Invent City Logo

MISSION:
BUILD A PROPOSED
ECONOMIC PLATFORM
TO HELP MAKE FIDI
A MODEL DISTRICT
FOR THE FUTURE

SUMMARY:

Invent City is a proposed economic development platform for New York City’s Financial District (FiDi). It would establish a global urban solutions industrial cluster addressing the forces beginning to reshape cities: demographic change, the climate crisis, and the rapid rise of AI and robotics.

The cluster would be anchored by an urban Trade Mart filled with immersive showrooms focused on urban industries. Together, the FiDi cluster, Trade Mart, immersive showrooms, events, media, and digital channels would reduce market friction, increase visibility, accelerate adoption, and create significant economic value for New York City.

MODELED RESULTS:

  • $4 billion in annual economic activity
  • 15,000 jobs
  • $380 million in annual tax revenues

STRATEGY:
LEAD WITH ECONOMICS,
USE PROVEN MODELS,
ACTIVATE WHAT EXISTS,
SCALE WITH AI

Economics is the fastest path to scale. City governments cannot finance the urban upgrade cycle alone. Invent City is designed to mobilize companies, investors, buyers, and global incubators around one goal: accelerate critical urban solutions and turn demand into growth for New York City.

AI and robotics, climate risk, and demographic change are becoming direct economic forces in cities. Robots can inspect sewers, support emergency response, and handle dangerous work. AI can improve operations, but also disrupt jobs and governance. Climate risk is shifting from long-term mitigation to urgent local adaptation. Fast-growing cities such as Lagos show the scale of future demand for housing, mobility, power, water, food systems, jobs, and infrastructure.

The economics are clear: under-investment is getting more expensive, and solving urban problems is becoming a massive market. The PIK Institute estimates climate damages could cost the global economy about $38 trillion annually by 2050, while the urban-solutions markets Invent City targets could exceed $43 trillion in annual revenue by mid-century.

More than half the world already lives in cities, and the urban share is projected to reach about 68% by 2050. That concentrates people, infrastructure, spending, data, and risk in one place. The costs will rise. So will the opportunity. This is not just a challenge. It is a market.

ECONOMIC CHALLENGES / DRIVERS ↓
Demographics

Urban growth is expanding demand for housing, mobility, services, and infrastructure.

Rising urban populations
Rising Urban Populations
Rapid urban growth in developing regions
Growth in Developing Cities
AI impact

AI is reshaping city systems, improving performance while raising new risks and governance questions.

AI transforming cities
AI Spendingby Area
Immediate Potential of AI in NYC
Immediate potential of AI in NYC
Environmentals

Heat, flooding, and climate stress are driving demand for more resilient urban systems.

Rising sea levels
Sea Level Rise
Rising temperatures
Rising Temperatures

Stakeholder value is the operating discipline. Invent City is designed to accelerate products and services that solve real needs for the stakeholders who fund, approve, buy, operate, visit, work in, and live in cities. That means tracking what stakeholders need now, anticipating what they will need next, and turning those signals into a stronger market for critical urban solutions.

is the mandate. Invent City will recruit companies and partners that create measurable value across the system: better city outcomes, stronger quality of life, higher asset values, quality jobs, business growth, and recurring tax revenue for NYC.

decide what moves. They fund, approve, buy, regulate, operate, visit, work in, and live with urban change. Their priorities shape budgets, procurement, standards, timelines, approvals, risk, public trust, and future demand.

will turn stakeholder demand into market intelligence. Roundtables, interviews, outreach, data, and AI will track needs, willingness to pay, barriers, and future priorities — helping shape the right mix of companies, capital, and A/E partners.

