As Hidden City first reported in September, Comcast will
indeed break ground for a Center City skyscraper designed by Norman Foster, as
the company announced today, at 1800 Arch. Comcast CEO Brian Roberts, quoted by
NBC10, said he envisions the building as “an urban vertical loft.”
Once construction is complete, the Comcast Technology and
Innovation Center will be the tallest structure in Philadelphia, surpassing the
company’s current headquarters by 150 feet, and among the top 10 tallest
buildings in the country.
Comcast is calling this a partnership with the Four Seasons,
which will move into the top 13 floors of the building. It’s also, of course, a
partnership with Liberty Property Trust.
Here are some specs:
• 1,121 feet tall, 59 stories
• 13 floors of hotel space with 200 rooms
• 2,682-square-feet of retail space
• An extension of the underground SEPTA concourse by one
block
• Exterior glass elevator
• Shared workspace environment for 4,000 employees
This is expected to be the tallest building in the U.S.
outside of NY and Chicago.
• $1.2 billion project cost — private investment plus grants
from city and commonwealth
• 1.517 million square feet
• block-long lobby
• gardens
• two restaurants
• fitness facilities
• public reception space
• Target completion date: 2017
• Ownership: 80 percent Comcast, 20 percent Liberty
• Management: Liberty
• LEED Platinum certification (hopefully)
• $30.7 million in annual commonwealth tax revenues
• 2,800 new permanent jobs within the city
• More than 20,000 temporary jobs
• $21.5 million in annual city tax revenues
Here’s some language from architect Lord Norman Foster to
explain the vision:
“At ground level this ‘urban room’ embraces the city; it
opens the building to the public and anchors it as a vital new neighborhood. It
also links directly into the below ground public transport system. Above this,
the highly flexible loft-like spaces and studios are designed for a dynamic way
of working – an engine for the city’s evolution as the kind of leading
technology hub presently associated with Silicon Valley. We look forward to
continuing our collaboration with Comcast and Liberty Property Trust to further
develop an outstanding location and a new landmark on the Philadelphia
skyline.”
To see renderings: click here.
Source: PhillyMag.com
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