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	<title>Cross Street Partners &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>Cross Street Partners &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>Penn Station is Once Again on the Verge of Rebirth. Will It Finally Succeed?</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/businessdevelopment/will-reborn-baltimore-penn-station-finally-succeed/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Aaron Hope]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Jan 2023 19:30:41 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Business & Development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Travel & Outdoors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Amtrak]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore Penn Station]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Beatty Development Group]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cross Street Partners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MARC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Penn Station]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Penn Station Partners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Penn Station renovation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Station North]]></category>
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A landmark is reborn in the birthplace of the American railroad.
</h4>

<h3 class="text-center">By Lydia Woolever</h3> 
<h5 class="text-center">Photography By Justin Tsucalas</h5>
 



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<p>
for Gamble Latrobe. When the new train station first opened its doors on
North Charles Street in Baltimore, the 45-year-old native son had
already spent a career climbing the ranks of the booming railroad
industry, rising from an entry-level engineer in 1884 to the local
head of the Pennsylvania Railroad—a position that made him the
man of the hour on this Thursday evening, September 14, 1911.
</p>

<p>
Railroading was in Latrobe’s blood—his grandfather, Benjamin
Jr., was chief engineer for the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad,
helping to lay the company’s first tracks—but landmarks were, too. Considered
one of the greatest architects in American history, his great-grandfather,
Benjamin Sr., designed the likes of the United States Capitol
and <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/baltimore-the-beautiful-historic-city-landmarks-architecture/">Baltimore Basilica</a>, while his father, Charles, a Baltimore City
engineer, can be credited for the Patterson Park Pagoda and the
original bridges that crossed the Jones Falls.
</p>
<p>
Along that same waterway, Gamble now stood, tall in stature,
with a thick mustache, in the halls of his own monument—a four-story
Beaux Arts train station, decorated with ornate granite and
marble finishes, that would carry out its first service tonight. For
years, Latrobe had been a loyal advocate for the station’s completion, and
now, when the wooden hands of the façade’s grand clock struck
8 p.m., it would become his official charge. “The building of the
new Union Station on Charles Street may be regarded, to a great
extent,” wrote <i>The Sun</i> at the time, “as a monument to him.”
</p>
<p>
Hours before the first train pulled in around 1 a.m.—a New York express
bound for Washington, D.C.—some 5,000 people flooded through the
oak doors of the arched entryways into what was then known as
Union Station, and not because they were all travelers. The last
station, built here in 1886, had been overcrowded, uncomfortable,
and, at times, downright dangerous, with passengers crossing active tracks
to reach their trains. Before that, the original structure, circa 1873,
was little more than a wooden shed. The new Union Station was state of the art, it promised change, and after decades of complaints and a year of
construction, residents were anxious to see inside.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Gamble Latrobe. <i>1916-1917 PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD YEAR BOOK,
RAILROAD MUSEUM OF PENNSYLVANIA, PHMC</i>
</h5>

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<p>
Latrobe led the crowd around the building,
showing off the new ladies’ parlor, men’s smoking
room, newsstand, lunch counter, dining room, telegraph
and telephone booths, and, of course, the colorful skylights
made of Tiffany stained glass, yielding expressions of awe and approval.
After all, this was finally the finery fit for a major
East Coast metropolis—not to mention the birthplace of
the American railroad.
</p>
<p>
“There is not a better railroad station in Philadelphia,
in New York, or in the country than this,” touted Latrobe to
the press that evening, “and it all belongs to Baltimore.”
</p>