Resident describing the future of transportation
Resident describing the future of buildings
Resident describing the future of power systems
Resident describing the future of transportation
Resident describing the future of buildings
Resident describing the future of power systems
Resident describing the future of transportation
Resident describing the future of buildings
Resident describing the future of power systems

Invent City will establish an urban industrial cluster in FiDi: a concentrated marketplace for buyers, sellers, capital, talent, institutions, and proof. The goal is simple — make urban innovation faster, more visible, more investable, and more valuable for New York City.

is the growth model. From Napa wine to South Korean robotics, clusters work by concentrating companies, buyers, talent, suppliers, capital, and institutions in one place. Density builds trust, speeds learning, increases deal flow, and turns place into advantage.

will focus on the systems cities must upgrade: transportation, buildings, energy, water, waste, logistics, AI, robotics, and resilience. The goal is cross-industry convergence around high-growth, high-margin urban demand.

will make FiDi a shared marketplace, not just a location. Companies, investors, agencies, operators, project teams, researchers, and experts will evaluate, finance, pilot, and scale solutions together.

will be economic: faster innovation, stronger sales, better hiring, lower friction, more investment, new business formation, stronger place identity, and greater demand for FiDi real estate. AI makes the model even more powerful.

Sample clusters worldwide

Invent City will focus where urban demand is large, urgent, and recurring: buildings, energy, mobility, logistics, water, waste, resilience, AI, robotics, and city operations.

defines the opportunity. Cities are entering a long upgrade cycle as population pressure, aging infrastructure, climate risk, and AI-driven change reshape demand. That creates recurring markets across buildings, energy, mobility, logistics, water, waste, resilience, security, and city operations.

defines the business case. These markets can support premium value because the problems are expensive and buyers need performance. Solutions that cut downtime, energy waste, labor burden, risk, or procurement friction can command stronger economics — especially when they address existential risks like water shortages in Phoenix or rising seas in Jakarta, Miami, and Shanghai.

Urban transportation sector
Urban buildings sector
Urban power and grids sector
Urban waste and materials sector
Urban agriculture sector
Urban consumer products sector
Urban energy sector
Urban water sector
Urban wastewater sector
Urban AI sector
Urban robotics sector
Logistics sector

An urban Trade Mart will be the commercial engine of Invent City: a year-round marketplace where urban-solution companies reach buyers, investors, agencies, project teams, and global delegations. The model draws from proven innovation platforms such as Hannover Messe, Messe München, SIAL Paris, and major annual events like CES — updated for urban systems, AI, finance, and New York City.

is the heart of Invent City. It gives companies a permanent market presence in FiDi — a place to demonstrate products, meet buyers, host delegations, launch pilots, and build partnerships year-round.

it creates a stronger route to market: more visibility, more qualified traffic, better demonstration space, stronger credibility, and a shorter path from first meeting to pilot, procurement, financing, or deployment.

it reduces search cost and comparison friction. Solutions become easier to discover, evaluate, test, finance, and advance — including in live FiDi settings where performance can be seen, not just promised.

SAMPLE TRADE MARTS ↓
cluster

The Trade Mart anchors the cluster. Immersive showrooms bring it to life — making complex urban systems visible, tangible, testable, and easier to buy.

make the market tangible. Complex urban solutions become visible, comparable, testable, and easier to buy. Events bring buyers in. Digital platforms take the market global. AI matches needs to solutions, models outcomes, and turns interest into action.

turn marketing into proof. Buyers can walk through future streets, buildings, parks, rooftops, waterfronts, and operating systems before they invest. AI simulation, live data, and scenario testing make value easier to see — and risk harder to hide.

Cluster
Trade Mart
Showrooms
INVENT CITY EXPERIENTIAL SHOWROOMS ↓

NYC gives Invent City global credibility. FiDi gives it leverage: transit, capital, visibility, history, waterfront risk, underused space, and direct access to the buyers, investors, agencies, and institutions that can move urban solutions from idea to deployment.

because New York is a global center of finance, media, culture, tourism, talent, public agencies, and decision-makers. That gives Invent City immediate scale, credibility, visibility, and market reach.

is the launch platform. It has deep transit access, major real estate assets, financial institutions, waterfront risk, historic identity, and investor networks — plus vacant office and retail space that can be reactivated faster and at lower cost than ground-up development or wholesale conversion.

