Six years after Comcast Corp. moved into the city's tallest
building, the cable-TV and Internet giant expects to break ground this summer
on an even taller, more dazzling, $1.2 billion tower.
The 1,121-foot-tall high-rise will be built on Arch Street
between 18th and 19th Streets in Center City, adjacent to the current tower,
company officials said.
One of the world's leading architects, Britain's Norman
Foster, has designed the trophy building with a host of innovative features.
Comcast announced the project Wednesday with Gov. Corbett, Mayor Nutter - via a
video link from Seattle, where he was attending a conference - and Council
President Darrell L. Clarke.
The city and state have committed $40 million in grants to
the project, officials said. At 59 stories, the new tower will have about 1.5
million square feet of rentable space.
The building will at least initially be called the Comcast
Innovation and Technology Center. Its structural core will run the vertical
length of one side of the see-through, all-glass tower, instead of through the
middle like a more traditional skyscraper.
There will be 13 "sky gardens," or three-story
atriums, for software designers, engineers, and product developers to
collaborate, and the building will be topped by a blade extending about 150
feet higher than the Comcast Center. Instead of offices, the building will be
mostly broken into "lofts."
Comcast and Liberty Property Trust, its partner, have
reached an agreement to move the Four Seasons Hotel at Logan Square to the new
tower's top floors. One entrance will be designated for the 200-room hotel and
a second entrance will be for Comcast employees. Separate banks of elevators
will serve both entrances.
Brian Roberts, Comcast chief executive, said at the news
conference that he expected the new Four Seasons to be one of the finest hotels
in the world. The existing Four Seasons on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway then
will not operate as a Four Seasons but could be rebranded.
NBC10 and the local Spanish-language Telemundo TV station
(Channel 62), both owned by Comcast through NBCUniversal, will move their
studios from Bala Cynwyd to the new building.
In addition, the Suburban Station concourse will be extended
a block to the west beneath 18th Street.
Economic impact
The massive project is expected to jolt Philadelphia's
lethargic economy with about 6,300 temporary construction-related jobs and an
additional 14,400 jobs in Pennsylvania.
To help pay for the concourse extension and other
public-space improvements, the state has committed $30 million in
economic-development grants, and the city has said it will contribute $10
million, Comcast officials said.
Liberty is expected to seek five ordinances from Council to
proceed with construction. Those include recalibrating the commercial zoning on
the block, approval for the building height, and the right to tunnel under 18th
to extend Suburban Station.
Comcast has agreed to an addition of 1,500 jobs in the city
connected to the tower and to lease 75 percent of the building, bringing its
Philadelphia payroll to about 6,300 employees. Company officials believe this
is a conservative estimate of the projected job growth at the company over the
next several years, and pointed to the experience with the Comcast Center.
Comcast initially agreed in the early 2000s to lease only 40
percent of the current Comcast Center. Now it occupies 90 percent and leases
offices around Center City for an additional 1,000 employees.
Comcast evolution
The Comcast Center, a Robert A.M. Stern-designed obelisk
that dominates the skyline, was mostly Liberty's project.
The new building's adventurous architecture will be a public
statement of the company's evolution from a low-tech cable-TV provider to a
technology developer with video streaming, Internet products, and mobile apps.
"This will not be a twin," Roberts said, referring
to the Comcast Center. "We wanted to create an environment that's better
than anywhere else. We are a different company than we were a few years ago. We
are competing for talent all over the world, and we have to offer something
special."
Roberts said his vision is for a "vertical urban
campus" that could compete with the traditional Google or Facebook
suburban-style headquarters.
Foster, who competed for the second Comcast tower along with
four other prominent architects, is developing a new Apple Inc. headquarters,
Roberts said. Apple manufactures the iPad and iPhone, through which Comcast now
streams its Xfinity content.
Some had feared that Philadelphia could be marginalized by
New York City, Los Angeles, or Silicon Valley after Comcast's acquisition of
NBCUniversal. Comcast bought 51 percent of NBCUniversal in early 2011 and the
remaining 49 percent in 2013.
But the new tower emphasizes Philadelphia as Comcast's
administrative corporate headquarters and home to its top executives, and consolidates
its position as the company's technology hub. Other geographic areas with
Comcast technology operations include Denver, Silicon Valley, and Northern
Virginia. Comcast also hires software writers in India and China.
In Philadelphia, Comcast has scattered software engineers
and technical employees in floors at the Comcast Center and offices around
Center City. With the new building, employees can all work and interact
together.
Comcast is projected to have more Internet subscribers by
next year than cable-TV subscribers. It's also developing WiFi upgrades and
"TV Everywhere" streaming.
As part of the building project, which has been discussed
since early 2013, Comcast commissioned an independent economic impact study.
"The arrival of the proposed expansion development
would enable the retention of Comcast's growth within the city and the
commonwealth, the relocation of economic activity into the city and
commonwealth, and the provision of sorely needed 'trophy'-level office space
within Center City," said the report by Econsult Solutions Inc.
Comcast will own 80 percent of the $1.2 billion project and
Liberty will own 20 percent. In 1984, Liberty founder and chairman Willard G.
Rouse III proposed breaking the Philadelphia "gentleman's agreement"
height limit with One Liberty Place. The limit had been the top of William
Penn's hat on the City Hall tower.
William P. Hankowsky, chairman and chief executive of
Liberty Property Trust, said he could think of no other U.S. development firm
that had redefined a major city's skyline as Liberty has done in Philadelphia
with Liberty Place, the Comcast Center, and now the proposed tower. Hankowsky
is a partner in the firm that owns The Inquirer.
Source: Philly.com
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