<p>
But much like Latrobe’s legacy, this sense of wonderment
would soon fade. The public quickly resumed its grumblings about what we now know as Penn Station. It
was still too small, too smokey, too far from downtown.
Even that opening night had minimal fanfare—no bright
lights, no ribbon cuttings, its four American flags already
blackened by locomotive smoke.
</p>
<p>
And so it would go for the city and its station, with
ups and downs not just in the immediate months and years that followed, but
to this day—a century after Latrobe’s death (due in part to
“hard work,” per his obituary).
</p>
<p>
If only he could see it now: his station once again on
the verge of rebirth, this time with an even more ambitious
vision—of not only improving travel in and out of Baltimore,
but connecting the entire city.
</p>
<p>
Though the question
remains: After generations of such promises, will it finally succeed?
</p>
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Trains, buses, trolleys, and Model Ts at the station, circa 1926. <i>COURTESY OF THE MARYLAND CENTER FOR HISTORY AND CULTURE, Z24.1086;</i> 
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A rendering
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sits in a room on the
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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter clan">I</span>
t’s clearly in need of some work,” says Chris
Seiler, marketing director of <a href="https://beatty.co/">Beatty Development
Group</a>, walking through the upper
floors of Penn Station this past November.
</p><p>Around him, layers of paint flake away
from the walls, fading carpet peels back from the floor,
rusted radiators lean lifeless in the hallway, and signs
taped across scuffed doors read “temporarily out of order.”
These rooms were once offices for railroad employees
like Latrobe, but today, most travelers don’t know they exist, having sat vacant for decades.
</p>
<p>
Soon enough, though, they could be full of life
again, or so hopes Seiler and the rest of <a href="https://baltimorepennstation.com/">Penn Station
Partners</a>, a master developer collaborative formed
in 2017 between Beatty and fellow local real-estate
heavyweight <a href="https://www.crossstpartners.com/">Cross Street Partners</a>, who together will
oversee the $150-million redevelopment of Amtrak’s
eighth busiest train station. Before COVID, its Northeast
Regional, high-speed Acela Express, and state-owned
MARC commuter trains served more than one million
passengers a year—a number that everyone is banking on
them returning to, and then surpassing, in the years ahead.
</p>
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<p>
In October 2021, a groundbreaking ceremony hosted
local leaders holding shovels and donning hard hats.
Behind them, a banner foretold of the historic station’s
vibrant facelift. More impressive still, it showed that the drab parking lot across the tracks on Lanvale Street would soon
be home to an ultramodern expansion—a glowing
juxtaposition to the august yet austere flagship,
which together could become the crux of a long-awaited
renaissance, starting in its Station North neighborhood.
</p>
<p>
“This will transform Baltimore,” said Mayor
Brandon Scott that afternoon. “It will change the
lives of [Baltimoreans] for generations to come.”</p>
<p> For those of a certain age, it was déjà vu, having already
seen at least two grand plans for such a revitalized transportation hub at this
same location in recent history, both also hailed as the city’s great
savior—ones that could heal broken infrastructure and bond fractured
communities—only to watch them die on the vine instead.
</p>
<p>
Still, none have come this close.</p>
<p>“These projects move at a glacial
pace,” says Seiler, staring up at the central skylight, trimmed in
shades of blue and green. “But finally, we’re off to the races.”
</p>
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Station North before highways, circa 1940.  <i>BALTIMORE CITY ARCHIVES</i>
</h5>

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<p>
It’s no small feat, breathing life back into this 112-year-old landmark,
its worn marble staircase and weathered wooden benches
grooved with Maryland history. But scaffolding went up last February,
and by fall, construction workers were busy bringing the
building’s façade back to its original glory. Stone is being scrubbed.
Masonry is being repointed. Windows are being repaired and the
roof is being replaced.
</p>
<p>
For a while there, the old clock stopped ticking, but now it tells
time again, looking out over Mid-Town Belvedere, Mount Vernon,
and onwards south, toward Baltimore’s harbor, where the railroads
once reigned.
</p>
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A miscellany of interior details before renovations begin inside the station.
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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter clan">I</span>
n many ways, it’s ironic that it has taken so long for Penn Station to get
the love that it deserves. After all, this is the place where, just
two miles southwest, the American railroad was born
almost two centuries ago.</p>
<p>At the time, Baltimore was
the second largest city in America, and while its inland
port positioned it as an economic powerhouse, there was no
major westward river, which other East Coast cities were using to
build canals that would open new markets for trade.</p> 
<p>But in 1826, a group of
locally owned businessmen found the solution in a nascent technology being
trialed across the pond in England. They pooled their money, and
the next year, the state of Maryland chartered the Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad—the first commercial railroad in all the United States.
</p>
<p>
“It was huge fanfare,” says Jonathan Goldman, curator at the
<a href="https://www.borail.org/">B&O Railroad Museum</a>, located in the company’s
original Mount Clare Station on West Pratt Street in Pigtown.
“After he set the first stone,
Charles Carroll, an early investor and
the last living signer of the Declaration
of Independence, led a parade
across Baltimore. Everyone went. There was music. It
was a big to-do.”
</p>

