A Flurry of Investments Elevate the Status of Fifth Avenue as the Ritzy Thoroughfare Turns 200

Fifth Avenue is getting ready to mark its bicentennial in November, and there’s plenty more than a milestone to celebrate.

The ritzy, internationally renowned thoroughfare, which commands the world’s highest commercial rents, has undergone an unprecedented degree of investment, retail development and transformation in Midtown for the past two years, and it all seemed to conspicuously take off around the August 2023 opening of the redesigned Tiffany flagship with its completely transformed interior.

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The Tiffany metamorphosis, which some sources pegged at $250 million to $350 million, while other sources estimate that cost was as high as $600 million to $800 million, including the art, was followed by a flurry of property acquisitions at lavish prices by luxury conglomerates. Prada bought 724 Fifth Avenue, site of its New York flagship, and the building next door where Abercrombie & Fitch formerly operated, for $835 million. Kering, owner of Gucci, Balenciaga, Bottega Veneta and Alexander McQueen, bought the 115,000-square-foot retail space at 715–717 Fifth Avenue for $963 million, considered the most expensive high street retail deal in the U.S. Armani will vacate the site and move to the designer’s mixed-used project under construction and opening in October at 760 Madison Avenue, and Dolce & Gabbana will also vacate the site and relocate to 695 Madison Avenue.

Kering bought the Fifth Avenue retail building housing Armani for a record $963 million.
Kering bought the Fifth Avenue retail building housing Armani for a record $963 million.

“New York City’s Plaza District is the only place on Earth where residential, retail, office and hospitality — at the highest end — are all located,” claimed Will Silverman, managing director at Eastdil Secured, a real estate investment bank that advised the sellers in Prada’s and Kering’s property purchases on Fifth Avenue. “There is no other city on Earth where these premium uses are all in the same place,” said Silverman. “That creates a unique foot traffic experience,” to the Plaza District, which runs from 50th to 58th Streets, west to Seventh Avenue and east to Third Avenue. “Anytime someone raises the bar on the Fifth Avenue experience, the customer has been there to meet it.”

“It’s just been one deal after another on Fifth Avenue,” said Robert Siegel, chief executive officer, Metropole Realty Advisors Inc. “Billions and billions are being poured in. About two years from now, Fifth Avenue will be restored as the most iconic retail destination in the world for the ultra-affluent. If you remember when Warner Brothers opened its store on 57th and Fifth (in 1993) where Louis Vuitton is now, everybody said luxury on the avenue is dead. But it’s all been coming back again.” Siegel said that retail availability on Fifth in Midtown is becoming scarce.