The Henry
RAMSA and Naftali's boutique UWS limestone tower. Calacatta marble kitchens, Dolomiti marble baths, Lefroy Brooks faucets.
| Building Type | glass tower |
| Era | Ultra-Contemporary (2015–present) |
| Governance | Condominium |
| Board Approval | Not Required |
| Year | 2025 |
| Architect | Robert A.M. Stern Architects |
| Interior Designer | Robert A.M. Stern Architects |
| Landmark | No |
| Units | 45 |
| Price Range | $4.5M - $16.9M |
| Design Register | New Classical |
| Flooring | White oak throughout |
| Kitchen | Custom (RAMSA-designed) |
| Countertop | Honed Calacatta marble |
| Backsplash | Calacatta marble |
| Appliances | Miele + Sub-Zero |
| Appliance Suite | Professional integrated suite |
| Bath Fixtures | Waterworks + Lefroy Brooks faucets; radiant heated floors; rain showers |
| Bath Stone | Honed white Dolomiti marble surfaces; warm wood cabinetry |
| Ceilings | 11 ft |
| Windows | Oversized windows; terrace setbacks at upper floors; Central Park proximity |
| Smart Home | Not specified |
| Collections | 45 residences (2–6 bedrooms + 1 townhouse); Penthouse East (6-bedroom, 27-ft wide primary bedroom) |
| Lobby | Indiana limestone and hand-set brick facade. Amenities: 24-hour lobby, porte-cochère with automated parking, fitness center, spa with steam and sauna, first indoor pickleball court in a Manhattan residential building, half-court basketball, two-lane bowling alley, cinema, children's playroom, club floor with salon, billiards lounge, private dining room. |
The Henry continues the Naftali/RAMSA collaboration — the same team behind 255 East 77th Street — on the Upper West Side. Indiana limestone and hand-set brick facade with terrace setbacks and bay windows, designed to honor the architectural DNA of the Upper West Side's great pre-war buildings. At 45 residences, the building has genuine community scale without anonymity.
The interior specification follows the Naftali/RAMSA formula precisely: white oak floors, honed Calacatta marble kitchens with Miele and Sub-Zero, Dolomiti marble baths with Waterworks and Lefroy Brooks. The polished nickel hardware throughout allows furniture and art to define the individual character of each home without competing with the interior specification.
The amenity program is notable for the first indoor pickleball court in a Manhattan residential building — a marketing claim that speaks directly to the building's target demographic. The automated parking porte-cochère and comprehensive club floor reflect the Naftali Group's consistent investment in building-as-lifestyle-platform.
- Calacatta marble kitchen and Dolomiti marble bath create differentiated marble systems within one home
- White oak floors with polished nickel hardware create neutral warm baseline — strong direction in either contemporary or traditional register
- 11-ft ceilings with proper proportions make furniture-making the primary design lever
- Waterworks + Lefroy Brooks combination is unusual — two premium brands in one bath; worth preserving or upgrading only one
- Automated parking and tech infrastructure suggests clients value seamless systems — smart home layering is appropriate
- First-owners set the design standard for the building — early work creates comparables future buyers will reference
