30th Street Station District

30th Street Station District

Artist rendering of project (2016). Looking away from Center City
Location West Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States (Philadelphia)
Status Proposed
Groundbreaking 2017
Estimated completion 2046
Website 30th Street Station District
Companies
Architect Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
Developer Brandywine Realty Trust
Owner Amtrak and City of Philadelphia
Technical details
Cost $6.5 Billion
Buildings
2901 Arch Street - 1,200 ft (365m)
  • 3001 JFK Blvd - 705 ft (214m)
  • 2928 Race Street - 670 ft (204m)
  • 3100 Cherry Street - 605 ft (184m)
  • 2929 Race Street - 590 ft (180m)
  • 3000 Baring Stree - 570 ft (174m)
  • 3100 Winter Street - 435 ft (132m)
  • 3120 Race Street - 405 ft (123m)
Size 7,623,000 sq. feet

The 30th Street Station District also referred to as the 30th Street District is a proposed urban development located in West Philadelphia or Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. The area will be home to eight modern skyscrapers or highrises ranging in heights between 1,200 ft (the tallest) and 405 ft with four other buildings (under 400 feet). The property if approved and build will be owned by Amtrak and will be a major addition the northeast corridor and the City of Philadelphia. The project is expected to cost between seven and eleven billion dollars.[1]

The project would be a huge addition to the city. Many believe that the project will provide a second downtown with some of the largest buildings not in the center city.[2]

The project isn't only to add new buildings to the skyline. Architects have put in their plans to connect West Philadelphia to the Center city by adding new walking paths and walking bridge and more connections to make traveling by car or bus from the 30th Street Station to downtown Philadelphia easier and faster. Also the placement of the current phase of construction would allow expansion north towards the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Philadelphia Zoo.

Project history

Completed in June 2016, the Philadelphia 30th Street Station District Plan is a long-range, joint master planning effort led by Amtrak, Brandywine Realty Trust, Drexel University, the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, and the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority to develop a comprehensive vision for the future of the 30th Street Station District in the year 2050 and beyond.[3]

A $2 billion investment in roads, utilities, parks, bridges, and extension of transit services will unlock $4.5 billion in private real estate investment, in addition to an estimated $3.5 billion for Drexel’s Schuylkill Yards project. These investments in the District will have robust and widespread economic development bene ts, with the potential to generate $3.8 billion in City and State taxes and 40,000 jobs when complete.[4]

Plan

The District Plan lays out a vision for the next 35 years and beyond to:

Street Station;

new civic space at the station’s front door.

Reconnecting the station

Passenger volume at 30th Street Station is projected to more than double over the next 25 years and beyond. Travel to the District is easily achieved by a number of modes, with nearly 100,000 trips made daily by train, subway, bus, trolley, car, bicycle, or on foot. However, the modes do not clearly connect, creating a confusing and sometimes precarious experience for visitors.

For almost 30 years, for example, passengers transferring between 30th Street Station and the trolley and subway lines below Market Street have lacked a covered, climate-controlled route, forced instead to leave the station and cross a busy 30th Street. The Plan proposes to re-establish a convenient and safe connection between these stations, via a new stairway within 30th Street Station’s Main Hall and through an active and day-lit below-grade retail concourse.

The Plan also envisions a permanent home for intercity buses (BoltBus, Megabus, and others) on the north side of Arch Street as part of an integrated, multimodal transportation facility. The new intercity bus terminal connects directly via pedestrian bridge to 30th Street Station and provides an indoor waiting area along with bus queuing. In the long-term, an additional Amtrak concourse could anchor this new transit center.[5][6]

Funding and Cost

Amtrak and its partners in the proposed redevelopment of a massive swath around 30th Street Station in University City say the decades-long plan, including partially capping the adjacent rail yard, will involve $6.5 billion in infrastructure funding and private investment. The financial projection is part of the planning team's final blueprint for the 175-acre site extending northeast from 30th Street Station, to be released Thursday morning.[7]

Publication of the 30th Street Station District Plan ends a two-year, $5.25 million study led by Amtrak, Drexel University, Brandywine Realty Trust, SEPTA, and PennDot for the area between Walnut and Spring Garden Streets east of Drexel's campus and Powelton Village.

Buildings

The 35-year plan to build a dense urban neighborhood, largely over what are now 88 acres of rail yards, will require about $2 billion in infrastructure investment, according to a plan summary. That spending on roads, bridges, parks, and transit would enable about $4.5 billion in private investment by developers of office towers, residential buildings, hotels, and other projects.

Anticipated is about 18 million square feet of new development, the equivalent of nearly 15 new Comcast Towers, including enough housing to accommodate up to 10,000 residents. The commercial space includes about 1.2 million square feet planners hope will be occupied by a single corporate, commercial, or institutional tenant that will anchor the development, though none has yet been secured.[8]

Project partners

As of September 2016 the following are partners[9] of the project:

See also

References

External links

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