The SoHo Building is a unique office building offering commercial space for creative and cutting-edge firms. At the epicenter of SoHo, on Greene Street between Prince and Spring Streets, the building provides its tenants access to the best shopping, restaurants, and nightlife in Manhattan and to 11 subway lines. 110 Greene Street has four exposures and frontages on both Greene and Mercer Streets. Built as two structures by Charles “Broadway” Rouse, a noted New York City merchant, the Mercer Street building was completed in 1908 and the Greene Street building in 1920. Years later, these two buildings were joined to make up what is now the SoHo Building.
A rare early skyscraper in the cast iron district, the SoHo Building offers fantastic views and unparalleled natural light on its upper stories. The building also features high ceilings, open floor plates and historic details throughout. The world's largest surviving collection of cast iron buildings, the SoHo Cast Iron Historic District was reclaimed from light industrial and warehouse use in the 1950s and 1960s by artists associated with Pop and Abstract movements in American Art. As galleries moved to Chelsea, chic boutiques, creative industries, and stylish hotels moved in, making the neighborhood a draw for locals and international visitors alike. The term “SoHo effect” refers globally to the rejuvenation of a compact older district in or near a city’s center.