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Sales Launch at 3 Luxury High Rises on Manhattan’s Upper West Side

Prices at Waterline Square start at $2 million

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The developers are expecting to deliver some 263 condo units by late 2018.

Noe & Associates with The Boundary
The developers are expecting to deliver some 263 condo units by late 2018.
Noe & Associates with The Boundary

Waterline Square, a set of three luxury high rises in Manhattan, each designed by a renowned architect, is now open for business.

The triptych of angular glass towers between West 59th Street and West 61st Street launched sales on Tuesday, developer GID Development Group announced.

More:A First Look Inside Waterline Square

The developers are expecting to deliver some 263 condo units by late 2018. In the meantime, high-end real estate brokerage Corcoran will sell the homes off of floor plans with prices starting at $2 million.

Starchitects Richard Meier and Partners Architects, Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates and Rafael Viñoly Architects have designed three distinct towers, all connected by five acres of park space and the Waterline Club, a collection of indoor amenities available to all residents and linked by walking bridges.

Starchitects Rafael Viñoly (left), Richard Meier (center) and William Pedersen are leading the design of the three distinct high rises.

Christopher Anderson

The project will help finalize the Riverside Master Plan, designed more than two decades ago to transform 77 acres of waterfront land along the Hudson River into a residential neighborhood. The project is expected to be complete by 2019.

A laundry list of shared amenities will include a program of sports, fitness and social spaces. There are also areas designed for children as well as pets. There will be a tennis court, squash court, 30-foot rock wall, half-pipe skate park, bowling alley—all indoors.

"We wanted to offer future residents a living experience that is unlike any other location in New York City—which means access to architectural landmarks, green spaces and an unmatched set of amenity offerings," said James Linsley, president of GID.

Residents will also share art and recording studios and indoor gardening facilities.