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  #8821  
Old Posted Sep 26, 2017, 8:24 PM
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More FDP details from bizjournals.com. Bowling, steakhouse, wine bar, etc. mentioned.

https://www.bizjournals.com/philadel...-revamped.html
     
     
  #8822  
Old Posted Sep 26, 2017, 11:16 PM
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More tenants and hints of things to come for the Fashion District

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Coradino had the biggest news. Besides AMC and a previously announced 38,000-square-foot superstore for H&M, he announced that PREIT and its development partner Macerich had also landed several other retail tenants for what is now being called Fashion District Philadelphia, a total reworking of the old Gallery mall.

Jeans icon Levi’s, shoe retailer Skechers, outerwear outfitter Columbia Sportswear and women’s boutique Francesca’s will all be coming to the revamped shopping center. “All of these are first-in-Center-City stores,” he said.

Coradino also dropped hints about the dining destinations to come. One of the destinations, he said, will be a collection of restaurants called “Market Eats” that will cater to shoppers, visitors, and commuters headed to and from Jefferson Station on the center’s lower level. One of the eateries will be housed in an Airstream trailer while another will operate from a restored railroad car.

“There will be best-of-market, all-natural pizza,” handmade on the premises, he said. “There will be gourmet burgers and a sports bar that will have take-away cocktails so those commutes home will never be the same again.” All of the restaurants will offer table or counter service on the side facing the stores and grab-and-go options on the side facing the Regional Rail hub. What “Market Eats” won’t be, he said, is a typical mall food court, no more than the Fashion District will be a typical mall.

(Coradino said that he could not identify the operator of the eateries until it was ready with its own publicity.)

He also said that a European food retailer would be opening its first US location and that leases were in the works with unidentified apparel and cosmetics retailers who will also open their first Center City stores. Finally, one of the area’s anchor institutions, Wills Eye Hospital, will open a retail eyewear store in the Fashion District with Wills Eye ophthalmologists offering diagnostic services.
Read more at http://www.phillymag.com/property/20...EGtWGHUqKeX.99
     
     
  #8823  
Old Posted Sep 26, 2017, 11:27 PM
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Post Brothers' Fight For Industrial-To-Multifamily Conversion Sheds Light On Labor's Lack Of Diversity

Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/philadelphia/...rd-labor-79457
     
     
  #8824  
Old Posted Sep 26, 2017, 11:30 PM
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PREIT to capture a range of shoppers with revamped Gallery

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In addition to an H&M, which leased 38,000 square feet, tenants that have signed on include Wills Eye Hospital, which will operate its first retail location selling glasses and other eye-related products. The hospital couldn't immediately be reached for comment about the project.

Wills Eye Hospital, established in 1832, treats more than 300,000 patients annually at its main 140,000-square-foot medical center just a few blocks away from the Gallery and its network of nine multispecialty, ambulatory surgery centers throughout the region.

Some of the other tenants so far lined up are an eight-screen AMC movie theater that will also have a restaurant in it that will serve alcohol to movie patrons, also Columbia Sports, Levis, Sketchers, and Francesca’s will operate outlet stores. An area called “Market Eats” will replace the traditional food court, among the architectural features will be a railroad car and an Airstream trailer. Foods that will be offered include pizza, burgers, a bakery with a cafe, Asian fare, and a sports bar with take-away cocktails. To that, Coradino joked that commuting on the train will never be the same.

Plans also call for activating the Filbert Street side of the Gallery with a wine bar that also has live entertainment. There will also be bowling, a diner and a steakhouse. In addition, Coradino said that the project will include a European food market, of which the two likely suspects are Lidl or Aldi, though he didn’t disclose any names.
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https://www.bizjournals.com/philadel...-revamped.html
     
     
  #8825  
Old Posted Sep 26, 2017, 11:45 PM
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Originally Posted by 1487 View Post
one of the gallery buildings, its hard to tell because they consolidated the various addresses to one property. But I think I was clicking on the 10th and market building. There are 35 permits for that address.
Got it. Thanks. If that building gets a tower and so does the building on the other side of Health Partners (both can support one), that will hopefully help the vacant stores on the other side of the block. Or launch of at least one of these towers if not both. Hopefully absorption and occupancy in the East Market towers is good and they soon pull the trigger on one or both of these towers further east.
     