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The second station,
built in 1886. <i> COURTESY OF THE MARYLAND CENTER FOR HISTORY AND CULTURE, PP107.75</i>
</h5>

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<p>
A mix of iron and granite laid by Irish immigrants, the first tracks opened in 1830, carrying the first passengers to the first train station in what is now Ellicott City, and before long, they unfurled west, toward the Appalachian
Mountains, and east, to the Baltimore harbor’s bustling docks,
where industries rose up to meet them. In no time, new companies
caught on and started sprawling across the city—and country—too.
</p><p>“You can still see the tracks going through the streets in some places,” says Goldman. “It was the internet of the 1800s. Immediately
everyone saw how fast it went, how predictable it was. They abandoned
the canals and switched to railroads. And Baltimore was the
epicenter of this new technology, for a while.”
</p>
<p>
The end of the Civil War ushered in an explosion of growth, as
well as a ruthless age of industry rivalry, with B&O competitors
including the Northern Central Railway, the Baltimore & Potomac
Railroad, and its greatest adversary, Latrobe’s Pennsylvania Railroad,
which bought up those other companies, and with them, vital economic
passageways.</p>
<p> “Think of it like Google and Apple,” says
Goldman. “They were big money. They were technology. They were
infrastructure. They were commerce. They were travel. For all of human history, the speed limit was how fast a horse goes,
which is eight miles an hour. The first locomotive was 13. A hundred
years later, they’re more than 100. Just imagine how the world
shrank. Lincoln sent troops to Gettysburg by rail instead of marching
them from Washington. Electronic communication got developed for trains.
Time got standardized for trains. It was transformational.”
</p>
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<p>
It was during this time that the first Union Station was built in Baltimore
in 1873, located below street level, just north of the flowing Jones
Falls and south of the North Avenue city limits. The board-and-batten
structure didn’t last long, replaced in 1886 by a more formal
station, named, as in Washington and Chicago, in hopes of
becoming a junction for both northern and southern railroads.
</p>
<p>
But even at a cost of $1 million, the new brick building was still
a far cry from a modern amenity, with passengers infamously injured
or killed along its tracks. It was the turn of the 20th
century, and Baltimore had grown impatient for a dignified station
befitting its booming city, ultimately feeling left behind by the
railroad.</p>
<p> “It is probable that no city in the United States of the size
of Baltimore . . . is so poorly provided with railroad terminals as is
this city,” wrote a <i>Sun</i> editorial in 1907. “The company has been
promising a new station . . . but the fulfillment of that promise is
apparently as far away now as it was years ago.”
</p>
<p>
That is until 1910, when, under the direction of Latrobe, the old
Union Station was demolished, and construction began on a grand
new gateway for Baltimore’s future.
</p>

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The cast-iron canopy; travelers linger in the marbled lobby.
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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter clan">S</span>
ome have called Penn Station an acropolis.
Flanked by bridges on St. Paul Street to the
east and North Charles Street to the west,
the 112-year-old train terminal sits at a
45-degree angle on a hillside above the
rocky banks of the Jones Falls, as if watching
over Charm City.
</p>
<p>
Time has kissed its steel-framed façade, designed
by New York architect Kenneth Murchison
and built by the local J. Henry Miller Construction
Company, but the building remains
a classic beauty, full of European flair and rich
details, from its soaring Roman columns, gilded
windows, and ornamental roof lines to its
intricate cast-iron canopy scalloped in emerald-green
glass.</p>
<p>“It was very much meant to be a
civic monument,” says James Smith of <a href="https://www.quinnevans.com/">Quinn
Evans</a>, the renovation project’s associate architectural firm. “Penn
Station has had a rough life, many parts have been patched,
repaired, and replaced over the years, but it remarkably
retains its character.”
</p>
<p>
Inside, terrazzo floors lead travelers into a lobby
wrapped in Sicilian marble and dappled by that iconic trio of domed skylights framed with whimsical sconces. Past
fluted columns into the main concourse, cream and olive
Rookwood tiles line the walls, amidst brass fixtures
and elegant benches that curve with the shape of the
room above the platforms below.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
The Charles Street
bridge, circa 1911. <i><a href="https://collections.digitalmaryland.org/digital/collection/mdaa/id/251/rec/14">MARYLAND DEPARTMENT, PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION: L418</a></i>
</h5>

