Amid the crowded bustle of Manhattan's Sixth Avenue, a slender plot of land gives rise to a high-rise wedged into a narrow gap—a distinctive kind of design practice. Here, stories and fragments of time converge, rich in substance, memory, and quiet intrigue. In that moment, what came to mind were the solitary, silent, and lingering shadows of Edward Hopper, the weathered warmth and dimmed light of his muted palette, and Georgia O'Keeffe's way of "living within the building"—a layered life shaped by height, light, and introspection.