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  #2981  
Old Posted May 15, 2014, 6:55 PM
Londonee Londonee is offline
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Originally Posted by hammersklavier View Post
As long as Gehry doesn't get a chance to touch the existing first and second floor gallery space, this will be a good project. None of his usual "flourishes"--the whole thing's going underground.
Like Gehry or hate him, many of his buildings become instant global attractions. In a city desperately looking for a global footprint, having a Bilbao-esque building, for example, wouldn't be a bad thing.

I'm somewhat disappointed that his work will be underground. Since it sounds like they are moving much of the modern art collection to the new space, it's a shame that a new, standalone Philadelphia Museum of Modern Art couldn't be built somewhere in Center City.
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  #2982  
Old Posted May 15, 2014, 7:17 PM
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Originally Posted by Londonee View Post
Like Gehry or hate him, many of his buildings become instant global attractions. In a city desperately looking for a global footprint, having a Bilbao-esque building, for example, wouldn't be a bad thing.

I'm somewhat disappointed that his work will be underground. Since it sounds like they are moving much of the modern art collection to the new space, it's a shame that a new, standalone Philadelphia Museum of Modern Art couldn't be built somewhere in Center City.
I'm not sure Philadelphia has the collection to warrant building a new standalone museum. We just built the Barnes and renovated the Pearlman Building. I'm no fan of Gehry at all but I wouldn't mind one somewhere like Centennial Park. It might complement the Mann Center nicely.
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  #2983  
Old Posted May 15, 2014, 7:21 PM
Kidphilly Kidphilly is offline
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Originally Posted by Londonee View Post
Like Gehry or hate him, many of his buildings become instant global attractions. In a city desperately looking for a global footprint, having a Bilbao-esque building, for example, wouldn't be a bad thing.

I'm somewhat disappointed that his work will be underground. Since it sounds like they are moving much of the modern art collection to the new space, it's a shame that a new, standalone Philadelphia Museum of Modern Art couldn't be built somewhere in Center City.

The extension is definitely nice. It also would be great for a PuMMA to be built on the parkway between the Rodin and PMA but would need some big funds for that
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  #2984  
Old Posted May 15, 2014, 7:24 PM
skyscraper skyscraper is offline
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Originally Posted by philatonian View Post
I'm not sure Philadelphia has the collection to warrant building a new standalone museum. We just built the Barnes and renovated the Pearlman Building. I'm no fan of Gehry at all but I wouldn't mind one somewhere like Centennial Park. It might complement the Mann Center nicely.
there was a proposal to build a Calder museum on the parkway a few years ago that would showcase his mobiles and sculptures. so there is, or recently was, some mojo for a new museum.
not to say that I'd want Gehry to design it. he is everything that is bad about contemporary architecture.
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  #2985  
Old Posted May 15, 2014, 7:25 PM
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I just shit my pants.


At a cost of $230 Million, first phase of East Market about to get under way

First phase is a slight dissapointment but a HUGE improvement over what is there. First phase will include multiple floor retail and a 17 story apartment tower. The Family Court building will be modified to accompidate retail and office space. Future phases will include three larger towers

Quote:
Demolition of what many know as Girard Square in Center City will begin this summer and construction of a new development called East Market will begin in earnest.

The 4.3-acre site takes up an entire city block bound by Market, Chestnut, 11 th and 12 th streets. The building fronting Market Street will be taken down and the first phase will rise in its place. It will total $230 million and encompass 650,000 square feet.

That initial phase will include constructing a 17-story tower that will have the first two levels dedicated to 160,000 square feet of retail space and the remainder an apartment structure with 322 units. It will also involve renovating the 200,000-square-foot family court building and preparing that for retail space on the street level and office space above.

At build out the project will cost an estimated $500 million and total 2 million square feet.
I will pull renderings after work.

http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/...irst-phase-of-market-east-to.html?page=2
http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/...-230m-first-phase-of-market-east-to.html
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  #2986  
Old Posted May 15, 2014, 7:28 PM
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Originally Posted by skyscraper View Post
there was a proposal to build a Calder museum on the parkway a few years ago that would showcase his mobiles and sculptures. so there is, or recently was, some mojo for a new museum.
not to say that I'd want Gehry to design it. he is everything that is bad about contemporary architecture.
Invisible Gehry is better. Better use of the existing building is what's needed. The collection is what matters....and we have ICA (which has no collection at all).
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  #2987  
Old Posted May 15, 2014, 7:40 PM
Nightman Nightman is offline
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Originally Posted by summersm343 View Post
I just shit my pants.


