A rare mid-block design opportunity engendered the 
creation of this unique Manhattan mid-rise. Employing 
dramatic cantilevers and an expressive, textured 
façade, 35XV is anchored by a six-story granite-clad base
–an expansion of the adjacent High School–that extends 
the scale and materiality of the street-level 
context. Emerging from the base is a 19-story  sculptural, 
angled, glass volume residential space. A conscientious 
modulation of fenestration at the base equally 
accommodates the school’s functions and the building’s 
residential identity, while the tower’s sloped form and 
faceted glass cladding serve to reflect the changing 
sky, appearing to de-materialize the building. The 
residential tower resolves a complex three-dimensional 
puzzle that finesses zoning requirements and the 
unique attributes of its site. The design leverages 
requirements that stipulate a sky exposure plane
–traditionally a design constraint–to sculpt a unique form 
that offers tenants light, airy interior living spaces with 
unparalleled views of the surrounding cityscape.