</div>
<p>
Against this backdrop, it’s hard to say whether the
public’s grievances, aired after that 1911 opening,
were valid or out of spite. It didn’t help that
an even grander Pennsylvania Station had just
opened in New York City, hailed as an architectural
wonder with seamless service, and
soon, ideas for Baltimore improvements were
bandied about—relocating near City Hall, adding
a rooftop airport, creating a superstation
with the B&O.</p>
<p>“That such a vast Union Station
is needed is, of course, sheer nonsense,” wrote
H.L. Mencken in a 1928 <i>Evening Sun</i>.” “I can
recall only three or four occasions when it was
uncomfortably crowded—and then it was crowded, not
by passengers, but by idlers horning in to gape at [Calvin]
Coolidge, or Jack Dempsey, or the Prince of Wales,
or some other such magnifico.”
For a while, it remained as it was.
</p>
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The north side of Penn Station, overlooking the tracK.
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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter clan">N</span>
ot train travel though, which continued its golden
age through the first half of the 20th
century. It was a period of peak innovation,
with diesel locomotives and electrified
tracks introduced in the 1930s, and
fast, fancy Pullman cars offering the latest and greatest
luxuries, from air-conditioning to dining cars dripping
in oysters and martinis. World War II provided another
boost, as 98 percent of servicemen and women were
deployed by rail, including many out of Baltimore. A
temporary USO lounge took over the east side of what
had since been renamed “Pennsylvania Station,” while
blackout paint, applied to the lobby skylights to fend
off enemy war planes, stayed in place until the 1980s. 
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">The station’s old Savarin restaurant.<i>Courtesy of Baltimore Museum of Industry Archives</i>
</h5>

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<p>
But by the 1950s, the rise of automobiles and the advent of airlines would precipitate the crash of private railroad
companies. The B&O had already been sold, and in 1968, the
Pennsylvania Railroad merged with the New York Central, only to
give up the ghost two years later via bankruptcy—then the largest of its kind in U.S. history. It was the end of
an era, and also the beginning of a new one.
</p>

<p>
“That’s when it all comes to a head,” says Johnette Davies, historic
preservation manager for Amtrak. “Then you’ve got the inception
of Conrail, and the creation of Amtrak.”
</p>
<p>
With an act of Congress in 1970, Amtrak was born as a bailout
for American train travel. Inheriting much of the once-private
track between Washington and Boston, the country’s government-owned
railroad company also took over stations located along what would
become its Northeast Corridor, including Baltimore’s Penn.
</p>
<p>
At this point, Latrobe’s pride and joy had fallen into true disrepair,
with dated cars used for deteriorated service along graffitied
tracks, and minimal maintenance done inside. Penn Station was seen as a
reflection of its surrounding neighborhood, which was riddled with blight. The Jones Falls now trickled out of view, buried beneath the
new I-83 Expressway.
</p>

