The planned Trump Tower Philadelphia never came about, but new owners are pursuing their own ambitious plans. |
Donald Trump's vision of a
45-story condo-and-hotel tower - or at least one like it - may yet rise on the
Philadelphia waterfront.
The new owners of the
Delaware River pier where the ill-fated Trump Tower Philadelphia was to have
been built see the project as a possible template for developing the site,
according to George Polgar, a spokesman for the recent buyers.
The new owners, represented
by Northern Liberties-based Shovel Ready Projects, have some alternative uses
for Pier 351/2 in mind, too, including a plan for as many as 60 townhouses on
the 2.13-acre tract, Polgar said.
"We're pursuing the
highest and best use of the property, given the current real estate
market," he said.
Trump's original plan called
for the $300 million project - with 263 units, a landscaped garden, and a
high-end spa - to be completed by mid-2008.
By the time he had acquired
the necessary permits and building rights from the city, however, the housing
market's downturn had doomed the project.
The company formed to develop
the tower filed for bankruptcy in 2013, and the pier was sold later that year
by its mortgage holder to a company in Minneapolis for $86,300.
The new group of investors
bought the property for $2.4 million on April 23, according to city records.
The pier is at Columbus Boulevard and Fairmount Avenue, between Festival Pier
and Waterfront Square.
Polgar said the pier was an
attractive investment for the current ownership group - which includes Adam
Spivak, co-owner of the Electric Factory concert venue - because it is zoned
for a wide range of uses, including housing, hotels, and shops.
The permits for Trump's tower
are valid through July 2016, he said.
The ownership group is
assembling a portfolio of possible plans for the site that it will market to
other investors, who would either be brought in as partners or sold the entire
project to develop themselves, Polgar said.
"The flexibility gives
us the ability to look at projects from as many perspectives as possible,"
he said.
Matt Ruben, president of the
Northern Liberties Neighbors Association, said he hoped the pier's new owners
would ultimately opt not to revive the tower plan. He said the tower's height
and other attributes put it at odds with the area's zoning requirements.
"Whoever owns it would
do very well to think of something very different from the old Trump Tower
proposal," Ruben said.
Source: Philly.com
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