The Maybury
The Maybury will create an urban oasis in a dense part of New York City.
The Maybury is a new 47-story tower with over 450 residences and 20,000 sq. ft. of indoor and outdoor amenity spaces including a sky deck, and social, leisure, and fitness spaces. Retail will wrap the ground level, and a dedicated entrance has been included for social services provider Covenant House, who will have office space on floors two and three.
The exterior of the tower is defined by rust-red panels that fold outward, giving the facade depth. The articulation of these panels expands as the tower rises, framing single-story spaces at the podium all the way to five-story expanses at the tower top. Cutting through the massing, a ribbon of glass stitches the base and the tower together and points toward the building's exterior decks.
Inside, interiors have been designed to create a feeling of escape from the bustle of New York. Organic forms will define the public space interiors, lending to a feeling of an urban oasis.



The building's interiors are designed to evoke a secret garden within Hudson Yards' urban fabric.
Drawing from nature’s quiet complexity, the design layers organic forms, textured surfaces, and filtered light to create an atmosphere of tranquility within the city’s dynamic energy. Delicately veined panels introduce a recurring leaf motif woven throughout the interiors.
Amenity spaces balance urban sophistication with natural serenity, offering multiple lounges, coworking spaces, a fitness club & terrace, a rooftop sky lounge, two expansive sundecks, and a pet spa.


The fitness club and yoga studio maintain a bright, open layout with floor-to-ceiling windows.
Leaf-like motifs continue in the ceiling paneling overhead, while an expansive terrace allows for indoor-outdoor workout space.

Above, a rooftop lounge continues the natural theme with green walls, sculptural felt panels that mimic tree trunks, and uninterrupted Hudson River vistas.
Overhead, oversized leaf-shaped panels hover, defining alcoves for communal gatherings and intimate conversations alike. Perched high above the city, the lounge offers a surreal contrast—an oasis of leaves and trees suspended among rooftops and skyscrapers, where nature cannot naturally reach.
Units offer expansive windows that frame panoramic views of the Manhattan skyline and Hudson River.
At every residence entry, tree-bark wallcoverings and leaf-shaped knockers transform doorways into portals, reinforcing the concept of the building as a series of secret gardens. Well-appointed kitchens feature wood grain cabinetry, quartz countertops, and panelized appliances.

