Supertall for All: Proposed Mixed-Income Tower in Manhattan
Supertall for All proposes a 74,000 square meter residential tower on Manhattan’s Gansevoort Square. It aims to deliver 1,000 rental units half affordable, half market rate stacked evenly from base to top. The project responds to New York City’s housing crisis. It repositions the skyscraper as a vehicle for equity, not exclusivity. Developed with SO IL, it answers a design competition by NYCEDC.
The proposed tower is positioned to engage with existing cultural institutions and public waterfront space, reinforcing its role as an integrated urban element rather than an isolated landmark. (Image © Powerhouse Company)
Design Concept
The tower uses a single floor plate repeated vertically. Each level holds twelve units. This ensures consistent distribution while allowing subtle façade variations. A two story Sky Garden on the 53rd floor adds shared outdoor space and daylight. This aligns with current research in architectural design. Supertall for All integrates social equity into its spatial layout. It avoids segregated housing tiers seen in older mixed-income buildings.
The imposing scale and repetitive facade rhythm emphasize the structural logic of mid-century high-rise design, where form follows functional massing rather than ornamentation. (Image © Unspecified Photographer / Public Domain) Materials & Construction
Exact building materials are not specified in early renderings. However, the proposal follows an all electric, low carbon strategy. This matches modern construction standards for dense cities. The slender shape fits the narrow Gansevoort site. It also respects height limits near the High Line, a landmark in New York’s cities network.
The conceptual placement of the Supertall for All tower within Manhattan’s dense urban grid highlights its scale and relationship to the Hudson River and surrounding neighborhoods. (Image © Powerhouse Company) Sustainability and Urban Equity
Long term affordability depends on operational efficiency. The all electric system cuts fossil fuel use. This reflects methods in global sustainability frameworks. Supertall for All challenges Manhattan’s luxury tower trend. It ensures income diversity on every floor. Data shows little affordable housing was built in the Meatpacking District recently. Nanne de Ru of Powerhouse Company noted that Manhattan has added skyline since 2008. Yet it has added too little affordable rental housing, especially here.
Conclusion
Can vertical architecture support inclusion instead of displacement? The Supertall for All model tests this in a high pressure real estate market. Explore equitable urban models in the archive. Follow the latest news on the global architecture platform.
Architectural Snapshot: A supertall residential tower in Manhattan integrates 1,000 mixed-income units with equal affordable and market rate distribution from base to crown.
ArchUp Editorial Insight
The Supertall for All proposal reframes New York’s luxury skyline narrative by mandating vertical income integration a formal response to institutional calls for equity. Yet its architectural language remains within familiar aesthetic boundaries, relying on repetition and a mid rise Sky Garden rather than reimagining structural or communal innovation. While commendable for resisting housing segregation, the project risks normalizing supertalls as neutral tools, overlooking their infrastructural and speculative entanglements. Its all electric claim aligns with current sustainability trends, but without material transparency or construction economics, it leans more on ideology than operational proof. Still, embedding affordability into Manhattan’s premium corridor sets a necessary precedent. Whether this model becomes a replicable standard or another symbolic gesture depends on policy more than design.
https://archup.net/cbdx-cities-for-all-competition-sparks-discussion-and-highlights-proposals-for-equitable-and-inclusive-city-designs/ https://archup.net/resilient-communities-designing-for-a-sustainable-and-equitable-future/ Dive into the world of architecture – from bold concepts to global competitions – curated with ArchUp. #ArchUp #architecture