At a cost of $230 Million, first phase of East Market about to get under way

First phase is a slight dissapointment but a HUGE improvement over what is there. First phase will include multiple floor retail and a 17 story apartment tower. The Family Court building will be modified to accompidate retail and office space. Future phases will include three larger towers



I will pull renderings after work.

http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/...irst-phase-of-market-east-to.html?page=2
http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/...-230m-first-phase-of-market-east-to.html

I love the pedestrian street Chestnut Walk, something akin to Lincoln Drive in South Beach.
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  #2988  
Old Posted May 15, 2014, 7:51 PM
domodeez domodeez is offline
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I'm usually not a fan of Gehry's work, BUT this PMA project is not typical Gehry. To get an idea of the interior renovations that you can expect (at least, until the exhibit opens July 1) check out what did for the Art Gallery of Ontario. It's gorgeous, as good as the collection itself.

I'm thrilled about this expansion.

image via Elli Davis:
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  #2989  
Old Posted May 15, 2014, 8:21 PM
Skintreesnail Skintreesnail is offline
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Art museum expansion

some more renderings from the art museum were hiding in the article:











source - Philly.com: http://www.philly.com/philly/gallery/201...matic_Gehry_expansion.html?viewGallery=y

Last edited by Skintreesnail; May 15, 2014 at 8:47 PM.
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  #2990  
Old Posted May 15, 2014, 8:51 PM
Baconboy007 Baconboy007 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by summersm343 View Post
I just shit my pants.


At a cost of $230 Million, first phase of East Market about to get under way

First phase is a slight dissapointment but a HUGE improvement over what is there. First phase will include multiple floor retail and a 17 story apartment tower. The Family Court building will be modified to accompidate retail and office space. Future phases will include three larger towers



I will pull renderings after work.

http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/...irst-phase-of-market-east-to.html?page=2
http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/...-230m-first-phase-of-market-east-to.html
Love everything about this!!
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  #2991  
Old Posted May 15, 2014, 8:53 PM
acenturi acenturi is offline
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Originally Posted by philatonian View Post
I'm not sure Philadelphia has the collection to warrant building a new standalone museum. We just built the Barnes and renovated the Pearlman Building. I'm no fan of Gehry at all but I wouldn't mind one somewhere like Centennial Park. It might complement the Mann Center nicely.
Huh??
The PMA has one of the largest collections in America, of which only a small portion is ever on exhibt - primarily because of space.
Ranking wise (although I am not a supporter of "ranking" sites) it is also consistently within the top 10 - and frequently much higher.
These are Art related sites, not "ehow" garbage:
http://www.theartwolf.com/galleries/museums-location-north-america.htm
http://artbistro.monster.com/news/articles/11228-top-22-art-museums-in-america?page=4
The problem with funding for any significant expansion, is NOT the quality or size of its collection, but the tiny number of annual visitors, when compared to its peers. That likely has lots to do with both the Philly demographics and the primary interests of the tourists who visit - which is History and Food. IMO, it would be a travesty to spend on trying to create a Philly Bilbao . Philly already has a globally recognized art museum facility - the PMA.
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  #2992  
Old Posted May 15, 2014, 11:44 PM
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relnahe relnahe is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by philatonian View Post
I'm not sure Philadelphia has the collection to warrant building a new standalone museum. We just built the Barnes and renovated the Pearlman Building. I'm no fan of Gehry at all but I wouldn't mind one somewhere like Centennial Park. It might complement the Mann Center nicely.
The PMA has the second or third largest collection of art in North America. They could build 3 more Pearlman's easily.

Last edited by relnahe; May 16, 2014 at 9:07 AM.
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  #2993  
Old Posted May 16, 2014, 12:10 AM
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Newsworks reports that a $15 million North Broad Street streetscaping project could begin in as little as two weeks - a move that will kick off efforts by Avenue North Renaissance to improve, clean and develop the corridor.
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  #2994  
Old Posted May 16, 2014, 12:26 AM
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http://planphilly.com/articles/2014/05/1...y-city-high-school-and-surrounding-areas

Councilwoman Jannie Blackwell introduced a bill Thursday that would allow Drexel University to build a new mixed-use development on a property at 38th Street and Powelton Avenue that currently houses the empty University City High School, Charles Drew Elementary School, and the Walnut Center.