     
  #8826  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2017, 11:26 PM
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At Last, Real Progress at Former Salvation Army Building in Society Hill





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http://www.ocfrealty.com/naked-phill...-army-building
     
     
  #8827  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2017, 11:38 PM
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Risky makeover of Divine Lorraine takes another step forward

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t’s taken a while for Blumenfeld, 54, to get to this point. When he leads a tour of the historic North Broad Street building in late September, the Philadelphia-born developer is still on a high from five days earlier, when he publicly unveiled his $1 million overhaul of the lobby. Since hundreds attended the event, he says, the pace of leasing the building’s 101 apartments has quickened. Employees on site are buzzing with excitement. Blumenfeld himself is sporting a “Divine Lorraine Hotel” lapel pin; the trunk of his Jeep is stuffed with duffel bags, T-shirts, and mugs bearing the former hotel’s name.

Five years ago, it’s likely that no one in Philadelphia — including, perhaps, Blumenfeld himself — could have predicted that the Divine Lorraine would be what it is today. Since 1999, the 11-story tower sat vacant along North Broad, serving as “a billboard of blight,” former Philadelphia Deputy Mayor Alan Greenberger said. Certainly, there was always interest — in the last 18 years, the building has had multiple owners, including Blumenfeld once before — yet no one believed that a project could work financially.

“It’s a risky project,” said Greenberger, who helped shepherd the project to fruition. “There was nothing about this area that said, ‘Invest here,’ or that this would be easy.”

Blumenfeld repurchased the landmark in 2012 for an estimated $2.1 million plus $800,000 in debt. Since, he’s turned a building formerly filled with homeless people, graffiti artists, and trespassers into attractive apartments — and he did it all, aside from the lobby, within budget. Nearly all of the units are outfitted with trendy finishes — exposed brick walls, lofts, and sleek appliances. On the ground floor and basement of the main building, and in the smaller annex behind it, Blumenfeld is planning a labyrinth of commercial space, with tenants already in place for three restaurants, a speakeasy, bakery, recording studio, and lounge.

When discussing his vision for the project, which he expects to complete next summer, Blumenfeld talks excitedly. During the tour, he climbs up and down grand staircases, steps over muddy puddles, paces in and out of unfinished, graffitied rooms on the ground floor. He hops rapidly from subject to subject, frequently speaking in hyperbole. Yet there’s a genuine confidence about him. And he’s proud. Mostly, he believes the Divine Lorraine can transform North Broad Street.

“When I was a little kid, when someone came to visit my mom and dad, they took them to the [Old Original] Bookbinders — it was the picture of Philadelphia,” Blumenfeld says. “I think in the future, it’s going to be a selfie in front of this recording studio.”

Blumenfeld would not identify the commercial tenants. Pressed for details, he explains that the recording studio will be occupied by someone who is “very Philadelphia but internationally famous.” As for the restaurants, he says there will be two fine-dining spots — one inside the Divine Lorraine and one in the annex. One chef also will run a trattoria, serving casual food. All are trying to get liquor licenses; outdoor seating will abound.

“Who is not going to come to a restaurant at the Divine Lorraine?” Blumenfeld exclaims. “It’s going to be awesome!”

Still, there is a lot of work ahead — and no promise that the makeover will be successful. North Broad Street remains home to spotty development, vacant lots, and petty crime. The neighborhoods closest to the corridor, namely Francisville, Fairmount, and Callowhill, have been gaining in popularity, yet they still lack the degree of activity of the neighborhoods that have bolstered South Broad Street just a few miles away.

Plus, Blumenfeld’s stylish project — at the corner of Broad Street and Ridge Avenue — is on the edge of one of Philadelphia’s poorer swaths. According to the nonprofit North Broad Renaissance, the per capita income of residents in the area — which stretches from Spring Garden Street to Erie Avenue — is $14,366.

