Amtrak wants to replace the traffic-choked snarl that
surrounds Philadelphia’s 30th Street Station with tree-canopied public spaces
in an early step toward realizing the transit corporation’s $6.5
billion redevelopment vision for a huge adjacent swath of University City.
The passenger-rail operator plans to present a proposal
for what it is calling 30th Street Station Plaza at an open house at the station
late Wednesday afternoon.
The plaza would be completed in an early
phase of the larger redevelopment project, known as the 30th Street
Station District Plan, that is seen as eventually including the partial capping
of Amtrak’s adjacent rail yard to accommodate what would be a new urban enclave
along the Schuylkill’s west bank.
“We have the vision in place for the District
Plan,” said Natalie Shieh, a senior manager for planning and development
at Amtrak’s major stations. “Now we are zooming in on Station Plaza.”
As currently situated, 30th Street Station is
isolated from its neighborhood by the teeming vehicle-access roads that
ring the 1930s station building.
The plaza plan aims to reconfigure that space with
driveways that channel taxis to a new queueing area on the station
property’s northwest corner and separate passenger-car pickup and drop-off
lanes on the block’s north and east sides that can be reached directly from
surrounding streets.
Much of the space reclaimed from what are now winding
driveways will be integrated into the station’s eastern, western, and
southern aprons, which would be landscaped with trees and planters and paved
with patterned surfaces.
Also included in the plaza plan is a new outdoor access
way leading to underground shops, parking, and a concourse that will eventually
link 30th Street Station with SEPTA’s Market-Frankford Line.
Envisioned in the much broader 30th Street Station
District Plan is redevelopment of a 175-acre site between Walnut and Spring
Garden Streets, east of the Drexel University campus and Powelton Village, over
35 years.
The overall plan was devised through a
two-year, $5.25 million study published last summer and is now being led
by a group made up of Amtrak, SEPTA, PennDot, Drexel, the University of
Pennsylvania, and the University City District business association.
Radnor-based Brandywine Realty Trust had been part of the
group while the study was being prepared, but it has since left to avoid any
conflicts while pursuing development opportunities at the site, Shieh said.
Brandywine chief executive Jerry Sweeney said in an
interview in late June that his company was among those responding to a request for proposals last
year to develop a three-quarter-acre site owned by Amtrak at the corner of
30th Street and John F. Kennedy Boulevard that is to be part of the 30th Street
Station District Plan.
The District Plan’s vision for a dense urban
neighborhood, largely over what are now 88 acres of rail yards, is expected to involve about
$2 billion in public infrastructure spending and about $4.5 billion in private
investment by developers of office towers, residential buildings, hotels, and
other projects.
Amtrak plans to open its search for developers to
handle the overall project and its constituent parts, including Station Plaza,
by issuing a request for qualifications later this month, Shieh said.
Work on the plaza project is seen as beginning within
five years, she said. Construction is expected to cost about $73.5
million, according to the District Plan study.
At Wednesday’s open-house presentation, set for 4:30 to 7
p.m., Amtrak will seek public input on how the space will be used, to further
refine designs.
Retail kiosks, temporary market stalls, and
programming such as yoga classes are among the uses imagined for the space,
Shieh said.
“Our focus was to make sure that Station Plaza not only
functions from a transportation sense, but would become the next great civic
space for Philadelphia,” she said.
Revitalizing the station’s immediate surroundings is key
to forging a strong physical link between western Center City
and University City, an important step toward making the combined district an
economic driver for the region, said Jennifer Vey, an urban-planning fellow at
the Brookings Institution in Washington.
The station site is “an impediment in its current state,”
said Vey, co-author of a recently released study calling on
Philadelphia leaders to foster an “innovation district” from 17th Street
to 43rd Street along the Market Street corridor. “On the other
hand, it’s obviously a major opportunity, as well.”
Source: Philly.com
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