Zeckendorf Development and Atlas Capital Group bagged a broker duo to head sales at their 80 Clarkson project.
The developers tapped new development veterans Dan Tubb and Amy Williamson for the two-tower luxury West Village development, The Real Deal has learned. The agents will lead the roughly 100-unit project at 80 Clarkson Street with the developer’s in-house firm, Zeckendorf Marketing.
Tubb jumped to Zeckendorf Marketing last summer, after heading sales at the troubled Waldorf Astoria condo conversion with Douglas Elliman’s new development marketing arm. Sales launched for the 375 residences, which sit atop the famed hotel, in 2020, but its official reopening has been delayed since early projections pegged it for that same year. Hilton now expects to open the hotel’s doors in spring 2025.
Tubb also led sales at Extell Development’s One57 with the developer’s in-house marketing team and at the Rudin Family and Global Holdings’ The Greenwich Lane with Corcoran Sunshine.
Williamson joined the 80 Clarkson team after five years with Douglas Elliman. She previously led sales at JDS Development and Property Markets Group’s 111 West 57th Street, 15 William Street in the Financial District and The Centurion in Midtown.
A spokesperson for the building declined to comment. Tubb and Williamson did not respond to a request for comment.
The developers launched a teaser website for the building on Tuesday, though they’ve yet to announce when listings will hit the market. Initial plans for the project estimated its total sellout to land at $1 billion with apartments averaging about $5,000 per square foot.
Earlier this year, Zeckendorf and Atlas scored the largest residential construction loan since before the pandemic. The developers, also partnered with the Baupost Group, notched the $1 billion loan from London-based Cale Street Partners and San Francisco-based Farallon Capital Management.
Attached to 80 Clarkson and part of the 1.3-acre development site is 570 Washington, which includes 175 units of affordable senior housing.
The developers paid $340 million to buy the site from Westbrook Partners in 2022 after outbidding Extell, Vornado Realty Trust and the Naftali Group, according to the New York Post. Early financing for the project included a $322 million loan package from Blackstone.