Four Seasons Private Residences
Robert A.M. Stern's 82-story limestone supertall above the Four Seasons Hotel. Bilotta rift-cut oak kitchens, Gaggenau, Colorado White marble, Chinchilla Mink baths.
| Building Type | glass tower |
| Era | Ultra-Contemporary (2015–present) |
| Governance | Condominium |
| Board Approval | Not Required |
| Year | 2016 |
| Architect | Robert A.M. Stern Architects |
| Interior Designer | Robert A.M. Stern Architects |
| Landmark | No |
| Units | 157 |
| Price Range | $4.0M - $25.0M |
| Design Register | New Classical |
| Flooring | Solid oak with herringbone pattern in formal rooms |
| Kitchen | Bilotta (rift-cut oak cabinetry) |
| Countertop | Colorado White marble |
| Backsplash | Colorado White marble |
| Appliances | Gaggenau |
| Appliance Suite | Full Gaggenau suite including wine cooler; Miele ventilation hood |
| Bath Fixtures | Robert A.M. Stern custom-designed vanities; radiant heated floors; soaking tub; marble shower |
| Bath Stone | Chinchilla Mink marble + Bianco Dolomite marble (primary bath); RAMSA custom-designed vanities |
| Ceilings | 10–14 ft |
| Windows | Floor-to-ceiling; residences begin on 39th floor; downtown views: Hudson River, Statue of Liberty, Woolworth Building; 82 stories |
| Smart Home | Yes |
| Collections | 157 residences beginning on 39th floor; 38th floor devoted exclusively to private residential amenities (fitness, yoga, conservatory, lounge, dining room, screening room, playroom); full Four Seasons Hotel services access (75-ft pool, spa, Wolfgang Puck's CUT restaurant, ballroom) |
| Lobby | 82-story RAMSA limestone supertall in Tribeca — the tallest residential building downtown at the time of completion. Silverstein Properties development (same developer as 220 Central Park South). Residents begin on the 39th floor looking directly at the Woolworth Building's neo-Gothic ornament. Four Seasons services: in-residence dining from hotel kitchen, daily housekeeping, valet parking, 24/7 concierge, spa, CUT by Wolfgang Puck. |
30 Park Place is the downtown counterpart to 220 Central Park South: same developer (Silverstein Properties), same architect (RAMSA), same philosophy of limestone-clad supertall with hotel service infrastructure and classical interior sensibility. At 82 stories, it was the tallest residential building downtown at completion, with residences starting on the 39th floor above the Woolworth Building's Gothic ornament.
Bilotta rift-cut oak kitchen cabinetry — warm, sophisticated, European in register — with Colorado White marble countertops and Gaggenau appliances. Chinchilla Mink marble in primary bathrooms combined with Bianco Dolomite and custom RAMSA-designed vanities. Solid oak floors with herringbone patterns in formal rooms.
The Four Seasons hotel services — Wolfgang Puck's CUT restaurant, a 75-foot pool, daily housekeeping, and in-residence dining from the hotel kitchen — create a service standard comparable to 15 Central Park West's private infrastructure. At $2,600 per square foot, 30 Park Place positions itself as the premium reference for downtown luxury.
- Bilotta rift-cut oak kitchen is warm and European — same quality tier as Christopher Peacock; renovation should maintain or exceed
- Chinchilla Mink marble is a building-specific choice (warm complex-veined Italian grey) — renovation should engage with this stone's unusual character
- Residences begin at 39th floor — views of Woolworth Building Gothic ornament from lower units is a design resource
- RAMSA custom vanities are architecturally integrated — renovation of primary bath must address or replace these specifically
- Four Seasons service context means clients entertain formally — design should support this lifestyle
- Herringbone oak in formal rooms creates a design hierarchy within apartments — renovation should respect or deliberately subvert this
