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Tag: market street

  • Parker says Market East plan is open to input. Residents, scarred by Sixers arena fight, aren’t buying it.

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    Mayor Cherelle Parker unveiled her vision to reverse the decadeslong decline of East Market Street on Friday, promising a process that will restore the corridor as Philadelphia’s economic and cultural anchor while accounting for the interests of people who live in the area.

    Some residents, who say they still are recovering from the trauma caused by the process of the 76ers’ abandoned plans to build a new arena on East Market, feel this new situation is all too familiar. 


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    After months of lobbying the city to build their $1.3 billion arena at 10th and Market streets, the Sixers abruptly withdrew the plan in favor of partnering with Comcast Spectacor, their current landlord at Xfinity Mobile Arena, to build an arena in South Philly. The joint venture includes commitments to invest in East Market Street.

    “After we all got over the shock and awe of what was not going to happen on Market East, I immediately shifted into my eternally optimistic view about how we are going to be able to move things forward,” Parker said during a press conference at Jefferson Health’s Honickman Center.

    The Market East Corridor Planning and Advisory Commission, led by Brandywine Realty Trust CEO Jerry Sweeney, will be tasked with creating a redevelopment plan that stretches from City Hall to the Delaware River. The planning process is expected to take about a year.

    “All of us have connections to Market East and a significant stake in remaking this corridor into a valuable asset for the city,” Sweeney said.

    Leaders from Comcast Spectacor, the 76ers and dozens of other institutions will now be responsible for planning construction, infrastructure upgrades and social services along a street that has had trouble keeping businesses in storefronts and has a large homeless population.

    Parker said she learned from how she handled the contentious arena planning process, which drew resistance from communities in Chinatown and Washington Square West. She pledged to take a different approach to city planning that listens to government, businesses and residents.

    “I don’t want anyone leaving here today saying that there is a plan that is baked, that is cooked, that is done, and (that) it is a plan that will be shoved down the throats of Philadelphians,” Parker said. “That is not what this is.”

    Demolition plans draw rebuke from critics

    Neighborhood advocates at Friday’s press conference said they have little faith that the city will follow through with its promises.

    “There’s not a clear accountability measure for making sure that the actual citizens of Philadelphia are heard in this process,” said Katie Garth, a member of the Neighborhood Alliance of Washington Square West.

    The Sixers and Comcast Spectacor already have plans to demolish several vacant buildings on the south side of Market Street, between Ninth and 10th streets, before the end of the year. The structures, which cover half the block, include the former Robinson department store and a former Reebok store.

    Market East DemoProvided Image/Arielle Harris

    The Philadelphia Department of Licenses & Inspections has a demolition notice posted for the buildings at 1020-1024 Market St., which Comcast Spectactor and the Philadelphia 76ers plan to knock down in the coming months to make way for a World Cup pop-up next summer. Opponents of the plan taped signs next to the notice on Friday morning.

    Comcast’s chief legal officer, Thomas Reid, said the empty space will be used for activities related to the World Cup when the international soccer tournament comes to the city in June. He gave no other details, but said Comcast already has invested $60 million in properties on Market Street and will be a “turbocharged engine” for redevelopment as the city prepares to celebrate the nation’s 250th anniversary next year.

    Beyond 2026, Comcast and the 76ers have not disclosed plans for the soon-to-be vacant lots.

    “We think that that’s going to further blight the neighborhood. It’s going to make the situation worse with no real guarantees that it will get better,” said Laney Myers, with the historic preservation group RePoint Philadelphia.

    The Design Advocacy Group, a volunteer organization of development and planning professionals in the city, published a letter last week calling the pending demolitions “impulsive.” They questioned why it took nearly a year for Parker to convene the advisory group and said the city should consider “strategic reuse” of the buildings slated to be torn down.

    Market Street DemolitionMarket Street DemolitionMichael Tanenbaum/PhillyVoice

    Comcast Spectacor and the 76ers plan to soon demolish several buildings along the 1000 block of Market Street as part of a long-term plan to revitalize the corridor.

