When computer engineer Jim Nasto started working at the
Philadelphia Navy Yard about a decade ago, the 1,200-acre property was a
virtual desert of vacant industrial buildings and abandoned parade grounds.
Many of those buildings now make up Urban Outfitters'
headquarters, while the vast open spaces are being shaped into office parks
inhabited by such corporations as GlaxoSmithKline.
"I love it," said Nasto, 29, a research
contractor for the U.S. Navy, as he tossed a bocce ball in a landscaped park
that opened last month. "Now we have all these buildings."
Ten years after the Navy Yard's first new offices opened,
plans to transform the site from a symbol of the city's lapsed industrial might
into a vibrant new neighborhood are hitting their stride.
The roughly 12,000 workers at the yard now outnumber the
10,000 or so ship workers and others employed there when it closed as a
military base in 1996. The yard is estimated to have generated $77 million in
local and state taxes in 2012, when its managers conducted their last economic
study.
Liberty Property Trust, the yard's main developer,
recently broke ground on its 14th new office building at the site, designed by
the architect behind Two World Trade Center, and expects to start two or three
more offices this year.
Crews also continue to renovate warehouses from the
yard's heyday for Urban Outfitters, which, already the site's largest employer
with 2,500 workers in eight buildings, plans to add 1,000 more over the next
few years.
Joining the new park - landscaped by James Corner Field
Operations, designer of New York's High Line - will be improved waterfront
trails and a new canal fed by the Delaware River. Planners hope these amenities
will attract workers and full-time residents.
"You begin to start to layer a series of textures on
the Navy Yard that fulfill the vision," said John Gattuso, Liberty's
regional director. "It is really about creating an environment that can
compete on a world stage to attract the best-quality talent."
The Navy Yard joins other vast redevelopment projects
nationwide, where abandoned or underused military or industrial sites are
giving dense cities a blank slate for renewal.
In San Francisco, the former Mission Bay industrial
enclave is now a growing district of corporate headquarters, biotech labs, and
residential blocks, anchored by a new University of California campus.
At the former site of Denver's Stapleton International
Airport, developer Forest City Enterprises is building walkable tracts of
homes, shops, and offices that could one day be that city's biggest
neighborhood.
And the Brooklyn Navy Yard, once the world's most
expansive dry docks, now accommodates art studios and small factories, as well
as the biggest movie studio outside Hollywood.
"It's a great opportunity for cities to rethink a
piece of property that might not have been available to them for 100
years," said former Pittsburgh Mayor Tom Murphy, now a senior fellow at
the Urban Land Institute.
For Philadelphia, the Navy Yard is also serving as a
template for the city's efforts to bring blighted sites back to productive use,
said John Grady, president of the Philadelphia Industrial Development Corp.,
which manages the yard for the city.
Planners are already applying its lessons to the
3,000-acre corridor of industrial land along the Lower Schuylkill River, from
its confluence with the Delaware River to the University of Pennsylvania.
"We're starting a process of assembling land for
private development and planning out infrastructure investments," Grady
said. He says that the yard is at about the halfway point of its intended
build-out.
The Philadelphia Navy Yard, which employed 40,000 at its
peak, came under city ownership in 2000 after the U.S. Defense Department
decommissioned the site as a military base. Some shipbuilding resumed that year
at the newly opened Aker Philadelphia Shipyard.
Liberty finished its first building in the yard's main
office park in 2005. A year later, Urban Outfitters began moving into its
campus of renovated buildings.
Another watershed came in 2013 when GlaxoSmithKline left
Center City for its glass-sheathed Navy Yard building. Other tenants include
Tasty Baking Co., which operates a factory in the yard's industrial section,
and WuXi AppTec Inc., a Shanghai-based pharmaceutical company.
The Navy Yard has enabled the city to retain and attract
companies that may have left for suburbs with more space and building
flexibility, Grady said.
About one third of the tenants at the yard also receive
breaks on some city and state taxes for creating jobs or making large
investments, thanks to its designation as a Keystone Opportunity Zone in need
of development.
"We want to give people the maximum options" to
work and expand in the city, Grady said. "Sometimes there are people who
can't meet their real estate needs" in Center City.
When Franklin Square Capital outgrew its space at the
29-story Cira Centre near 30th Street Station, it considered University City
and Delaware before settling on the Navy Yard, said executive vice president
Michael Gerber.
The company liked the opportunity for outdoor sports
along the waterfront and the ability to incorporate a fitness center into the
design of its headquarters, he said. It was also drawn by the promise of the
new park, which is dense with hammock groves, table-tennis tables, and exercise
stations.
"The Navy Yard is perfectly suited for folks who are
active and love the outdoors," Gerber said. "Those are opportunities
you can't get anywhere else in an urban setting."
Still, some workers at the yard miss the shops and
eateries found in more established centers.
Jade Nguyen, a computer engineer at General Dynamics
Information Technology, said the site - where Marc Vetri's Lo Spiedo opened
late last year - lacks inexpensive lunch spots and convenience stores. "If
we had more amenities, it would be nice," said Nguyen, 34, munching on a
food truck quesadilla. "The more stores you add, the better."
Planners hope to introduce homes to the site to attract
shops with a round-the-clock clientele, pending a change to Navy rules barring
housing.
The plan also includes an extension of the Broad Street
Line, which now ends about a mile north of the Navy Yard's gates.
Up to 1,500 rental lofts and flats are planned in three
of the site's historic buildings over five to seven years, PIDC's Grady said.
"It brings in morning and nighttime traffic, it
brings in weekend traffic," Grady said. "It starts to drive a demand
for amenities . . . that the office workers really can't support economically
on their own."
Source: Philly.com
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