
Manhattan
Hudson Yards
Modern service architecture and global capital.
Hudson Yards represents Manhattan's most deliberate bet on new-construction luxury at scale. For buyers seeking turnkey product with hotel-grade services, unobstructed views, and immediate connectivity to both Midtown and Chelsea, this corridor continues to attract global capital — particularly from international buyers and corporate relocations.
Manhattan
Hudson Yards
Market character
The residential market here is almost entirely condo — branded towers with full amenity stacks, concierge services, and maintenance structures designed for absentee or part-time owners. This makes Hudson Yards uniquely liquid compared to co-op-dominated corridors elsewhere in Manhattan.
Pricing reflects the newness premium and the view corridors. Upper-floor units facing the Hudson River or south toward the skyline command the highest per-square-foot numbers, while lower floors offer relative value with full access to the same services.
What defines the blocks
The development is anchored around the platform above the rail yards, with residential towers concentrated along 10th and 11th Avenues from roughly 30th to 34th Streets. The High Line provides a southern cultural edge, connecting the district to Chelsea's gallery corridor.
Retail and dining at the base of the towers create a self-contained ecosystem — particularly attractive to buyers who value walkable convenience. The extension of the 7 train provides direct Midtown access in minutes.

Key metrics
Price per SF
$2,000 – $3,200
Dominant structure
New-construction condo
Buyer profile
International buyers, corporate relocations
Inventory pace
Moderate; turnkey product moves well
Buyer profile
Ideal for buyers who want a frictionless ownership experience: new construction, full services, and a liquid asset that can be held or sold without co-op constraints. Particularly well-suited to pied-à-terre buyers and those relocating from other global cities.