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Avenue of
the Arts Master Plan
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
As
part of its economic development strategy, the Avenue of the Arts, Inc.
and the Philadelphia Industrial Development Corporation launched a plan
in 1993 to expand its tourism and convention economy by consolidating
its broad base of performing arts organizations. A focal point of this
plan was an ‘Entertainment Loop’, integrating the city’s main historic,
retail, entertainment and cultural sites into an identifiable route. The
Loop included an Avenue of the Arts along the portion of South Broad Street
featuring a new performing arts center. The city commissioned a consulting
team to develop a programming, site analysis and master plan strategy
for the center. This plan was the first building block that led to the
development of Philadelphia’s Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts, opened
in 2001.
The
plan proposed a new 160,000 s.f. facility which would occupy one and a
half blocks of street frontage required a detailed analysis to determine
its feasibility within the site constraints. Because of its location among
prestigious neighbors such as the new Philadelphia Orchestra Hall, the
Academy of Music, the University of the Arts and Pierce College, the planning
carefully considered the Center’s appropriateness and its urban scale.
Among
the components of the Center was a 800-seat recital hall, 600-seat proscenium
stage drama theater, a 150 to 175-seat studio theater and multiple rehearsal
halls. The public spaces were envisioned as a series of interconnected
galleries to hold exhibits from the collections of the Center’s benefactors
and serve as a cultural window to the city.
Scott
C. Wilson, Principal-in-Charge and A. Scott Butler, Project Architect
while with Rothman Partners, Inc.
Project
Info
Cost:
Study
Complete:
1995
Scope:
Master Planning, Architecture
Client:
Philadelphia’s Economic Development Corporation
Staff:
Scott Wilson, AIA; Scott Butler, AIA
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arts
/ entertainment
master
planning
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