    Neighborhood leaders in attendance Friday said the city’s push for demolition is a bad start that shows little has been learned from the arena planning process, despite Parker’s claim that plans on Market Street have not been finalized.

    “We are still suffering from PTSD over the arena debacle, and there’s a lot of deja vu happening right now,” Myers said.

    ‘All perspectives will have a full seat’

    As the Market East commission’s work gets underway, Parker said progress is already taking shape on East Market Street.

    She pointed to the ongoing streetscape improvements along Market Street in Old City and the Philadelphia Parking Authority’s plan to invest $13 million to renovate the former Greyhound bus terminal on Filbert Street. She also praised the Convention Center for investing nearly $1 million in new lighting along the corridor.

    City Councilmember Mark Squilla, whose 1st District covers East Market Street, said he will create an online portal where residents can share ideas about Market Street’s future.

    “That allows us to take input from everybody, especially the adjoining communities that will be impacted the most,” he said.

    Sweeney anticipates there will be competing ideas and conflicts in the months to come.

    “No doubt, through our public engagement process, many strong opinions will be expressed,” he said. “All perspectives will have a full seat at the table to present ideas, raise concerns, share their hopes and aspirations, and then we will collectively determine our short- and long-term path forward.”

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    Michael Tanenbaum

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  • Philadelphia job growth is strong post-pandemic, but office vacancy persists

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    Five years after the COVID-19 pandemic slowed job creation, Philadelphia is bouncing back. 

    The city has seen a 13.6% growth in employment between 2020 and 2024. That’s higher than the rates recorded in Chicago and Los Angeles, and the overall 11.7% average in the nation’s 25 largest counties. Between 2011 and 2023, Philadelphia also saw a 103% increase in college-educated professionals; about 36% of residents 25 and older have at least a bachelor’s degree, the highest percentage recorded in city history.


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    But, as a new report from Center City District details, that trajectory has not led to a corresponding upswing in office occupancy.

    According to the CCD, office jobs have had a bumpy post-pandemic ride. Employment growth in office sector industries like finance and real estate has averaged just 1% since 2020. In the second quarter of 2025, overall office vacancy in Center City was 20.4%. The number is roughly in line with vacancy rates in the central business districts of cities like Boston and Washington, D.C. It is also slightly better than the 20.8% office vacancy observed in Philadelphia’s suburbs. 

    Yet it has still sparked concern from the district, an organization whose mission is to enhance the vitality of Center City. CCD proposes several methods to entice businesses to sign office leases. like making Market Street more pedestrian-friendly, implementing tenant improvements to attract “desirable” shops and restaurants north of Chestnut Street and developing a “comprehensive urban design plan for the office district.” 

    CCD officials also suggest pursuing a Keystone Opportunity/Innovation Zone designation, which lifts most business taxes, for the section of Market Street between the Schuylkill and Delaware rivers. Sections of Bridesburg, Lawncrest and Southwest Philly, among others, currently receive KOZ incentives.

    “Philadelphia’s employment trajectory tells a story of both momentum and resilience,” Clint Randall, CCD vice president of economic development, said in a release. “Our city has fundamentally strengthened its position as a regional employment leader and talent magnet. The challenge for our downtown is that this job and talent growth has not materially improved the office market as that entire sector has struggled to find stability in recent years.”

    The city has seen the most consistent job growth in health care and social assistance. Following a -3.3% decline in 2020, this industry has gained steadily each year, hitting 6.3% in 2024. The trend is even more pronounced over a larger time period; health care and social assistance employment grew by 44% between 2009 and 2024. The industry accounts for 32% of the city’s jobs as of 2024.

    According to the CCD, other industries driving Philadelphia’s employment gains are accommodation and food services, arts and entertainment and “other services,” a category that includes repair and maintenance, civic associations and personal services. These sectors were the most impacted by the onset of COVID-19, but have since “largely rebounded,” per the report.


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    Kristin Hunt

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  • M. Night Shyamalan’s film ‘Trap’ is set in Philly, but it clearly wasn’t filmed here

    M. Night Shyamalan’s film ‘Trap’ is set in Philly, but it clearly wasn’t filmed here

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    Filmmaker and Philly-area native M. Night Shyamalan has stuck close to his roots throughout his career, though his new movie “Trap” has other locations dressed up as Philadelphia and its surrounding region.

