Billionaires' row: tycoons, high rollers, and the epic race to build the world's most exclusive skyscrapers

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
Currency, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group
Publication Date
[2023]
Language
English

Description

A “thrilling” (Financial Times) fly-on-the-wall account of the ferocious ambition, greed, and one-upmanship behind the most expensive real estate in the world: the new Manhattan megatowers known as Billionaires’ Row—from a staff reporter at The Wall Street Journal“Deeply informative, delightfully entertaining, and addictively readable.”—Diana B. Henriques, bestselling author of The Wizard of LiesA CEO Magazine Best Book of the Year • Longlisted for the Financial Times and Schroders Business Book of the Year AwardTo look south and skyward from Central Park these days is to gaze upon a physical manifestation of tens of billions of dollars in global wealth: a series of soaring spires stretching from Park Avenue to Broadway. Known as Billionaires’ Row, this set of slender high-rise residences has transformed the skyline of New York City, thanks to developer-friendly policies and a seemingly endless gush of cash from tech, finance, and foreign oligarchs. And chances are most of us will never be invited to step inside.In Billionaires’ Row, Katherine Clarke reveals the captivating story of how, in just a few years, the ruthless real-estate impresarios behind these “supertalls” lining 57th Street turned what was once a run-down strip of Midtown into the most exclusive street on Earth, as legendary Trump-era veterans went toe-to-toe with hungry upstart developers in an ego-fueled “race to the sky.” Based on far-reaching access to real estate’s power players, Clarke’s account brings readers inside one of the world’s most cutthroat industries, showing how a combination of ferocious ambition and relentless salesmanship has created a new market of $100 million apartments for the world’s one-percenters—units to live in or, sometimes, just places to stash their cash.Filled with eye-popping stories that bring the new era of extreme wealth inequality into vivid relief, Billionaires’ Row is a juicy, gimlet-eyed account of the genius, greed, and financial one-upmanship behind the most expensive real estate in the world—a stranger-than-fiction saga of broken partnerships, broken marriages, lawsuits, and, for a few, fleeting triumph.

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ISBN
9780593240069

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Published Reviews

Kirkus Book Review

A gimlet-eyed look at the mega-skyscrapers that have been rising along New York's Central Park. The story of capital in the 21st century, writes Wall Street Journal reporter Clarke, is one of concentration in the hands of fewer and fewer people. As ever, many such people thrive on conspicuous consumption, and they find it in places such as One57, a massive city within a city that rose high in the Manhattan sky through the economic power of Saudi Arabian financiers. Other "copycat" structures have risen nearby, while predecessors have come and gone. One built by an aspirational developer named Harry Macklowe was an exercise in "amenity-rich luxury," with a comfortable waiting lounge for chauffeurs, around-the-clock catering services, a huge indoor swimming pool, squash courts, and even a wine cellar where collectors could house their prized vintages. Interestingly, Clarke writes, the Billionaire's Row of her title, which runs along 57th Street, was once "a schlocky patchwork," the locus of theme restaurants such as the Hard Rock Café and the Motown Cafe. When those restaurants failed in the Great Recession, developers began to buy up comparatively inexpensive properties through financial mechanisms that skirted regulations via sources that "included everything from private equity and hedge funds to sovereign wealth funds and ultra-high-net-worth individuals." Some developers made fortunes, while others went broke; some outfoxed Donald Trump along the way. If most architecture critics hated the newly remade street, so, too, did many ordinary New Yorkers, for whom "the skyboxes for billionaires were simultaneously an object of fascination and loathing." Clarke notes that while New York has pale imitators in places like Austin and Miami, it is far from being the world center of superopulent, supersized buildings, lagging well behind any number of Asian cities and with no sign of catching up anytime soon. A revealing work of financial reporting in a time of staggering inequality. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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