Now it could be home to America's burgeoning tech companies and their hipster employees.
"
The financial crisis didn't help either. Bank of America acquired Merrill Lynch and will ditch much of its office space when the lease expires, according to Bloomberg.
In fact, Bloomberg reports that consolidating financial companies have left 6.3 million square feet of office space to fill, about 7% of the lower Manhattan office market.
Naturally landlords are giving the area a makeover, hipsterfying FiDi into a destination for media and tech companies.
Brookfield is stripping away brass and marble trims and adding bicycle parking, free Wi-Fi in public spaces and electric-car charging stations. At Merrill’s former headquarters, clear glass is replacing the imposing, dark-tinted facade built as a barrier to the public...
At $47.13 a square foot, the Downtown Manhattan has the lowest rents (in addition to the most open space) in Manhattan's three major divisions.
Midtown south (encompassing Chelsea, the Flatiron District, and Soho) averaged $63.44 a square foot, according to Bloomberg.
At those prices, FiDi could look a lot different, and soon.