The bill also says that the project requires demolition of the existing buildings on the site to make way for 2.7 million square feet of new construction at a cost of nearly $1 billion to Drexel and its partner, Wexford Science and Technology. The development would eventually provide 3,700 permanent, full-time jobs.
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  #2995  
Old Posted May 16, 2014, 12:36 AM
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About time!

http://www.ocfrealty.com/naked-philly/coming-soon-better-hidden-gas-and-electric-meters

Coming Soon: Hidden Gas and Electric Meters

Thursday, May 15, 2014
Should improve the look of new construction

One of the more aggravating aspects of new construction these days is the apparent requirement to place electric and gas meters on the front of the home so that they're accessible to PECO or PGW.

Recently the Building Industry Association of Philadelphia has been working with the utility companies to come up with a solution that eliminates the eyesore factor for new homes but still allows PECO and PGW to access their meters if needed. The compromise that's been reached seems like a good one. Moving forward, builders will be able to reserve a space for meters that's recessed into the facade of the building. Also, the utility companies will allow screening in front of the meters so they're not visible from the street.
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  #2996  
Old Posted May 16, 2014, 3:10 AM
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I'm about 90% on board with the Art Museum's plan, now that I see how the parts all fit together.

There aren't very many museums with such sizable underground expansions. The most prominent I can think of is none other than the Louvre.
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  #2997  
Old Posted May 16, 2014, 4:44 AM
gfspeople gfspeople is offline
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http://www.businessinsider.com/iese-smar...A+businessinsider+%28Business+Insider%29

Philadelphia checks in at #11 out of 20 among the smartest cities in the world.
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  #2998  
Old Posted May 16, 2014, 6:31 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by acenturi View Post
The PMA has one of the largest collections in America, of which only a small portion is ever on exhibit - primarily because of space.

The problem with funding for any significant expansion, is NOT the quality or size of its collection, but the tiny number of annual visitors, when compared to its peers. That likely has lots to do with both the Philly demographics and the primary interests of the tourists who visit - which is History and Food.
That may change now that Philadelphia is becoming more nationally and internationally recognized. There's no doubt I think amongst any of us here that Philly's star is fast on the rise. The amount of new development is one thing but I've read several news and editorial pieces in the last few years that praise and herald promise for the emerging Philadelphia arts/culture, food and shopping scenes.

As Boston, New York and Washington have become expensive places where some feel unwelcome, Philadelphia has emerged as the easygoing and palatable Northeastern city, the alternative to the others. I left New York (born and raised native) for Austin a few months ago for exactly those reasons, among others, and I say now all the time that if I ever return to the Northeast, I'd live in Philly. The city is more on people's radar now than ever before, and that's huge.

I would love to see another new freestanding museum of some sort along Benjamin Franklin Parkway. The Barnes relocation was quite the coup in my mind because I always felt that, for a cultural district, BF Parkway lacked simply in number of institutions residing on it. A modern/contemporary art museum (or something else entirely), whether affiliated with PMA or supported by a new organization altogether would be tremendous for the boulevard and the area. I'm super excited for Philadelphia and I look forward to seeing what's still to come.
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  #2999  
Old Posted May 16, 2014, 11:09 AM
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It's essential that these new "brains" vote to fix Philadelphia's entrenched, tax dollar sucking, self-serving political system. If that can be done, Philadelphia will stand alone among US cities. And history is on Philadelphia's side, in that it was done here once before. If I could, I would vote to have Wharton run the city.

May 15, 2014, 5:14pm EDT

Forget that 'brain drain' stuff; Philly is becoming a brain magnet

Philadelphia has seen the largest growth of young-adults of the 30 largest cities in the country, with approximately 100,000 20-34 year olds added to the city’s population between 2006 and 2013.

http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/...in-drain-stuff-philly-is-becoming-a.html

RE PMA; Barnes; PAFA:
World class culture attracts world class talent and Campus Philly introduces students to the regional arts and culture scene through Open Arts (openartsphilly.com), where more than 3,000 annual student members have access to free art and culture experiences and thousands more find a one-stop-shop for student rush tickets, student membership information and arts engagement opportunities. With thousands of students and more than 35 arts and culture partners participating in Open Arts, Campus Philly has created a program that builds audience and attachment to Philadelphia in measurable ways.
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  #3000  
Old Posted May 16, 2014, 12:27 PM
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Three Philadelphia medical schools, including one that grabbed the top ranking, made U.S. News and World Report's list of the 10 schools that got the most applicants last year.

The Drexel University College of Medicine led the list with 13,520 applicants for the class that started in the fall of 2013.

http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/...a-med-school-ranks-first-nationally.html
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