Slim tower to replace Chestnut St. Rainbow building

The 52 new dwellings rising at 1208 Chestnut St. in Center City come as the eastern portion of Center City densifies and redevelops.

Demolition permits have been filed for this building standing at 1208 Chestnut St. (Google Maps)

Demolition permits have been filed for this building standing at 1208 Chestnut St. (Google Maps)

This story originally appeared on PlanPhilly.

A residential tower is coming to the 1200 block of Chestnut Street, bringing 52 new dwellings to the Center City neighborhood.  The planned nine-story building will replace a vacant storefront last occupied by Rainbow Apparel, a discount clothing chain.

Construction permits issued by the city’s Department of Licenses & Inspections last week outlined plans by developer Michael Alhadad to demolish the three-story commercial building at 1208 Chestnut St. He purchased the property in 2017 for $2.7 million.

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Renderings depict a slim high-rise that stretches a full block, from Chestnut Street to a three-story bump out facing Sansom Street. Both towers will feature rooftop terraces.

Renderings depict a slim high-rise that stretches a full block, from Chestnut Street to a three-story bump out facing Sansom Street. Both towers will feature rooftop terraces with adjoining penthouse units.

Alhadad said he envisioned an anchor tenant eventually occupying a large, first-floor space.

“We are going to do commercial on the first floor, street to street,” he said, in a phone interview. “My plan is to do a higher ceiling in the commercial space — 18 to 20 feet high — so we can get a highly visible tenant to fit the downtown environment.”

The narrow property is zoned CMX-5 allowing for development above the proposed 112-foot tower, so the building can be constructed without any further approvals. The proposal calls for no on-site parking; instead, the developer plans to lease 18 spaces from a nearby garage.

Alhadad is moving ahead with the project at a time when interest in the area is growing. A boom — years in the making — has taken off, spurred in large part by the $557 million redevelopment of the Gallery. Over the past few years, three large projects encompassing nearly 900 apartment units have gone up on surrounding blocks. Residential development in the 19107 ZIP code has played a major role in Center City’s overall population growth, according to a recent report from Center City District.

The developer is best known for building student housing near Temple University and occasionally courting controversy with neighbors.

In 2017, he landed in the middle of a heated debate over the future of a community tennis center when he bought the Girard Avenue building. The developer had slated the facility for demolition in order to make way for a gas station, triggering outcry from neighbors. In another instance, a historical marker on a property owned by Alhadad went missing after his company sought a demolition permit.

The current Chestnut Street property features a distinctive terra cotta bay window that is the last visible remnant of the Hamilton and Diesinger Building. The elegant 20th-century tower caught fire in 1942, necessitating the removal of its top five floors.

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