Showing posts with label Cira Centre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cira Centre. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

The Other Center City

Shortly after I moved to Philadelphia, ground broke on the Cira Centre. I was living in a modest studio apartment in University City and coming from DC, my impression of a skyline was Arlington, VA or college road trips to Richmond. Needless to say, Philadelphia wowed me. But still, as Cira Centre rose, I thought, "What?? A skyscraper in West Philadelphia??"

After Cira Centre grew synonymous with 30th Street Station and the west bank of the Schuylkill River, developers throughout University City became less shy about building vertically. Today, from Belmont Plateau, Philadelphia's skyline is as dramatic west of the Schuylkill as it is east of the Aramark Tower. 

For years, proposals for Cira Center South, even Cira Centre North were floated. They were fun to look at but seemed like a dream. We were sure that University City would never grow taller than Cira Centre. 

But with the FMC Tower, part of the Cira Centre South we never thought we'd see, one of "Philadelphia's tallest" will be west of the Schuylkill. And that's significant.


Let's face it, skyscrapers are built to make a statement. Working in one is a laborious hassle if your day is full of meetings. Once a building exceeds 300 feet, you can easily spend several hours a day in elevator banks. FMC Corporation needed space, sure. But its landlord, Liberty Property Trust, encouraged FMC to relocate to the yet-to-be-built Cira Centre South because Liberty knows University City is open for business, and they want other businesses to take note. 

And take note they will. Amtrak commuters from DC, Wilmington, and all points south will be greeted by FMC's crystalline skyscraper, backdropped by our growing Center City skyline. But what's more interesting than our growing Center City - the Comcast Innovation & Technology Center, 1919 Market, East Market, and the LDS Church's residences on Vine - is University City's true introduction into Philadelphia's skyline.

We're no longer a city bound by two rivers, we're a city straddling the Schuylkill. 

University City office space now costs more than office space in Center City, and University City continues to grow. And for good reason. University City is easily accessible by regional rail, the Market Street El, and the surface trolleys. It's also right on the Schuylkill Expressway, Baltimore Avenue, and Market Street, and chock full of parking. While that doesn't bode well for New Jersey; the Main Line, Upper Darby, and Media are essentially in University City's backyard. That's a lot of people. And they don't have to pay a toll to get here.

What's ever better, it doesn't seem that businesses are trading Center City for University City. With the exception of the FMC Corporation, University City is rising on its own, either growing its current base or attracting new. 

With ample sites for future development, low NIMBY intervention, and a precedent to build taller, University City's skyline may challenge Center City's in ten years or so. Imagine a complex on par with Liberty Place occupying the surface lot at 38th and Market. Now imagine what that would look like from Fairmount Park. 

As residents of Philadelphia, it's easy to discount University City. It's full of college kids. It's not "local." And perhaps that's why it's growing so rapidly. Unfettered with local politics and fueled by academic cash, University City is growing in isolation, and doing so at a fantastic rate. But while locals may be ignoring much of the growth west of the Schuylkill, the growth isn't ignoring us. 

From Drexel's proposed Innovation Neighborhood, plans floating to cap the railroad tracks north of 30th Street Station, and University City's hospital district, University City is organically growing as an extension of Center City's gridded urbanity. Pedestrianization has always been key, and development is seamlessly integrated into the streets leading to the bridges that connect University City to Philadelphia's core. 

It's exciting, and to more seasoned Philadelphians, perhaps a bit scary. Development has begun to snowball, and in a good way. As for University City, sure, it still contains a swell of college students between 30th and 40th Streets, but the way that swell is being developed is bridging West Philadelphia's residential neighborhoods with Center City. 

Once inner-burbs of Philadelphia, neighborhoods like Spruce Hill and Powelton Village are going to soon find themselves part of the cohesive, walkable fabric of Greater Center City. And that truly is a great thing.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Evo on the River

The Grove at 30th and Chestnut will be opening in the fall of 2014, and if you haven't gotten your skyscraper fix from the tallest student housing in the United States, Brandywine Realty Trust and Campus Crest aren't done.

When you think student housing, Campus Crest wants you to think vertically, which is why their Cira Centre South project isn't complete. With 33 floors already under construction, Campus Crest is aiming even higher on Walnut Street.

Remaining cryptic and making no official statements, Campus Crest does have the capital to build. With no neighborly resistance to development on the west bank on the Schuylkill River, University City and Campus Crest have been free to dabble in experimental design, tall design, free of community intervention.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Ping Pong Centre

Cesar Pelli's Cira Centre will soon host the world's largest gaming screen when Drexel University professor Dr. Frank Lee uses the building's customized LED lights to play one of the world's first video games, Atari's Pong.

Tetris simulated on the south wall of Cira Centre
 
If you notice something funky in the lighting scheme lately, Lee has been testing out a number of video games including Space Invaders on the building's façade.

The Pong challenge will take place on April 18th and 24th.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

The Grove at Cira Centre South

Previously circulated as Cira Centre South, a University City proposal expanding on the crystalline skyscraper complementing 30th Street Station, Campus Crest Communities, Inc., Brandywine Realty Trust, and Harrison Street Real Estate Capital will be building a 33 story, $159M, student housing highrise called The Grove at Cira Centre South

Campus Crest Communities, Inc. is based in Charlotte, NC. The highrise will be located at 2930 Chestnut Street, across from the recently renovated IRS building along the Schuylkill River. 

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Recycled Design or Artistic Inspiration?

When Cesar Pelli's Cira Centre first graced the University City skyline six years ago, it prompted many Amtrak passengers to question, "What on earth is that?" A friend from New York once asked me "What is that Buck Rogers building?" It's not just the building's odd, crystalline shape that draws attention, but also it's relative isolation and juxtaposition against the Art Deco 30th Street Station.

Philadelphia's Cira Centre

Since then, a surprising number of similar buildings have sprouted or been proposed around the world, many designed by Cesar Pelli as an evolution of Cira Centre itself. Madrid's Torre de Cristal, standing at 819 feet, is the results of Pelli's further experimentation with Philadelphia's Cira Centre which stands about 400 feet shorter.

Madrid's Torre de Cristal

Proposed at 30th between Chestnut and Walnut is Cira Centre South, in which Pelli expands his geode across Market, lining the west bank of the Schuylkill River.

Cira Centre South

Wilmington even got in on the action, proposing Two Christina Centre.

Two Christina Centre

As Cesar Pelli expanded upon his concept, firms worldwide began implementing this asymmetrical design in denser downtown areas. Cook + Fox Architects' Bank of America Tower in New York (which has topped our Comcast Center as the nation's tallest green building only because of its erection) was completed in 2009.

Bank of America Tower

Downtown Los Angeles' renaissance has drawn proposals from two firms. A. C. Martin's Wilshire Grand Hotel looks like an elongated Bank of America Tower, while Richard Keating's Maguire Office Tower looks suspiciously identical to Cesar Pelli's Cira Centre South.

Maguire Office Tower in Downtown Los Angeles