<p>
In one of his earliest urban revitalization efforts, Mayor William
Donald Schaefer did his best to spruce up the joint—from a deep
clean to fresh landscaping—and promoted the then-novel concept
of transforming the station into a “multi-modal” transportation
hub, which, post-oil embargo, would create a one-stop shop for all
forms of transit, improve travel around Baltimore, and serve as a
waypoint for other cities, even possibly luring residents from D.C.
</p>
<p>
Little came of it, whether for lack of funding or loss of interest.
But by the 1980s, the state’s MARC commuter railway did begin
service along the Amtrak tracks, and in 1997, the Light Rail, linked
to the BWI Airport, eventually joined them at Penn Station. Today,
five bus lines, plus the Charm City Circulator, now stop a stone’s
throw away on Charles Street, but the subway never made it, nor
did an axed Greyhound terminal.
</p>
<p>
If Schaefer’s vision were to become a reality, wrote <i>The Sun</i>
in 1975, it “will give Penn Station a second lease on life. It will
become once again a functional asset to the life of Baltimore.”
</p>
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The plaza’s Male/Female statue; passengers board a MARC train on the evening commute.
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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter clan">B</span>
ill Struever doesn’t remember the first time he visited
Penn Station, but when he moved to Baltimore
in 1974, the budding developer knew that this
“most civilized way to travel” was an indisputable
asset for his newfound city.
</p>
<div class="picWrap2">
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/JAN_PENN-STATION_beatty-struever.jpg"/>

<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Michael Beatty and Bill Struever of
the Penn Station Partners development team.
</h5>

</div>
<p>
In the decades since, <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/businessdevelopment/bill-struever-revives-baltimore-city-renovation-harbor-neighborhoods-maryland-charm-city/">Struever</a>, now 70, has invested heavily
along the railroad’s tracks through East Baltimore, from repurposing several
19th-century structures with his Cross Street Partners development
firm to helping his nonprofit American Communities Trust
spearhead the <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/last-mile-park-illuminates-east-baltimore-light-art-amtrak-underpasses/">Last Mile Park</a> project, which will use art to illuminate
the dark underpasses along the final northern stretch leading
up to Penn Station. It only makes sense, then, that he would set his
sights on the landmark itself.
</p>
<p>
“It’s been a long time coming,” says Struever, who came onboard
the redevelopment project in 2017, five years after Amtrak
first tapped Beatty to conceive a plan for the aging train station,
“but good things take time.”
</p>
<p>
Working with a site on the National Register of Historic Places,
the developers must follow strict state and federal preservation
standards for every inch of the original “headhouse,” where exterior
work, including dramatic new lighting, should be done by fall. A
rejuvenated plaza is also being envisioned for reduced car traffic with
pedestrian walkways, bike and scooter parking, and designated
bus zones. The fate of its polarizing <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/male-female-statue-should-it-stay-or-go-in-penn-station-overhaul/">Male/Female statue</a>, once described by <i>City Paper</i> as “Baltimore’s kinkiest artwork,” remains to
be seen; the final call will be up to city government.
</p>
<div class="picWrap">
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/JAN_PENN-STATION_Its-been-a-long-time.png"/>
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<p>
Come spring, they’ll move indoors, where any remnants from
the last major renovation, circa 1984, will be removed, and all other
historic details will be meticulously refurbished. Currently home
to a newsstand, Dunkin’ Donuts, and the Java Moon Café, the east
and west wings will be reimagined for new restaurants and retail,
with priority placed on local businesses. The upstairs will be gutted
for future office space.
</p>
<p>
Eventually, the north wall will be blown out and the construction
of a bridge across the tracks to the Lanvale Street parking
lot will lead to a new concourse for Amtrak. With an airy, luminous
design by the Gensler global architectural firm, it will also
include access to a brand-new Acela platform and, one day, a
skyscraping complex for potential commercial and residential
use, encouraging visits for more than just catching trains. In fact, the developers hope you’ll stay awhile, with a glassy south wall overlooking the old station and the tracks below showcasing “train as theater,” says Gensler design director Peter Stubb, as well as a “window to history.”
</p>