FINANCIAL DISTRICT ADVANTAGES ↓
Transit connectivity map
Vacancy heatmap
Blue Highway map
Regional hub network map
Lower Manhattan Coastal Resiliency map
FiDi identity graphic

could be a major public-realm upside of Invent City, including support for projects such as Gotham Park. It is not required for the concept to work, but phased pedestrian upgrades can increase foot traffic, strengthen retail, improve the visitor experience, and make FiDi a more livable, future-facing district.

FiDi can become a living lab for urban AI and robotics: a real-world platform to demonstrate value, test performance, expose risk, and set better deployment standards. The goal is clear: use AI and robotics to make cities more efficient, resilient, and humane — not more unequal, opaque, or automated without accountability.

fast. AI can cut costs, improve service delivery, optimize infrastructure, sharpen forecasting, automate routine work, and reshape how cities operate and compete. Invent City gives cities and companies a place to test those gains in real conditions.

fast. AI can displace workers, widen inequality, weaken privacy, increase cyber exposure, and push critical decisions into opaque systems. Invent City will examine both sides: what AI can do, what it should do, where it should be constrained, and who benefits.

AI IN NYC ↓
Aerial view

can become a real-world sales platform for urban AI and robotics. Its density, infrastructure, complexity, and decision-maker access make it a strong place to test performance, demonstrate value, and identify safeguards before broader deployment.

AI potential in NYC
Nairobi AI use case
Singapore AI use case
Jakarta AI use case
Seoul AI use case
Copenhagen AI use case
Tokyo AI use case
Amsterdam AI use case
Barcelona AI use case
Click image to open

The venue strategy is practical: use existing vacant office, retail, and public-realm assets first. That lowers cost, speeds activation, and turns underused FiDi space into productive economic infrastructure.

By filling underused space with a high-growth urban innovation economy, Invent City can help stabilize commercial real estate, strengthen property values, support small businesses, attract visitors, and give global companies a new reason to come to Lower Manhattan. Existing space also lowers upfront cost, reduces time to market, and improves phasing flexibility.

Office vacancy

Vacant FiDi office space can become productive economic infrastructure faster than major redevelopment.

Vacant office opportunity
OfficeVacancy
Retail vacancy

Vacant storefronts can become street-level showrooms, pop-ins, pilots, and visitor-facing demonstrations.

Vacant retail opportunity
RetailVacancy
Lower cost

Existing FiDi space can be activated faster and at far lower cost than conversion or ground-up development.

Redevelopment cost comparison
RedevelopmentCosts
Faster revenue

A Trade Mart can move from vacant space to market activity much faster than major redevelopment.

Time to revenue comparison
Time toRevenue
Flexible rollout

The platform can start small, prove demand, and expand as companies, buyers, and capital follow.

Flexible phased rollout model
FlexibleRollout
Vacant office interior
Vacant retail frontage
Vacant land in FiDi
Under the FDR Drive
Privately Owned Public Space
Educational facilities in FiDi
Historic alleyways in the Financial District
Major facilities in and around the Financial District
Transit concourses and circulation space in FiDi
Click image to open
Urban hub

could consolidate essential street-level services in one place: package logistics, Blue Highway freight transfer, e-bike charging and battery exchange, micromobility, micro-waste collection, public toilets, seating, water, and shelter for delivery workers. Building on models like NYC Deliverista Hubs, these nodes can reduce street clutter, improve last-mile operations, support cleaner logistics, and make the city more humane, efficient, and easier to manage.

bikes garbage toilets packages

Invent City will extend the cluster beyond FiDi. Events, media, data, digital platforms, and AI can keep the market active globally — expanding discovery, deepening relationships, and supporting sales around the clock.

Events, media, and digital channels will carry Invent City far beyond FiDi, attracting founders, buyers, investors, policymakers, operators, delegations, and press while expanding awareness, credibility, and market reach.

Digital tools and AI will keep the platform active across time zones, making it easier to explore, compare, share, and engage at any time. That supports continuous lead generation, buyer education, and always-on commercial activity.

Together, physical and digital channels will build trust over time, keep high-value prospects engaged longer, and turn one-time attention into repeat business, partnerships, and long-term platform value.

Reach diagram
COMPONENTS OF 24 / 7 GLOBAL REACH ↓
Events

Live programming turns attention into meetings, pilots, partnerships, and deal flow.