    The film follows a father (Josh Hartnett) taking his young daughter to a concert for fictional pop star sensation Lady Raven (Saleka Shyamalan). The bulk of the movie takes place in Tanaka Arena in Philadelphia — but it’s clearly not one of the city’s venues.


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    Tanaka Arena has red and yellow signage similar to the Wells Fargo Center, but the exterior of the fictional stadium is actually the Rogers Centre in Toronto and the inside is FirstOntario Centre in Ontario.

    Trap Tanaka ArenaScreenshot/Warner Bros. Pictures; YouTube

    The exterior of the fictional Philly stadium Tanaka Arena is actually the Rogers Centre in Toronto.

    Where this arena would be located in Philly is ambiguous. Near the beginning of the film, Hartnett parks near an elevated highway, and as the camera follows them, a sign for the U.S. Route 1 Philadelphia and Trenton exit is visible at the top of the frame.

    There are also several shots depicting police vehicles driving through Market Street to the arena, and a police dispatcher at one point in the film mentions 9th and Market streets, where the Fashion District stands. Is Tanaka Arena an alternate, actualized version of the proposed 76ers arena?

    The several high-rise buildings surrounding the arena are not recognizable as any in Philly. One shot of police en route to the arena shows a nearby building with the words “CONVENTION CENTER” in generic font, with no resemblance to the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Center City.

    Trap Market StreetTrap Market StreetScreenshot/Warner Bros. Pictures; YouTube

    Philadelphia Police and SWAT vehicles drive through a fictionalized Market Street in the movie ‘Trap.’

    It isn’t the first time Shyamalan has inserted a fictional building in Philly for one of his movies. In his 2019 film “Glass,” the opening of a new fictional skyscraper called the Osaka Tower is a major plot point; the film inserts the tower into the Philly skyline using CGI.

    Spoilers for “Trap” follow.

    After the Lady Raven concert ends, the action of the film moves to the surrounding suburbs of Philly, where Hartnett’s character lives. He states that his address is on Monk Road, which in real life is located in Gladwyne.

    Bizarrely, police vehicles labeled “East Dublin Police” are seen in this area. There is an Upper Dublin Township in Montgomery County in real life, but Gladwyne is in the Lower Merion Township.

    Adding to the confusion, a news report retelling the events of the movie during the credits mentions the Main Line town of Malvern, which is in East Whiteland Township — this fictional “East Dublin” is apparently an amalgamation of different suburban areas.

    While “Trap” may have not been shot on location in Philadelphia like previous Shyamalan films, it is still clearly a Philly-set movie — one character even dresses in excessive Sixers apparel, if that doesn’t make it obvious enough.

    The film serves as a fun nod to Shyamalan’s hometown — even if the confusing geography might flummox Philly folks who care about the details.

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    Chris Compendio

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  • Teenage girl suspected in mass shooting in Denver arrested in San Bernardino County

    Teenage girl suspected in mass shooting in Denver arrested in San Bernardino County

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    A teenage girl accused of shooting five people outside a Denver club last month was arrested this week in San Bernardino County, according to authorities.

    The girl, whose age was not released by police, was arrested Thursday in Barstow, about 115 miles from Los Angeles, according to a Denver Police Department news release. She was arrested on eight counts of first-degree attempted homicide.

    She is accused of shooting five people on Sept. 16 in the 1900 block of Market Street, authorities said. All five people survived their injuries.

    Police said the girl had tried to get into a bar but was rejected by the club’s security personnel because they thought she wasn’t using her real ID. She left the line and then shot toward the club as she was leaving, authorities said.

    Police believe that she had tried to shoot toward security personnel and that those who were wounded were not the intended targets.

    The Denver Police Department worked with the FBI’s L.A. SWAT team, the FBI’s L.A. Desert Cities Safe Streets Task Force and the Barstow Police Department to apprehend her. Because she is a minor, her booking photo and arrest affidavit were not released.

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    Summer Lin

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