Izak Senbahar (born 1959)[1] is an entrepreneur, hotelier and real estate developer. He is president of Alexico Group LLC, which is involved in luxury residential and hotel development.[2] According to The Real Deal magazine, the combined value of the company's projects in 2014 was approximately $2 billion.[3]
Before entering real estate, Senbahar worked as a precious metals trader at the New York City offices of Groupe Sucre et Denrées (SUCDEN), a French commodities broker.[6] In the mid-1980s, he joined Kiska, a Turkish construction firm, to help the company establish itself in the New York real estate market.[7] With Kiska, Senbahar oversaw the development of various properties including 353 Central Park West, a 19-story luxury condominium building.[8] Subsequently, he partnered with Steven Elghanayan to develop the Elektra, a 32-story condominium in New York City's Gramercy Park neighborhood; the building, completed in 1992, was later sold to Beth Israel Medical Center (now Mount Sinai Beth Israel).[9] In 1993, Senbahar formed Alexico Group and joint ventured with Simon Elias to develop a number of projects.
The Laurel, 2008. At 400 East 67th Street, this 129-unit condominium was designed by Costas Kondylis & Partners with interiors by Brian Callahan.[citation needed]
In 2017 Bilanz magazine ranked The Mark Hotel as the Best City Hotel in the World. In 2020 Travel + Leisure Magazine The World's Best Awards ranked The Mark Hotel; #1 Hotel in New York City and #1 City Hotel in The Continental U.S.
56 Leonard, completed in 2017. Designed by the Swiss architecture firm Herzog & de Meuron, this 60-story condominium tower stands 821 feet high and is the tallest building in Manhattan's Tribeca neighborhood.[citation needed]
56 Leonard was awarded the 2017 Engineering Excellence National Recognition Award by ACEC and the 2017 Best Projects Winner in the Residential/Hospitality Category by Engineering News-Record. In 2019, 56 Leonard was named one of New York City's 10 Most Important Buildings of the past decade by Curbed New York, a publication for American real estate and urban design.
Senbahar commissioned a sculpture at 56 Leonard Street. The sculpture – 48 feet long, 19 feet tall and weighing 40 tons – cost Senbahar $8 million.[12]
Film and television
Senbahar was featured in Season 1, Episode 1 of How Did They Build That?: Cantilevers & Lifts by the Smithsonian Channel. The show is centered on his 56 Leonard building in Tribeca, New York City.[13]
Personal life
He is married to Sarah Genske;[14] they have two children, Alexi and Oliver.[15] In an interview with The Real Deal magazine, Senbahar said that he enjoys "drumming, percussion and bongos."[16]