Events that activate and extend the Trade Mart ecosystem
Events
Media

Content expands the Trade Mart beyond FiDi and keeps buyers engaged between visits.

Media that scales ideas, brands, and buyer awareness globally
Media
Digital reach

Digital and AI channels keep discovery, comparison, and follow-up active 24/7.

Digital reach that extends Invent City globally
DigitalReach

FOR NYC:
$4B IN ECONOMIC ACTIVITY,
15,000 JOBS,
$380M TAX REVENUES

Tourism imports outside dollars into New York’s local economy. Invent City can add a higher-value business and innovation visitor stream to FiDi — supporting hotels, restaurants, retail, culture, transportation, jobs, and taxes.

Tourism is already one of New York’s largest economic engines. A proposed platform that brings buyers, delegations, trade events, and global attention to FiDi could add a valuable business and innovation layer to that base.

International visitors tend to stay longer, spend more, and create a larger ripple across hotels, food, retail, transportation, culture, and services. That makes them especially valuable to a district designed for global visibility and deal flow.

Business travelers often spend more per trip, visit year-round, and generate steadier demand. Invent City is designed to attract exactly that kind of visitor: buyers, sellers, operators, investors, project teams, and delegations.

Tourism summary Mid
Annual visitors 1,000,000
Traveler spending ($/yr) $1,348,750,000
Total economic impact ($/yr) $2,090,562,500
Tourism-supported jobs 6,034
Modeled taxes and fees ($/yr, no PIT) $159,240,625
Rounded taxes and fees ($/yr, no PIT) $159,200,000
Note: PIT excluded to avoid double counting with Trade Mart payroll impacts.
Tourism summary Low Mid High
Annual visitors 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000
Traveler spending ($/yr) $1,035,000,000 $1,348,750,000 $1,768,750,000
Total economic impact ($/yr) $1,604,250,000 $2,090,562,500 $2,741,562,500
Tourism-supported jobs 6,034 6,034 6,034
Modeled taxes and fees ($/yr, no PIT) $123,684,375 $159,240,625 $206,796,875
Rounded taxes and fees ($/yr, no PIT) $123,700,000 $159,200,000 $206,800,000
Note: PIT excluded to avoid double counting with Trade Mart payroll impacts.
1. Base assumptions: 1.0M visitors/yr Visitors/year Avg nights Hotel room-nights Visitor-days
International overnight 250,000 5 1,250,000 1,250,000
Domestic overnight 250,000 2 500,000 500,000
Domestic day 500,000 0 0 500,000
Total 1,000,000 1,750,000 2,250,000
2. Spending inputs Low Mid High
Hotel room-nights 1,750,000 1,750,000 1,750,000
ADR ($/room-night) $250 $325 $425
International other spend ($/day) $350 $450 $600
Domestic overnight other spend ($/day) $200 $275 $350
Domestic day other spend ($/day) $120 $160 $200
Note: ADR = average daily hotel room rate. “Other spend” = non-hotel visitor spending.
2A. Hotel and other traveler spending Low ($/yr) Mid ($/yr) High ($/yr)
Hotel revenue $437,500,000 $568,750,000 $743,750,000
Other spending (non-hotel) $597,500,000 $780,000,000 $1,025,000,000
Total traveler spending $1,035,000,000 $1,348,750,000 $1,768,750,000
Formula: Other spend = sum of (visitor-days by segment × spend/day by segment).
2B. Total economic impact Low Mid High
Traveler spending ($/yr) $1,035,000,000 $1,348,750,000 $1,768,750,000
Impact ratio 1.55x 1.55x 1.55x