<p>
“Everything is going to be right here,” says Struever,
crediting the project’s rollout in part to the city’s <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/up-hill-climb/">late Congressman
Elijah Cummings</a>, whose public persistence
undoubtedly inspired Amtrak’s $150-million investment.
The total bill could cost at least $400 million, to be covered by
a mix of sources—federal, state, or private dollars, grants,
tax credits, Opportunity Zone funding—with an optimistic
completion date of 2025.
</p>
<p>
It coincides with a nationwide effort to reinvigorate
America’s flailing rail system, which narrowly avoided
a freight strike before Christmas, and whose passenger service is still recovering from COVID. With a significant lift from the 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, passed
by lifelong locomotive-lover President Joe Biden, Amtrak’s
$75-billion overhaul will include an all-new Acela fleet,
upgraded Northeast Corridor infrastructure, and, eventually,
the $4-billion replacement of the 150-year-old
B&P Tunnel in West Baltimore—an infamous bottleneck
to be renamed for Maryland abolitionist
Frederick Douglass, who escaped slavery by train via
the harbor’s old President Street Station. The company hopes
to double ridership by 2040. MARC is likely to
benefit, too.
</p>
<p>
But the country’s transit woes are not limited
to train travel.</p> 
<p>“A mess,” “a disaster,” “on
the verge of collapse.” This is the reputation of
public transportation in the United States, with transit long passed over in favor of roads that
only induce more traffic. And yet studies show
that every dollar invested into such infrastructure yields a $4 economic
return to local communities, while also providing increased access to
jobs, goods, and services for its residents, plus significant reductions in
greenhouse-gas emissions in a time of climate change.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
A rendering of the
station expansion. <i>COURTESY OF GENSLER</i>
</h5>

</div>
<p>
Meanwhile, a neighborhood’s service shortcomings correlate with
lower incomes and higher rates of unemployment, and
in Baltimore, where most riders are people of color and
commute times rival gridlocked Los Angeles, a disjointed
transit system—including an isolated subway and slow-to-grow
bike lanes—continues to perpetuate inequalities.
</p>
<p>
Like Schaefer a half-century before him, Struever sees Penn
Station as a multi-modal transportation hub that could uplift his
struggling city, especially if his and Beatty’s efforts are combined
with a stop on the new north-south, city-county transit corridors
being studied by the Maryland Transit Administration, or
the prospective east-west MARC extension to the Johns Hopkins
Bayview Medical Center in East Baltimore.
</p>
<p>
“You can talk all you want about Maglev—the Northeast Corridor
is <I>happening</I>,” says Struever, referring to the <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/businessdevelopment/proposed-300-mile-per-hour-maglev-train-baltimores-future-or-fantasy-public-transport-technology/">futuristic magnetic-levitation trains</a> that would move passengers between Baltimore
and D.C. in 15 minutes. “We have the most transit-friendly administration
in history in Washington right now, and you bring transit
up to [Governor] Wes Moore and he starts bubbling with ideas, and then you have Amtrak well along the way. Shame on us if we don’t use Penn Station as a launchpad.”
</p>
<p>
And part of its promise lies in its very location.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
The station’s
circa-1911 clock;
scaffolding awaits
a grand reveal.
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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter clan">I</span>
t wasn’t that long ago that the area now known as Station
North was considered the end of the earth for
Baltimoreans. In the early 1800s, the city’s northern
edge along “Boundary Avenue,” aka North, was little more than a collection
of country estates. With time, it evolved into
an axis of education, industry, and culture, and as the city
stretched northward, it left behind landmarks like the circa-1917
Parkway Theatre to live on as tethers from past to present.
</p>

<p>
Today, the Charles North, Greenmount West, and Barclay
neighborhoods that make up Station North are once again in a
state of transition, with change then and now coming in fits and starts,
and for decades its reputation swinging between “rough-around-the-edges” and “up-and-coming.”</p> 
<p>Now located in the geographic
heart of Baltimore and designated the city’s first Arts & Entertainment
District since 2002, it’s a creative crossroads where an eclectic
mix of veteran businesses like Tapas Teatro and Club Charles
mingle with newcomers like the Le Comptoir du Vin bistro, The
Royal Blue bar—named for a beloved B&O passenger train—and
The Parlor pop-up arts space in a former funeral home, with its
namesake station always looming large in the distance.
</p>

<p>
“For as long as I can remember, there’s been talk of this grand
Penn Station redevelopment, and then it just doesn’t happen,”
says Kathleen Lyon, second-generation owner of The Charles Theatre.
“The neighborhood is holding its breath but feeling good.
There’s this on-the-cusp feeling—of hope and optimism for new
beginnings. What do they say? From the rubble, things rise.”
</p>

