Property’s one-stop comparison guide to the proposals on
opposite sides of the most prominent underdeveloped intersection on Broad
Street.
The Lincoln Square proposal (left) is just starting down
the path towards realization, while Tower Investments’ proposal across Broad
Street (right) will be revised yet again. | Renderings: Lincoln Square, © BLT
Architects, courtesy MIS Capital LLC; Blatstein, Cope Linder Architects
With
the announcement last week that Alterra Property Group had signed on to
develop the mostly empty lot at the northwest corner of Broad and Washington,
complete with renderings of a mixed-use project to be dubbed
“Lincoln Square,” both sides of the most prominent underdeveloped
intersection on Broad Street are now in play. Bart Blatstein‘s Tower
Investments, of course, has big — and controversial — plans for the northeast
corner of the intersection.
The
two projects are similar in concept but different in form, and their receptions
thus far reflect the differences. Residents of Graduate Hospital have so far
given Lincoln Square a warm reception, according to news reports, while those
living in Hawthorne still want Bart Blatstein to give his proposal a big haircut.
Up
until now, though, there’s not been a single spot where you can turn to for a
complete rundown of the two projects’ merits, demerits and progress. With the
table below, we’ve fixed that problem for you.
|
Northeast
Corner
|
Northwest
Corner
|
Name
of Project
|
1001
South Broad
|
Lincoln
Square, in honor of the railroad depot that stood on this site; President
Abraham Lincoln's body was displayed here after he was assassinated
|
Developer
|
Tower
Investments (Bart Blatstein)
|
Alterra
Property Group and MIS Capital LLC
|
Architect
|
Cope
Linder Architects LLC
|
BLT
Architects (BLTa)
|
Total
Size (in square feet)
|
1.8
million
|
495,000
|
Retail
Space, in square feet
|
143,000
(approx.)
|
74,000
|
Height
of tallest building, in feet (number of stories)
|
371
(34)
|
115
(10)
|
Number
of Residential Units
|
950-1,000
|
356
|
Parking
Spaces Provided
|
625
(approx.), in a three-story above-ground garage
|
360
(approx.), in a three-story garage with one underground level
|
Project
Cost
|
N/A
|
$100
million+
|
Notable
Features
|
Rooftop
shopping village with apartments above stores, reminiscent of a village in
Provence Blatstein visited
|
Preserves
former railroad freight terminal used by the Philadelphia, Wilmington and
Baltimore, later the Pennsylvania Railroad
|
Neighborhood
response
|
Blatstein
has gone before the Hawthorne Empowerment Coalition several times with
revisions to his original plan. Most neighborhood residents remain opposed to
the proposal, chiefly because of the height of the main residential tower.
|
As
this proposal was formally unveiled only last week, there's been no official
response from the South of South Neighborhood Association, but news reports
have stated that the group likes what it has been shown so far in informal
meetings.
|
Current
status
|
Back
to the drawing board. Not only are Hawthorne residents upset, the Civic Design
Review panel was unimpressed with the design; committee members questioned
the above-ground parking and the placement and accessibility of the rooftop
shopping village.
|
Just
starting down the path of formal review. The developer is seeking to have the
lot's zoning changed from industrial to commercial mixed-use rather than seek
a variance.
|
So:
how to score the projects?
1001 South Broad
Advocates
for this project say that
South Broad Street is the place for projects of this size and scale. Its
neighbors beg to differ, saying this project is overly dense for its location
so far south of Center City proper. There are also the issues of parking
and how the retail space is configured. While neighbors say there’s too little
parking, Blatstein argues that the project is designed around the carless
lifestyle Millennials appear to prefer, and points out that there’s a subway
station a block away. Even advocates, however, have some issues with the
project’s commercial component: Many say that the big-box podium will do little
or nothing to promote walkability. Architect Cecil Baker, a member of
the Civic Design Review panel, asked specific questions
about the rooftop shopping village in that regard, wondering whether it would
be truly accessible and effective four floors above the street without an
easily identifiable entrance. Putting the parking underground, these supportive
critics say, would enable the project to add truly walkable elements to the
design. [Update, 5:03 p.m.: Blaststein did respond to Baker’s
questions with a slightly revised design.]
Lincoln Square
From
the looks of it, the developers of Lincoln Square have been paying attention to
the criticisms leveled at 1001 South Broad. Its plan includes a
pedestrian path in the middle of the site, running from Broad Street to
15th, and a pedestrian plaza next to the former freight depot; both may
have outdoor seating. One of the parking levels is underground, which makes for
a lower overall height as well, but it won’t spare this project a trip to the
ZBA, for Broad Street has a zoning overlay that forbids any new above-ground
parking structures. (Were it not for the above-ground parking, 1001 South Broad
could be built by right on its lot, which is zoned for the densest commercial
mixed-use development with no height limit.) This project is about one-third
the size of its counterpart across Broad Street, which suggests that Blatstein
need not go as big as he has in order to make his project work. Unless, that
is, he paid too much for his lot.
Source: PhillyMag
No comments:
Post a Comment