Total economic impact ($/yr) $1,604,250,000 $2,090,562,500 $2,741,562,500
Rounded total economic impact ($/yr) $1,604,000,000 $2,091,000,000 $2,742,000,000
Formula: Total economic impact = traveler spending × 1.55.
3. Tourism-supported jobs Input / Output Value
NYC visitors (2024) 64.3M visitors
NYC tourism-supported jobs (2024) 388,000+ jobs
Jobs per 1M visitors 6,034+ jobs
IC annual visitors (assumption) 1.0M visitors
IC tourism-supported jobs (modeled) 6,034+ jobs
Formula: Jobs per 1M visitors = 388,000 / 64.3.
4A. Hotel room taxes and fees Low Mid High
NYS sales tax on hotel rooms (4.0%) $17,500,000 $22,750,000 $29,750,000
NYC sales tax on hotel rooms (4.5%) $19,687,500 $25,593,750 $33,468,750
MCTD sales tax on hotel rooms (0.375%) $1,640,625 $2,132,813 $2,789,063
NYC hotel occupancy tax (5.875%) $25,703,125 $33,414,063 $43,695,313
NYC per-room hotel tax ($2.00 × room-nights) $3,500,000 $3,500,000 $3,500,000
NYS hotel unit fee ($1.50 × room-nights) $2,625,000 $2,625,000 $2,625,000
4B. Sales tax on other spending Low Mid High
NYS sales tax (4.0%) $23,900,000 $31,200,000 $41,000,000
NYC sales tax (4.5%) $26,887,500 $35,100,000 $46,125,000
MCTD sales tax (0.375%) $2,240,625 $2,925,000 $3,843,750
Total sales tax on other spending $53,028,125 $69,225,000 $90,968,750
4C. Tax totals roll-up (no PIT) Low Mid High
NYS total (hotel + other) $44,025,000 $56,575,000 $73,375,000
NYC total (hotel + other) $75,778,125 $97,607,813 $126,789,063
MCTD total (hotel + other) $3,881,250 $5,057,813 $6,632,813
Grand total (no PIT) $123,684,375 $159,240,625 $206,796,875
Rounded grand total (no PIT) $123,700,000 $159,200,000 $206,800,000
4D. Tax formulas and notes Low Mid High
Hotel revenue formula room-nights × ADR room-nights × ADR room-nights × ADR
NYS hotel-room sales tax Hotel revenue × 4.0% Hotel revenue × 4.0% Hotel revenue × 4.0%
NYC hotel-room sales tax Hotel revenue × 4.5% Hotel revenue × 4.5% Hotel revenue × 4.5%
MCTD hotel-room sales tax Hotel revenue × 0.375% Hotel revenue × 0.375% Hotel revenue × 0.375%
NYC hotel occupancy tax Hotel revenue × 5.875% Hotel revenue × 5.875% Hotel revenue × 5.875%
NYC per-room hotel tax $2.00 × room-nights $2.00 × room-nights $2.00 × room-nights
NYS hotel unit fee $1.50 × room-nights $1.50 × room-nights $1.50 × room-nights
NYS sales tax on other spending Other spending × 4.0% Other spending × 4.0% Other spending × 4.0%
NYC sales tax on other spending Other spending × 4.5% Other spending × 4.5% Other spending × 4.5%
MCTD sales tax on other spending Other spending × 0.375% Other spending × 0.375% Other spending × 0.375%
Scope note: PIT excluded to avoid double counting with Trade Mart payroll impacts.

The Trade Mart converts urban innovation into recurring commercial activity. The economic case is jobs, payroll, procurement, buyer traffic, events, business travel, regional spillovers, and a larger tax base.

A Trade Mart can support direct on-site jobs, event and production work, local services, building operations, hospitality demand, and wider knock-on activity. The value is not just jobs alone, but recurring commercial activity anchored in one place.

The model is designed to generate repeat traffic from buyers, sellers, delegations, trade events, project teams, and business visitors. That can support steadier hotel demand, more year-round activity, and stronger spending across the district.

