Puneet Varma (Editor)

One Sutton Place South

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Type
  
cooperative

Country
  
US

Completed
  
1927

Opened
  
1927

Architecture firm
  
Cross & Cross

Architect
  
Rosario Candela

Town or city
  
New York, New York

Current tenants
  
approx. 42 to 60

Structural system
  
Skyscraper

Construction started
  
1927

Floor count
  
14 (42 apartment units)

One Sutton Place South httpsds3cityrealtycomimgc77d5a992ae2f82551d

Similar
  
Sutton Place Park, River House, 834 Fifth Avenue, 740 Park Avenue, 1040 Fifth Avenue

One Sutton Place South is a 14-story, 42-unit cooperative apartment house in the East Midtown neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, overlooking the East River on Sutton Place between 56th and 57th streets. One Sutton Place South is home to diplomats and financial titans of yesteryear, Hollywood types and captains of industry.

Contents

Map of One Sutton Place South, New York, NY 10022, USA

History

The building was designed and completed in 1927 by Rosario Candela and Cross and Cross for the Phipps family.

The building is topped by a penthouse, a 17-room unit that has 5,000 square feet (460 m2) of interior space and 6,000 square feet (560 m2) of terraces that wrap entirely around it; the penthouse was created originally for Amy Phipps as a duplex. When her son, Winston Guest, the polo player and husband of garden columnist C. Z. Guest, took the apartment over, the lower floor was subdivided into three separate apartments, one of which is occupied by designer Bill Blass. The Guests lived on one side of the penthouse and one of their sons, Alexander, lived on the other side for several years and sold the apartment in 1963 about the time that his daughter, socialite Cornelia Guest, was born. The apartment was then acquired by Janet Annenberg Hooker, the philanthropist who died in late 1997 and was a sister of Walter Annenberg, the communications magnate and art collector. The apartment was put on the market in early 1998.

Property dispute

The property behind One Sutton Place South was the subject of a dispute between the building's owners and the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. Like the adjacent park, the rear garden at One Sutton Place South is, in fact, cantilevered over the FDR Drive, a busy expressway at Manhattan's eastern edge that is not visible from most of Sutton Place. In 1939, city authorities took ownership of the property behind One Sutton Place South by condemnation in connection with the construction of the FDR Drive, then leased it back to the building. The building's lease for its backyard expired in 1990, The co-op tried unsuccessfully to extend the lease, and later made prospective apartment-buyers review the legal status of the backyard and sign a confidentiality agreement. The question of ownership came to a head in 2003 when the state's Department of Transportation began rehabilitation of F.D.R. Drive between 54th and 63rd Streets and had to tear up the garden to fix the deck. In June 2007, the co-op sued the city in an attempt the keep the land, and on November 1, 2011, the co-op and the city reached an agreement in which the co-op ended its ownership claim and each side would contribute $1 million toward the creation of a public park on the land.

Other residents have included John Fairchild, publisher of Women’s Wear Daily; and actress Sigourney Weaver,

References

One Sutton Place South Wikipedia