Offices Real Estate

Hudson River Trading Moving to 3 WTC

NEW YORK – Hudson River Trading is moving from 4 World Trade Center to new space at 3 World Trade Center, which opened last June.

Silverstein Properties Chairman Larry Silverstein announced HRT has signed a lease with Hudson River Trading (HRT) for 136,000 square feet of office space at 3 WTC.

Founded in 2002, HRT develops automated trading algorithms using advanced mathematical and statistical modeling techniques in an extremely high-performance computing environment.  With offices around the world, HRT trades equities, futures, options, currencies and fixed income on over 50 markets worldwide.

HRT, which is currently located on the 57th and 58th floors of 4 World Trade Center, will move its headquarters to the 74th, 75th, 76th and 77th floors next door at 3 World Trade Center.  Included in the lease is an iconic 5,000 square foot outdoor terrace that was made possible by the 76th floor setback of the Richard Rogers designed tower.  HRT will now have sole access to the space, at 935 feet, the highest private outdoor terrace in New York City, along with panoramic views of New York Harbor and the Midtown skyline.

HRT had this to say on the move:  “HRT is delighted to be moving to 3 WTC.  We’ve enjoyed incredible growth over the past few years, and we look forward to continued growth next door.”

Larry Silverstein said:  “It’s so exciting to see companies such as Hudson River Trading grow and move within the World Trade Center.  This is the most accessible place in New York, and a major draw for the City’s top talent.”

Jeremy Moss, Director of World Trade Center Leasing for Silverstein Properties, led the negotiations for the landlord, together with the CBRE agency team including Mary Ann Tighe, Ken Meyerson, Evan Haskell, David Caperna, Adam Foster, Steve Eynon, Rob Hill.  Hudson River Trading was represented by Sacha Zarba and Chris Corrinet of CBRE.  HRT has also hired Gensler Architects to design its space.  Gensler designed the company’s existing headquarters at 4 WTC, which also features an outdoor terrace.

Jeremy Moss said:  “Downtown is where Wall Street meets Silicon Alley.  Lower Manhattan has always been the international capital of finance, but over the past 10 years, the neighborhood has completely transformed, attracting nearly 1,000 TAMI (Technology, Advertising, Media, Information Services) companies from start-ups to established brands.  Now these sectors are merging and Lower Manhattan is becoming the fintech center of America. Hudson River Trading joins many other great fintech companies at the World Trade Center.”