The economic upside is broad: payroll, commercial rent, property value support, sales taxes, hotel taxes, business activity, permits, and multiplier effects. The larger point is simple: more productive space and more recurring activity can expand the city’s tax base.

value chain
Trade Mart summary Mid
Direct on-site jobs 8,500
Direct payroll ($/yr) $1,427,500,000
Local procurement ($/yr) $428,250,000
Total direct activity ($/yr) $1,855,750,000
Note: Direct activity shown here is kept separate from tourism and real-estate modules to reduce double counting.
Trade Mart summary Low Mid High
Direct on-site jobs 8,500 8,500 8,500
Direct payroll ($/yr) $1,140,000,000 $1,427,500,000 $1,790,000,000
Total jobs incl. indirect + induced 12,750 15,300 17,850
Knock-on jobs 4,250 6,800 9,350
Note: Only direct jobs should be treated as additive across modules to avoid double counting.
1. Jobs based on area Area Density Direct jobs
Showrooms 1,000,000 sf 1,000 sf/job 1,000
Support offices 1,500,000 sf 200 sf/job 7,500
Trade Mart total 2,500,000 sf 8,500
Formula: Jobs = Area / Density. Example: 1,500,000 sf / 200 sf per job = 7,500 jobs.
2A. Low-case payroll detail Jobs Low wage ($/yr) Payroll ($/yr)
Showrooms 1,000 $90,000 $90,000,000
Support offices 7,500 $140,000 $1,050,000,000
Total for direct 8,500 $1,140,000,000
2B. Mid-case payroll detail Jobs Mid wage ($/yr) Payroll ($/yr)
Showrooms 1,000 $115,000 $115,000,000
Support offices 7,500 $175,000 $1,312,500,000
Total for direct 8,500 $1,427,500,000
2C. High-case payroll detail Jobs High wage ($/yr) Payroll ($/yr)
Showrooms 1,000 $140,000 $140,000,000
Support offices 7,500 $220,000 $1,650,000,000
Total for direct 8,500 $1,790,000,000
2D. Direct jobs Jobs Low wage Mid wage High wage
Showrooms 1,000 $90,000/yr $115,000/yr $140,000/yr
Support offices 7,500 $140,000/yr $175,000/yr $220,000/yr
Total direct jobs 8,500
Total payroll ($/yr) 8,500 $1,140,000,000/yr $1,427,500,000/yr $1,790,000,000/yr
3. Local procurement Low Mid High
Procurement assumption (% of payroll) 20% 30% 40%
Local procurement ($/yr) $228,000,000 $428,250,000 $716,000,000
Formula: Local procurement = Payroll × Procurement share.
What it reflects: Tenant and campus operating spend—security, cleaning, repairs, IT/AV, catering, event staffing, printing/signage, and local logistics; excludes landlord building OpEx.
4. Direct campus activity (Economic expansion) Low Mid High
Payroll ($/yr) $1,515,000,000 $1,902,500,000 $2,390,000,000
Local procurement ($/yr) $303,000,000 $570,750,000 $956,000,000
Total direct activity ($/yr) $1,818,000,000 $2,473,250,000 $3,346,000,000
Formula: Total direct activity = Payroll + Local procurement.
5. Indirect and induced jobs Low Mid High
Direct jobs 8,500 8,500 8,500
Total jobs incl. indirect + induced 12,750 15,300 17,850
Knock-on jobs 4,250 6,800 9,350
Implied total multiplier 1.50x 1.80x 2.10x
What this shows: Additional off-site jobs supported through suppliers, vendors, and household spending.
Definitions: Direct = on-site Trade Mart jobs. Indirect = supplier and vendor jobs supported by Trade Mart spending. Induced = jobs supported by household spending from wages. Knock-on = indirect + induced combined.
6. Modeled tax revenues Low Mid High
NYS PIT $62,700,000 $85,650,000 $116,350,000
NYC resident PIT $34,200,000 $45,680,000 $60,860,000
MCTMT $10,203,000 $12,774,125 $16,020,500
Sales tax on employee spending $17,688,469 $22,150,602 $27,779,445
Sales tax on local procurement $10,117,500 $18,998,344 $31,772,500
Total modeled taxes ($/yr) $134,908,969 $185,253,070 $252,782,445
Rounded total modeled taxes ($/yr) $134,900,000 $185,300,000 $252,800,000
NYS stands for New York State, NYC for New York City, PIT for personal income tax, and MCTMT stands for the Metropolitan Commuter Transportation Mobility Tax.
6A. Tax assumptions and formulas Low Mid High
NYS PIT effective rate 5.5% 6.0% 6.5%
NYC resident PIT rate 3.0% 3.2% 3.4%
MCTMT rate 0.895% 0.895% 0.895%
Employee spending sales tax assumption Payroll × 35% local spend × 50% taxable × 8.875%
Procurement sales tax assumption Local procurement × 50% taxable × 8.875%
Procurement assumption Payroll × 20% Payroll × 30% Payroll × 40%
NYS PIT formula NYS PIT = Payroll × NYS PIT rate
NYC resident PIT formula NYC PIT = Payroll × NYC resident PIT rate
MCTMT formula MCTMT = Payroll × 0.895%
Employee spending sales tax formula Payroll × 35% × 50% × 8.875%
Procurement sales tax formula Local procurement × 50% × 8.875%
6B. Scope note and caveat Value
Scope note NYC resident PIT assumes employees are NYC residents. If some workers commute from outside NYC, this line should be reduced accordingly. NYS PIT would still apply.
Additivity note To avoid double counting across modules, only direct jobs should be treated as additive; indirect and induced jobs should not be added again in Tourism or other spillover modules.

