West Philadelphia Corporation As part of the
Housing Act of 1949, Congress established the "Slum Clearance and Community Development and Redevelopment" program, commissioning federal funds to "assist local communities in eliminating their slums and blighted areas and in providing the maximum opportunity for the redevelopment of project areas by private enterprise." A few years prior, in 1945, the
Redevelopment Authority of the City of Philadelphia (RDA) was formed with the power to acquire and redevelop land through condemnation proceedings. This power to take land reached University City when The West Philadelphia Corporation (WPC) was formed in 1959 by a group of local institutions including Penn. A 1965 map shows the "units" identified for redevelopment.
Unit 3 Unit 3, the largest of the identified areas, spanned roughly from 34th to 40th streets and North of Chestnut to Lancaster and Powelton streets, Within four years, the
University City Science Center had been established and most of the buildings on Market St. between 34th St. and 40th St. had been demolished.
University City High School was opened in 1972, after years of planning by the WPC and the
School District of Philadelphia and conflict with the displaced community.
Unit 4 Much of what is now the center of Penn's campus, including Locust Walk and Superblock, was part of the redevelopment of Unit 4. The key purpose of creating these high-rises was to accommodate 3,500 more students at the university. The whole superblock project and especially the high-rise design were widely criticized, but this view is not held by everyone.
Other activity WPC also guided several other redevelopments that directly benefited Penn and Drexel. and grounds for a
World's fair have been scrapped, but a new plan called "
30th Street Station District" is in the works. The
Schuylkill Yards project is also in this area. A small part of this area was used to build the
Cira Centre, a 29-story, crystal-shaped office tower with distinctive LED lighting visible at night.
Civic Center complex Beginning in 1991, Penn publicly expressed official interest in acquiring the to the southeast of its campus occupied by the
Philadelphia Civic Center complex. After the opening of the
Pennsylvania Convention Center in 1992, the Civic Center was mostly unused. In 1998, a City Council resolution was put forth to turn over much of this property to Penn and
CHOP. The initial plans were not fully developed, but did not call for the demolition of Convention Hall, the location of several historic events. By 2005, plans had been expanded and the whole site, including Convention Hall, was slated for demolition to make way for a new clinical care facility attached to the hospital. Many local preservationists were opposed to this. Some were mollified by an exhaustive study commissioned by Penn to find alternate uses for the buildings and demolition continued. The last remaining building in the complex, Pennsylvania Hall, was demolished on March 3, 2007. Penn's
Perelman Center for Advanced Medicine was officially opened on October 2, 2008.
Postal lands In 2007, Penn bought between its campus and the Schuylkill river, an area formerly occupied by the
United States Postal Service known as the Postal Lands. (A 1994 map shows the area before the
GE building was refurbished into the Left Bank and the Cira Centre was built.) Penn repurposed the Postal Lands into a new high-rise office and residential complex,
Cira Centre South, and a public park with University athletic facilities, Penn Park. In addition, the
former post office building has been turned into office space for the
IRS. Penn Park opened in September 2011 as a new urban park that stretches from Walnut Street to South Street featuring a fabric of tightly interwoven recreational and athletic components. The project also includes underground cisterns that collect and repurpose rainwater. Cira Centre South was developed by
Brandywine Realty Trust and completed in 2016. Two new towers replaced a one-time truck annex for the Post Office and now include the headquarters for the FMC Corp., a parking garage with a green roof open to the public, an apartment building, and street-level retail. The 49-story FMC Tower in this complex is the tallest building in University City. ==University City District==