Less than two years after successfully negotiating a
three-year temporary street closure permit for the Grays Ferry Triangle
pedestrian plaza at 23rd and South streets, the Grays Ferry Avenue Triangles
Committee is already making moves on a permanent design.
The committee had been mulling over different
configurations for several months now, and they officially settled on the
option that was on display at this week's DesignPhiladelphia event, Shifting
the Public Realm from Streets to Plaza at Grace Tavern.
Sean O'Rourke, one of the committee members and an
architect at Bergmann Associates, who developed the design, highlighted some of
the new features the revamped plaza would have, including stone benches made of
native Wissahickon schist and cobblestone circles designed to retain more
stormwater on the triangle's surface.
The Triangles Committee handed Bergmann a few
stipulations. The redesigned plaza would need to preserve roughly the same
amount of flexible space for events like the Plazapalooza block party, movie
nights, concerts, kids' birthday parties and other programming. Preserving the
historic horse drinking fountain, and specifically peoples' ability to sit
around it campfire-style, was also a must.
It was also important to the committee that the edges
separating the plaza from South Street traffic be preserved, both for noise and
safety reasons. The fountain area on corner of South Street and 23rd is
currently hemmed in by trees and plants which would end up being removed in
construction of the permanent plaza. The fountain would be moved slightly
toward the middle of the plaza, though not by a noticeable amount.
The Triangles committee also requested more tree cover,
as the direct sunlight can be intense.
Marcus Ferreira, one of the committee members, drew our
attention to the somewhat off-kilter placement of trees. PECO rebuffed the
committee's request to bury the power lines when the reconstruction eventually
happens, so the tree locations next to the commercial strip are thrown off a
bit by the requirement to plant them sufficiently far away from the power
lines.
Notably, the design pockets the three parking spaces on
23rd Street recently lost to an Indego station, while keeping the loading zone
in front of Woven Treasures. Loading capacity for Woven Treasures was the main
sticking point during the committee's nine-year push to turn what was once a
through-street with seven parking spaces into a public plaza.
SOSNA will use the designs to develop a project budget
and raise the necessary funds. The Streets Department will also need to approve
any changes
Source: PlanPhilly.com
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