Real estate matters because underused FiDi space can become productive again. Filling 3.0 million square feet can support NOI, values, refinancing, reinvestment, street life, and recurring NYC revenue capacity.

Filling 3.0 million square feet could expand NYC’s recurring revenue base. More occupancy means more income, stronger values, and greater long-term tax capacity.

The real-estate case is direct: absorb vacant office and retail space, improve NOI, support valuations, and rebuild confidence in FiDi.

Vacancy is the opening. Existing space can move faster and cost less than ground-up development, while AI is reshaping what tenants need from buildings, systems, and districts.

The Trade Mart could also become a company-attraction engine. A year-round marketplace in FiDi would give firms a reason to locate near buyers, investors, agencies, partners, media, and talent — strengthening New York City as the global base for urban innovation.

Real estate summary Low Mid High
Stabilized leased area (sf) 3,000,000 3,000,000 3,000,000
Annual rent ($/yr) $165,000,000 $165,000,000 $165,000,000
NOI ($/yr) $111,750,000 $106,860,000 $102,000,000
Illustrative implied value at 6.0% cap ($) $1,862,500,000 $1,781,000,000 $1,700,000,000
Modeled recurring NYC revenue capacity ($/yr) $69,704,500 $70,675,890 $71,313,250
Rounded recurring NYC revenue capacity ($/yr) $69,700,000 $70,700,000 $71,300,000
Note: This module is kept separate to avoid double counting with jobs, tourism, and construction modules.
1. Leasing assumptions Area Asking rent Annual rent
Trade Mart - Showrooms 1,000,000 sf $40/sf/yr $40,000,000/yr
Trade Mart - Support offices 1,500,000 sf $60/sf/yr $90,000,000/yr
Trade Mart - Total 2,500,000 sf $130,000,000/yr
Additional offices (separate) 500,000 sf $70/sf/yr $35,000,000/yr
IC rent total (all space) 3,000,000 sf $165,000,000/yr
1A. Average gross rent across all space Value
Total area (sf) 3,000,000
Total annual rent ($/yr) $165,000,000
Average gross rent ($/sf/yr) $55.00/sf/yr
1B. Operating expense assumptions OpEx ($/sf/yr)
Low $17.75
Mid $19.38
High $21.00
1C. Cap-rate assumptions Cap rate
Low cap 5.5%
Base cap 6.0%
Higher cap 7.0%
High cap 8.0%
1D. Property-tax uplift assumptions Value
NYC Class 4 assessment ratio 45%
NYC Class 4 tax rate 10.848%
Illustrative phase-in 50% / 75% / 100%
1E. CRT assumptions Value
Rent base proxy ($/yr) $165,000,000
Effective CRT rate 3.9%
Coverage factor 70% / 85% / 95%
CRT gross upper bound ($/yr) $6,435,000
1F. Vacancy context Value
FiDi Financial East office vacancy (a) 26.0%
FiDi Insurance office vacancy (a) 29.5%
Retail storefront vacancy in FiDi/BPC (Q3 2024) (b) 24%
Source note (a) Cushman & Wakefield, Q4 2025; (b) Small Business Services
2. Real-estate logic Definition
Gross rent Total annual rent collected
OpEx Building operating expenses
NOI Gross rent minus OpEx
Implied value NOI divided by cap rate
2A. NOI per square foot Gross rent ($/sf/yr) OpEx ($/sf/yr) NOI ($/sf/yr)
Low expense $55.00 $17.75 $37.25
Mid expense $55.00 $19.38 $35.62
