By sheer location and design alone, Philadelphia's Market
East neighborhood should have been destined for continuing greatness.
Construction continues on The Ludlow building which will
have retail on the lower floors and residential space in the tower above it.
At 100 feet wide, East Market Street is perfect for
transportation; it's positioned in the center of the city, ideal for highway
access. The blocks between Independence Mall and City Hall form an ideal
corridor for food and entertainment and shopping. Yet for decades, Market East
has fallen flat.
That baffled city planners and developers, who over the
years witnessed a resurgence in some of Philadelphia's unlikeliest places, but
never along the stretch from Sixth Street to City Hall and the nearby streets
between Vine and Chestnut. The phenomenon was so confounding that, a decade
ago, planners hired a New York firm to draft a plan to revive this
long-languishing part of town.
When it was finally released in 2009, the report by
Ehrenkrantz Eckstut & Kuhn Architects pulled few punches: The district
"is one of the most vital and important areas in Center City
Philadelphia. ... [but] it has yet to perform up to its
potential."
Now, eight years later, Market East is finally working
toward that goal. In place of the pawn shops and cheap eateries that once
dominated the 1100 block of East Market Street, construction crews and cranes
have been raising skyscrapers as part of a nearly $1 billion private investment
in the area.
Two distinct projects are active today: the $325 million
move by Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust (PREIT) to remake the Gallery
at Market East into Fashion Outlets of Philadelphia, and a separate $600
million effort by Washington-based National Real Estate Development to
revitalize the four-acre swath between Market, Chestnut, 11th and 12 Streets.
Both are expected to yield a multitude of shops, offices, restaurants, and
entertainment.
Most surprising, perhaps: National Real Estate
Development's new project also is bringing something that Market East has never
seen: luxury apartment units. To be exact, 562 of them.
It's an incredible change for Philadelphians who, for
decades, have known this part of Center City as an exclusively commercial
corridor, one that more recently has offered lower-priced opportunities to shop
and relax. Even more, it underscores just how the city's apartment market has
ballooned in recent years.
Since 2012, according to the Center City District, nearly
6,000 rental units have been added in Greater Center City -- an area it defines
as extending from Girard Avenue to Tasker Street, from the Delaware River to
the Schuylkill. And in the next two years, that area is expected to see 4,100 more apartments.
Yet most of the new units completed or under construction
up until 2016 were concentrated south of Market Street and west of Broad
Street, city maps show. What that means: The two residential towers currently
rising are among an exclusive few reshaping Center City's eastern core.
As planners and some residents see it, that development
is overdue. When Ehrenkrantz Eckstut & Kuhn Architects devised its plan in
2009, it envisioned Market Street as something akin to Chicago's Michigan
Avenue -- an all-encompassing experience that connects nearby neighborhoods.
(In Philadelphia's case, Chinatown and Washington Square West.)
To achieve that, the firm said, Market Street would need
more density, more mixed use, and an expanded intermodal transit center to
reshape the area. So far, many say, the two mammoth projects are helping.
Before them, "you essentially had a street that was
fairly vibrant by day, but largely died at night," said Paul Levy, CEO of
the Center City District. "The hotel managers would tell people to take a
cab to West Walnut Street, because there was nowhere around to go."
Now, Levy said, "there is a really great
environment." Beyond just shops, offices and residential spaces, National
Real Estate Development and PREIT have taken a multi-pronged approach.
"If this was a single residential tower on Market
Street, it would be a little island," Levy said. "But they are doing
a comprehensive redevelopment. ... The key to success these days is diverse
mixed use."
The dearth of activity along East Market Street was
exactly what prompted National Real Estate Development to get involved, said
Dan Killinger, managing director of development. Market East, he said,
exhibited not only a lack of supply, but also an opportunity for population and
job growth, and a high barrier of entry for others.
After making plans for its first residential tower, Killinger's
group was so bullish that it made plans for a second. The first, called the
Ludlow (at the corner of 11th and Ludlow Streets), is expected to begin
pre-leasing this summer and continue with move-ins through fall. The second
tower, at 1199 Ludlow St., is expected to be completed in summer 2018. Details,
except that those units will be larger, were not shared.
For the Ludlow, prices will range from $1,600 for studios
to $3,500 for the largest two bedrooms, and amenities will include a coffee
bar, a yoga studio, and a rooftop deck. Both towers are expected to attract
professionals, couples and families "who want a dynamic city living
experience," Killinger said.
For longtime residents who know the area, that's quite
the sudden change.
Decades before developers and strategic plans were
focused on this stretch, Market East existed as a unique meeting place. Even as
storefronts became a repetitive mix of jewelry and electronics stores and as
sales at the Gallery -- Philadelphia's downtown mall -- fell flat, residents
from across the city would venture here, lured by easy transit and cheap dining
and shopping.
"I'd hop on the Route 33 bus and go to the food
court, check out sneakers and the new games," Omar Woodward, executive
director of Philadelphia's branch of the GreenLight Fund, a nonprofit
investment organization, said of his high school years. " ... I was struck by how democratic the space was.
There were elderly folks and young kids who had just gotten out of
school."
"That's not coming back," Woodward continued.
"It's taking it from a democratic space to something that's a bit more
elite."
That's not necessarily a bad thing, he said. But it
raises a question: Where will longstanding residents who traversed this area
go?
Levy is optimistic that they will stay right here.
"I would not assume that just because it's new that
it's economically exclusive in its format," Levy said. PREIT will bring
outlets, he said, "at a moderate price." Plus, Chinatown, Reading
Terminal Market and Century 21 -- all of which cater to mixed-income clientele
-- are nearby, too.
As for more residential spaces along the Market East
corridor?
"We're in a cycle where there's a significant amount
of supply coming online," Levy said. "I don't think you will see
major announcements about major towers in residential areas in the next two to
three years."
Source: Philly.com
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