<p>
Still, Station North has a 42-percent commercial vacancy rate,
hamstrung by retail turnover and speculative landlords waiting
on urban renewal of neglected blocks to yield higher prices. The
focus now is on filling in the gaps, which would be a boon to business
owners like Lyon, who already benefits from the station’s
commuters. For starters, six unused Amtrak-owned properties are
currently slated for redevelopment along the tracks.
</p>
<p>
“Say whatever you want—density brings people, and density brings economic opportunity, and that’s a good thing,” says Jack
Danna, director of commercial revitalization for the nonprofit
<a href="https://www.centralbaltimore.org/">Central Baltimore Partnership</a>. “There’s great potential in creating
something that brings these communities together.”
</p>
<p>
Which they have not been, for a long time, and by all accounts,
Penn Station, trapped in a snarl of busy thoroughfares,
is the island between them. To the north, the 1.5-acre parking
lot on Lanvale Street serves as a barrier to its umbrella neighborhood.
To the south, I-83 barricades Mid-Town Belvedere, Mt.
Vernon, Bolton Hill, and Johnson Square—though proposed improvements
to the Oliver Street promenade aim to better connect
the station’s plaza to MICA and its Mt. Royal Light Rail station.
</p>
<div class="picWrap">
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<p>
“We’ve been a city of two cities for my 49 years here,” says
Struever, lamenting the loss of the Red Line rail project between
East and West Baltimore, which secured $900 million
in federal funding before being unceremoniously slashed by
Governor Larry Hogan. “This is the ultimate opportunity to bring our
city together. It is truly the one place where Black Baltimore,
white Baltimore, city, suburbs, rich, poor, north, south, east,
west all meet.”
</p>
<p>
But attempts at weaving together disparate parts of the city
have been known to tie Gordian knots. Revitalization often
means gentrification, which often means displacement of those
low-income residents who benefit most from enhanced transit.
Equitable development of Penn Station could look like commitments
to small-business tenants, living-wage job opportunities,
and solutions for the surrounding food deserts, says Lauren Kelly-Washington, president emeritus of the <a href="http://www.greenmountwest.org/">Greenmount West Community
Association</a>, who’s been involved in the project’s community
outreach, with a third public meeting expected this spring.
</p>
<p>
“You have a double-edged sword—if you own a home and
want to pass on that generational wealth, an increase in value
is not necessarily a bad thing, but as rents go up, that changes
who can live here, and how will subsidized housing be affected?”
says Kelly-Washington. “There’s concern, of course, about
gentrification, but people are ready. The area deserves this
level of investment. This <i>is</i> the center of Baltimore. And Baltimore
needs to pay attention to its center in order to be a
shining beacon of the East Coast.”
</p>
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Video of a train arriving today. <i>Video by Justin Tsucalas</i>
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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter clan">A</span>
rika Davenport grew up near Penn Station,
living just up the street on Guilford and Lorraine
avenues in Charles Village. In the
summertime, her grandfather, a firefighter
with Engine Company No. 52, would take
her on the newly formed Amtrak line to see the sights in
New York City.</p> 
<p>“I was always fascinated by trains,”
says Davenport. “I have a cousin who is a conductor, an uncle who
was an electrician, an aunt who worked in payroll—and
all they talked about was working the railroad.”
</p>
<p>
After a career as a court clerk, she applied for an Amtrak job in 1999, coming
onboard the first-class car of the Northeast Regional’s
then-new Acela trains—at the time a 16-hour, 43-minute
roundtrip between D.C. and Boston.</p>
<p>“I worked it
every other day,” says Davenport. “Railroading taught me
a lot about myself as a young woman. I enjoyed
interacting with people and I would sometimes
sing ‘New York, New York’ to the passengers. After
9/11, it became part of my routine.”
</p>
<p>
Now, at 55, Davenport works in customer service,
navigating the evening rush hour in Baltimore five days a
week. Dressed in a tailored blazer and white blouse with silver earrings, she breaks out in a playful smile when sharing that she’s referred to as “the C.E.O.” by commuters and colleagues.</p>
<p>“It’s not just selling tickets—we’re mothers
and sisters, we’re therapists,” she says, having
helped travelers with dementia and always on watch for
human trafficking. “I treat everyone like they’re at my
house. You want them to come back again.”
</p>
<p>
Throughout renovations, Penn Station will do its best
to run business as usual, with dozens of trains rolling in and out morning and
night. Baltimore is no longer the tangle of tracks it once was, but after
a lifetime of false starts, the city might finally get the
station that it has dreamed about, one way or another, for over
a century—the last of its local kind.</p> <p>Only time will tell what that will mean for the future.
</p>
<p>
“I’ve been all over this station, and whichever way
you look at it, there’s a lot of history,” says Davenport.
“I’m always in awe when I stop and think about all of
the people who’ve passed through here.”
</p>