High expense $55.00 $21.00 $34.00
2B. Total NOI on 3.0M sf NOI ($/sf/yr) Area (sf) Total NOI ($/yr)
Low expense $37.25 3,000,000 $111,750,000
Mid expense $35.62 3,000,000 $106,860,000
High expense $34.00 3,000,000 $102,000,000
2C. Implied value from capitalized NOI Cap rate Implied value ($) Value per sf
Low expense5.5%$2,031,818,182$677.27/sf
Low expense6.0%$1,862,500,000$620.83/sf
Low expense7.0%$1,596,428,571$532.14/sf
Low expense8.0%$1,396,875,000$465.63/sf
Mid expense5.5%$1,942,909,091$647.64/sf
Mid expense6.0%$1,781,000,000$593.67/sf
Mid expense7.0%$1,526,571,429$508.86/sf
Mid expense8.0%$1,335,750,000$445.25/sf
High expense5.5%$1,854,545,455$618.18/sf
High expense6.0%$1,700,000,000$566.67/sf
High expense7.0%$1,457,142,857$485.71/sf
High expense8.0%$1,275,000,000$425.00/sf
2D. Plain-English economic benefits Value
Benefit 1 Fills vacant office and retail space
Benefit 2 Creates steady rental income
Benefit 3 Improves NOI
Benefit 4 Supports stronger building values
Benefit 5 Helps owners refinance, reinvest, and stabilize assets
Benefit 6 Can improve confidence in the broader FiDi market
3. Job-counting treatment Value
Approach This module does not claim incremental job creation, to avoid double counting with separate Trade Mart operations, tourism, and construction modules.
Why It shows how filling vacant space can improve building income, support asset value, and expand recurring city revenue.
Caveat Stabilizing vacant space can still support employment indirectly by making buildings more viable and attracting more tenants, activity, and investment.
4A. Commercial Rent Tax (CRT) Low Mid High
CRT gross upper bound ($/yr) $6,435,000 $6,435,000 $6,435,000
Coverage factor 70% 85% 95%
CRT modeled ($/yr) $4,504,500 $5,469,750 $6,113,250
Rounded CRT modeled ($/yr) $4,500,000 $5,500,000 $6,100,000
4B. Property-tax capacity uplift (mid-case illustration) Value
Mid-case implied value ($) $1,781,000,000
Assessment ratio 45%
Class 4 tax rate 10.848%
Phase-in 75%
Property-tax capacity uplift ($/yr) $65,206,140
Rounded property-tax capacity uplift ($/yr) $65,200,000
Formula: Property-tax capacity uplift ≈ market value × 45% × 10.848% × phase-in
4C. Total modeled recurring NYC revenue capacity Low Mid High
Property-tax capacity uplift ($/yr) $65,200,000 $65,206,140 $65,200,000
CRT modeled ($/yr) $4,504,500 $5,469,750 $6,113,250
Total recurring NYC revenue capacity ($/yr) $69,704,500 $70,675,890 $71,313,250
Rounded total recurring NYC revenue capacity ($/yr) $69,700,000 $70,700,000 $71,300,000
4D. Plain-English tax benefits Value
Benefit 1 More leased space can support higher building income
Benefit 2 Higher income can support higher property value
Benefit 3 Higher value can support higher NYC property-tax revenue capacity
Benefit 4 Leased commercial space can also generate CRT revenue
4E. Scope note
This section models recurring NYC revenue capacity from stabilized leasing and value. It excludes one-time transaction taxes such as RPTT, RETT, and mortgage recording tax, and keeps jobs separate to avoid double counting.