such a high rating. The high-tech building is intended to serve as Goldman Sachs’ world headquarters, housing its investment banking, investment management, and trading operations.
Designed by Henry N. Cobb of Pei Cobb Freed & Partners, the new Goldman Sachs headquarters building will rise to a height of approximately 740 feet. Six floors above the ground floor will contain trading facilities. The middle portion of the building will include amenities and meeting facilities while tower floors will house office functions. Located directly across Vesey Street from the World Financial Center and just north of the World Trade Center site across West Street, the building’s presence is characterized by a play between angular geometries along West Street and Murray Street—relating to the two dominant planning grids of Lower Manhattan—and a sweeping, curved, west façade facing the Hudson River. The building’s stainless steel and glass skin, coupled with three major setbacks as the building rises, will animate the building’s form while reinforcing its relationship to its surroundings.
The spaces surrounding the building will be an important contribution to the evolving open space network of Lower Manhattan. The existing mid-block pedestrian walkway between the Goldman Sachs headquarters site and the Embassy Suites Hotel/Regal Cinemas is to be redeveloped, covered with a partial canopy and lined with retail spaces to become an important gathering place and pedestrian link between the World Financial Center and the North Residential neighborhood of Battery Park City. A generous landscape along West Street featuring a full-block canopy of trees, will incorporate Hudson River Park with its bicycle path and walkway extending south to the Battery and north to 59th Street.
In addition to ground rent, Goldman Sachs is expected to pay approximately $150 million in civic facilities fees to the Battery Park City Authority during the term of the lease. In addition, as a contribution to the new neighborhood, Goldman Sachs has pledged $3.5 million to the New York Public Library branch planned for a site at Murray Street and North End Avenue, and an additional $1 million to be used for a community center in a new residential development in Battery Park City.
“Goldman Sachs’ new commitment to Lower Manhattan is a significant expression of renewed confidence and another indication of the collaborative spirit that is driving Downtown’s revitalization,” Governor Pataki’s Chief of Staff John P. Cahill said. “Today’s announcement is the result of another successful partnership between the State and the City under the leadership of Governor Pataki and Mayor Bloomberg. Goldman Sachs’ world headquarters, directly across the street from the World Trade Center site, Verizon’s World Headquarters and global giants American Express and Merrill Lynch reinforces Lower Manhattan’s position as the financial capital of the world. Goldman Sachs’ over 9,000 employees will also further transform Lower Manhattan into a mixed-use community, vibrant day and night, by offering critical support to our small businesses, restaurants, shops, and entertainment establishments.”
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