There’s plenty of cause for pessimism for NYC commercial real estate in 2026
Share and Follow

The outlook for New York City’s commercial real estate in 2026 appears exceptionally promising, at least when viewed through optimistic projections.

However, while this column has consistently championed positivity throughout the year, today, we take a moment to explore the challenges.

Let’s start with the encouraging developments. As we’ve frequently highlighted, several indicators suggest a robust and flourishing market. These include declining vacancy rates, a significant drop in available sublease space, a gradual increase in rental prices, and a noteworthy return-to-office surge that other U.S. cities can only envy.

Notably, there have been substantial expansions by prominent entities such as Jane Street Capital, Guggenheim, and Amazon. Bloomberg LP has also shown its commitment to New York by extending all three of its Manhattan leases through 2040. Additionally, new skyscrapers at 350 Park Avenue and 343 Madison Avenue have received the go-ahead. The city’s first $1 billion-plus building sale in half a decade occurred at 590 Madison Avenue.

Hotels are experiencing a boom, and the accelerated conversion of residential spaces is revitalizing the market by transforming numerous outdated Class-B properties.

So where’s the downside?

For all the planned new developments, too many prominent sites lie barren where developers wait on financing or anchor-tenant miracles that might never come.

London, the city that is New York’s primary competitor, doesn’t have half as many ugly holes in the ground with no plans filed as Manhattan does.

There are at least five of them on West 57th Street alone; on three blocks along First Avenue below the UN; several prime blocks of Midtown Madison and Park avenues; and on thriving Sixth Avenue between West 44th and 45th streets.

There are more empty holes and vacant lots downtown than can be counted — none more visible than the some-day site of Two World Trade Center. Until Larry Silverstein signs Amex or another anchor tenant to get the project off the ground, the 16-acre site’s recovery will remain achingly incomplete.

In the “not vacant but troubled” category are three prime chunks of cityscape.

The former Roosevelt Hotel’s future is way up in the air as owner Pakistan International Airlines fidgets over what to do with the empty hulk after JLL walked away from its sale-agent role last summer.

The beloved but antiquated Chrysler Building will continue to lose luster until landowner Cooper Union finds a developer that can afford the skyrocketing cost of the ground lease.

The South Street Seaport took on water after Howard Hughes Corp. spun it off into Seaport Entertainment Group. The Tin Building is scaling back; tacky “immersive” attractions encroach on home-grown restaurants; and the next-door lot at 250 Water St. is a question mark since SEG sold it off last summer.

The retail landscape falls well short of cheery surveys by the Real Estate Board of New York, commercial brokerages and business-improvement districts which cite reduced “availabilities” — but overlook what New Yorkers actually see.

The former Barneys at 660 Madison Ave. remains a dark hulk after six years. Brooks Brothers’ opening at 195 Broadway and Printemps at 100 Wall St. belie innumerable empty spaces nearby. “Prime Retail for Lease” signs are everywhere, and still seem to outnumber stores from Broadway on the Upper West Side to corridors in central Greenwich Village and Flatiron. There are even huge empty storefronts on Fifth Avenue in the East 50s and on East 42nd Street.

But perhaps the darkest cloud is environmental zealotry over “100-year flood” fears that would deny the five boroughs access to the historic basis for their current-day prosperity: the waterfront.

A southern portion of Battery Park City is already ruined by the “redesign” of Wagner Park. Even worse sea-wall construction is already past the planning stages at many river and harbor locations.

At this rate, even the Coney Island ocean might eventually be blocked from view. 

Share and Follow
You May Also Like
Aryna Sabalenka vs Nick Kyrgios - Battle of the Sexes LIVE

Epic Showdown: Aryna Sabalenka Faces Nick Kyrgios in Thrilling Battle of the Sexes Live Event

Pause for a dance break – and a signed tennis ball? (Sabalenka…
Donald Trump meets with Zelensky at Mar-a-Lago - and snaps at reporter

Donald Trump and Zelensky’s Mar-a-Lago Meeting: Tensions Flare with Reporter’s Question

In a significant display of diplomacy, former President Donald Trump extended a…
Head of America's 'free enterprise' college optimistic about academia despite left-wing bias: 'there is hope'

Why the Free Enterprise College Leader Sees a Bright Future Amid Academic Left-Wing Bias

PHOENIX — Despite the prevalent perception of excessive administrative layers and a…
Pop-Tarts Bowl features shenanigans and mascot sacrifices following BYU win

BYU Victory at Pop-Tarts Bowl Brings Unexpected Mascot Antics and Surprises

The postgame scene at the Pop-Tarts Bowl was a mix of quirky…
Officer pulls missing boy from freezing pond and reunites him with dad

Officer Rescues Missing Boy from Icy Pond, Reunites Him with Father

In a remarkable rescue that unfolded on Christmas night, a police officer…
Chicago nonprofit Concrete Rose 773 hosts girls flag football camp at Pullman Community Center

Chicago’s Concrete Rose 773 Kicks Off Girls Flag Football Camp at Pullman Community Center

In a vibrant corner of Chicago, a unique initiative is taking shape,…
Brigitte Bardot, 1960s sultry sex symbol turned militant animal rights activist dies at 91, starred in 'And God Created Woman'

Renowned 1960s Icon and Animal Rights Advocate Brigitte Bardot, Star of ‘And God Created Woman,’ Passes Away at 91

PARIS — Brigitte Bardot, the iconic French actress of the 1960s who…
LSU vs. Houston prediction: Odds, picks, best bet for Texas Bowl

LSU vs. Houston Preview: Expert Predictions, Betting Odds, and Top Picks for the Texas Bowl

Gambling content 21+. The New York Post may receive an affiliate commission…