Blumenfeld is charging $1,600 to $1,700 a month for one-bedroom units measuring up to 785 square feet, and up to $3,200 for two-bedroom units on the penthouse floor. (He says he also is planning a handful of smaller, less expensive apartments in the annex.)

“The $1,700 to $1,800 range is really our magic price point,” Blumenfeld says.
Since Blumenfeld began developing along North Broad more than a decade ago, his other residential projects have found success. His Mural Lofts development in the old Thaddeus Stevens School is 97 percent leased, said Ed Casella, Blumenfeld’s regional property manager. Nearby, his Lofts 640 apartments are 95 percent full. Both charge an average $1,600 to $1,700 in rent.

The Divine Lorraine, however, has been slower to lease. In mid-September, nine months after the building opened to residents, about half of the units were still available. Blumenfeld says that’s because the building remains a construction site. Casella adds they have been “leasing in earnest” for only four to six months.

Until then, Blumenfeld is focused on what is ahead: He is getting married in the Divine Lorraine lobby later this year, and he’s itching to dive in to redeveloping the Metropolitan Opera House, located just blocks north of the Divine Lorraine. He purchased the building in 2012; concert company Live Nation recently signed on as its tenant.

“Isn’t this amazing?” Blumenfeld says, staring up at the opera house that afternoon as construction crews work inside. “This is the sort of condition that the Divine Lorraine lobby was in.”
http://www.philly.com/philly/busines...-20170928.html
     
     
  #8828  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 1:10 AM
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218 Arch - luxury apartments/retail - 10 floors

     
     
  #8829  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 1:43 AM
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Aramark HQ - 2400 Market - office/retail - 10 floors









     
     
  #8830  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 1:54 AM
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Fashion District Philadelphia - Gallery Mall Redevelopment - retail/commercial - 9th and Market to 11th and Market











     
     
  #8831  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 12:13 PM
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I hope they do something with the facade above the burlington store.
     
     
  #8832  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 2:13 PM
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I hope they do something with the facade above the burlington store.
They're going to at some point... especially if they build the residential building above this. If not, the facade will at least be cleaned up, and there will be more electronic signage.
     
     
  #8833  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 2:54 PM
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I hope they do something with the facade above the burlington store.
both the new and the old don't have much going for them. I was hoping for much better.
     
     
  #8834  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 3:30 PM
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The section facing Market on the old Kmart looks like it's 3-4 months away from completion (it looks about where the BCF looked to be at around June-ish).
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  #8835  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 3:41 PM
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2415 North Broad got its first tenants this week. I didn't take photos for you guys, but I did get to tour the facility with some Project HOME staff. They really knocked it out of the park on that building. It's great density for that area and really nicely built. The facilities are great too. They've got a little work to finish on the back in the garden but other than that it's done.
     
     
  #8836  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 4:59 PM
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1613 Germantown Avenue Apartment Project Gets Zoning Approval



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http://www.ocfrealty.com/naked-phill...oning-approval
     
     
  #8837  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 6:22 PM
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Originally Posted by summersm343 View Post
Fashion District Philadelphia - Gallery Mall Redevelopment - retail/commercial - 9th and Market to 11th and Market

I think it would have been better if they just removed the entire section above 9th Street all together. (on right)
     
     
  #8838  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 7:56 PM
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^well then you lose interior space and the pedestrian pathway on that level.
     
     
  #8839  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 10:38 PM
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1613 Germantown Avenue Apartment Project Gets Zoning Approval



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http://www.ocfrealty.com/naked-phill...oning-approval
Awesome! That entire stretch of Germantown Avenue should look radically different within the next 5-10 years, especially with development occurring north of Berks Street! I could have sworn that I saw a project breaking ground at 7th and Diamond not too long ago. The American Street redesign will only accelerate the change!

Also, I saw fencing and digging at the triangle bounded by 5th, Germantown, and Montgomery while I was out yesterday!
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  #8840  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2017, 11:20 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by summersm343 View Post
Fashion District Philadelphia - Gallery Mall Redevelopment - retail/commercial - 9th and Market to 11th and Market











The changes so far still makes this look dated. I hope that will change. I don't want to say a year from now the phrase, you can't shine shit.
     
     
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