You are reading

Plans filed for 13-Story Hotel to Go Up Next to Flushing Town Hall

Raymond Chan Architect

Sept. 18, 2018 By Christian Murray

Building plans have been filed for a 13-story mixed-use building to go up on a site adjacent to the Flushing Town Hall.

The development, which will be located at 137-45 to 137-61 Northern Blvd, will include a 244-room Westin Hotel and 38 apartments. The building replaces the building that was home to the Great Wall Supermarket.

The developer, George Xu, filed plans to demolish the existing one-story building last month.

The 152-foot tall building will consist of 228,000 square feet of space, with 101,000 square feet for the hotel, 42,000 square feet for apartments and 2,270 for community facilities such as medical offices.

The 38 apartments will be on the tenth floor.

The building will include 64 parking spots and 40 bicycle spaces. Hotel Guests will have access to a swimming pool, fitness center, ballroom, laundry, storage, and conference rooms.

Raymond Chan Architect is the designer.

135-45 to 135-61 Northern Blvd. (Google Maps)

email the author: news@queenspost.com

One Comment

Click for Comments 

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Resorts World officially submits bid to expand Queens casino into $5.5B full-scale resort

Resorts World New York City put all its chips on the table when it officially submitted its bid to the New York State Gaming Commission hours ahead of the Friday deadline, the latest step toward unlocking an eye-popping $5.5 billion vision to build a world-class integrated resort in Southeast Queens.

Building on fifteen years of community partnerships, the 5.6 million-square-foot proposal to expand the city’s only casino would create thousands of union jobs, generate billions of dollars for education and transit, and deliver a new era of inclusive growth for Southeast Queens and expansive public amenities.