
Jack Resnick & Sons has inked six new leases at 250 Hudson Street, totaling about 119,000 square feet and pushing the Hudson Square tower to roughly 99 percent occupancy. The deal mix pairs four full-floor office agreements with smaller retail and specialty suites, bringing creative, production and wellness users into the building.
About 250 Hudson
The 394,424-square-foot property features a limestone and marble lobby, high ceilings and an award-winning 10,000-square-foot landscaped rooftop amenity for tenants, according to Jack Resnick & Sons. The building holds LEED Gold and WiredScore certifications and maintains an EPA Energy Star designation, per EPA Energy Star.
New Deals Push Occupancy Near Full
According to an announcement reported by CityBiz, the six transactions add roughly 119,000 square feet of office and retail space and include four full-floor leases of about 27,780 square feet each. The activity underscores continued appetite for amenitized creative and tech-adjacent space in Lower Manhattan.
Who's Moving In
Marketing agency Croud International signed a 16-year lease for the building’s entire ninth floor and will relocate from 101 Sixth Avenue, while production company Pro Media took a 15-year lease for the fifth floor. Greenlite Technologies signed a three-year lease for the fourth floor, Galareana Holdings inked an 11-year deal for the third floor, MBH Architects took 5,529 square feet on part of the seventh floor, and wellness studio Body Observability will open a 2,314-square-foot retail location under a five-year lease, per CityBiz. "These new tenants represent a wide range of industries and reflect the broad appeal both of this building and Hudson Square," Jonathan Resnick, president of Jack Resnick & Sons, said in the announcement.
Hudson Square's Momentum
Hudson Square has remade itself from a printing district into a hub for media, tech and life-science firms, a shift accelerated by large moves such as Google’s leasing at nearby 315 Hudson Street, part of the Google Hudson Square campus, according to GlobeSt. Longstanding occupants at 250 Hudson, including the Writers Guild of America East and Edelman, have helped anchor the building’s tenant mix in recent years, per coverage by CommercialCafe.
What’s Left
Despite the recent leasing surge, a small number of ground-floor retail storefronts remain available, according to the building’s availability listings on Jack Resnick & Sons. The new deals push 250 Hudson to near-full capacity, tightening prime creative office options across Hudson Square as landlords compete on amenities and sustainability features.









