Philadelphia Stadium Complex Proposal Updated To Include Residential Tower

Aerial view of the project looking southwest; image courtesy of 76 Place

The Philadelphia 76ers have updated plans for a US$1.3 billion mixed-use stadium in Philadelphia’s Chinatown, reports The Architect’s Newspaper. Designed by Gensler, alongside the basketball team’s subsidiary group 76 DevCorp, 76 Place will now include a 20-story residential tower. Plans for the development, which would move the 76ers from Wells Fargo Center on Broad Street to a new stadium on the corner of Market and 10th streets, have been contested by the Philadelphia Chinatown Development Corp. since they were announced. The proposal revisions follow a series of community meetings this summer. The new tower would contain 395 housing units, 79 of which would be affordable. Project stakeholders have contributed an additional US$250 million in private investment to finance the improvements, raising the project cost to US$1.55 billion.

Get more of Elevator World. Sign up for our free e-newsletter.

Please enter a valid email address.
Something went wrong. Please check your entries and try again.

SEA-LEVEL RISE THREATENS NEW YORK HOUSING AND TALL BUILDINGS

Sea-Level Rise Threatens NYC Housing and Tall Buildings

HOUSTON SENIOR APARTMENT COMPLEX SUFFERING ELEVATOR BREAKDOWNS

Houston Senior Apartment Complex Suffering Elevator Breakdowns

Herrmann

In Memoriam: Tim Herrmann

Armas

Otis Appoints Armas as President U.S. and Canada

Example of Mogilevliftmash elevator interior; image courtesy of Mogilevliftmash

Elevator Assembly Plant Officially Opens in Belarus

Unsworth

Unsworth Joins LML Lift Consultants Senior Consultant

This July will mark 40 years since the beginning of Wurtec; image courtesy of Wurtec

Wurtec Celebrating 40th Anniversary

HydraSafe surveyed 17 elevators at the Metropolitan Museum of Art with partner Claddagh, which will be providing a control system for single-plunger code compliance; photo by Hugo Schneider for Wikipedia.

HydraSafe Brake: NYC Training, a Move and a New Hire