Center City, Philadelphia's engine for growth for the last
decade or more, is showing signs of distress, according to statistics compiled
by the Center City District for its annual "State of Center City"
report.
From office rental rates to visits to tourist attractions
and the number of major conventions on the horizon, a variety of measures of
the health of the city's core suggest it might not be quite as vibrant as
hoped.
For instance, while Center City's population inches higher,
office rental rates run stubbornly below national averages, an indication of a
city's weakness in attracting new employers.
Employment in health care and education - the city's biggest
job creators - has been flattening and, in the first time in a decade, declined
in 2013.
Even tourism, a major boom in recent years, is showing
unevenness. While total hotel-room nights are up, 10 of the city's 18 most
important cultural attractions reported a drop in attendance in 2013. Losers
included the Liberty Bell, Independence Hall, and the Philadelphia Museum of
Art.
"This is not meant to be a purely promotional
report," said Paul Levy, chief executive officer of the Center City
District. "This is meant to be a look at our strengths and our challenges.
The city is loads better than it was, but it is not yet fulfilling its full
potential."
The 75-page report is generally upbeat, highlighting the
positive while not hiding the negative. It drives home the importance of Center
City to Philadelphia and the challenges both face.
For instance, Greater Center City (Girard Avenue to Tasker
Street, river to river) holds 43.3 percent of the city's jobs. It ranks behind
only Manhattan in the gross number of downtown residents among major U.S.
cities, and experienced a 13 percent increase in residents from 2000 to 2013.
Dig deeper, however, and there are reasons for concern.
Office rental averages show that Philadelphia continues to
do a poor job of attracting new employers when compared with other major cities
and the region's suburbs.
While Center City's commercial occupancy rate (86 percent)
is slightly higher than the national average for central business districts
(85.8 percent), the per-square-foot rental rate ($24.67) dramatically trails
the national average ($35.19). When it comes to top-tier office space, the
Pennsylvania suburbs are commanding a higher rent ($27.95) than Center City
($27.11).
Since 1990, Center City's share of the region's office space
has declined from 36.3 percent to 29.1 percent.
Overall, Philadelphia is a laggard in job growth. Between
2012 and 2013, jobs grew 1.57 percent nationwide, 1 percent in the Philadelphia
suburbs, and 0.5 percent in the city. That slower growth means an increasing
number of Philadelphians (188,000 last year) leave the city each day to work.
Among the largest drivers of city employment are major
hospitals and universities. From 2003 to midyear 2012, the number of
health-care and higher-education jobs grew steadily from 170,430 to about
199,000. From mid-2012 to mid-2013, however, there was a drop of about 4,500
jobs in the sectors, the only decline in 10 years.
Also down are the number of large conventions set to come to
the Convention Center. In 2013, the center attracted eight conventions with
attendance of greater than 14,000. Currently, there are none booked for 2014
that exceed 13,000 attendees.
Levy acknowledged the shortcomings, but noted each had its
own roots and solutions. The basic core of the city remains a work in progress,
he said.
Source: Philly.com
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