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Arika
Davenport greets
passengers at
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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/businessdevelopment/will-reborn-baltimore-penn-station-finally-succeed/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Penn Station Renovation Secures Crucial Funding From State Tax Credit</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/penn-station-renovation-secures-crucial-funding-from-state-tax-credit/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Evan Greenberg]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Jan 2020 12:54:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Business & Development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Amtrak]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Beatty Development Group]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cross Street Partners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Head House]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Penn Station]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=71329</guid>

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			<p><em>[</em><strong><em>Update 2/5/20: This story has been updated to indicate that further funding has been secured]</em></strong></p>
<p>The redevelopment of Penn Station is a project with a lot of moving parts. Talk of what could happen to enhance the historic building has often been done in the abstract while stakeholders waited to see if proper funding could be secured. But with the recent awarding of a crucial $3 million historic state tax credit, things are finally starting to take shape. </p>
<p>“People have been talking about this for a while,” says Cross Street Partners vice president John Renner, who is working with Beatty Development Group and Amtrak to renovate the station’s Head House—the century-old building whose design has <a href="https://www.greatamericanstations.com/stations/baltimore-penn-station-md-bal/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">American Renaissance roots</a>. “It takes work to earn legitimacy. This credit is the linchpin in a way of the project moving forward.”</p>
<p>The Head House renovation is a $70 million dollar endeavor, of which $53 million has now been raised with $50 million funded by Amtrak. The remaining $17 million will be broken up among another expected $3.5 million historic tax credit, and funding from banks or private investors.</p>
<p>The historic tax credit is a designation given by Governor Larry Hogan, with the purpose to strengthen economies within Maryland and create new jobs and opportunities for growth. Penn Station was <a href="https://governor.maryland.gov/2019/11/25/governor-hogan-announces-more-than-9-million-in-tax-credits-to-revitalize-historic-buildings/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">one of eight recipients</a> of the credit, among other buildings including the Strawbridge United Methodist Church in New Windsor and Glenn L. Martin Plant No. 2 in Middle River. </p>
<p>“The award of these historic tax credits is an important step toward revitalizing Baltimore Penn Station,” says Brian Taylor, the Amtrak program manager for the Baltimore Penn Station Master Developer Partnership, an umbrella group consisting of Amtrak, Beatty, and Cross Street. “Our shared vision for the future of the station is to promote the development of a vibrant, mixed-use, transit-oriented development with Penn Station at its core.”</p>
<p>Back in August, a <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/businessdevelopment/plans-to-transform-penn-station-into-station-north-hub-continue-forward" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">preliminary meeting</a> was held to educate the public on the grand vision for the station and the area surrounding it. Community activation, increasing residential office space, and making the streetscape more inviting were at the forefront of these talks. What’s most important now, though, is that the redevelopment team has enough money to continue its search for occupants to fill the spaces they’re creating.</p>
<p>“We want retail offerings that are conducive to the neighborhood,” says Tim Pula, Beatty’s vice president of community development. “Penn Station should be a place where people come not just because they’re there to take a train. We really want to try and find local and regional businesses—that adds to its character and uniqueness.”</p>
<p>At the moment, efforts to restore and preserve the building that Taylor calls “an important historic asset of the city,” are well underway. With this tax credit, developers can now scout prospective tenants having secured the most difficult part of their funding.</p>
<p>“Within the constraints that the Head House is an existing building and a historic landmark, we’ll customize the space to the needs and aspirations of our tenants,” Renner says. “The hope is that the state tax credit award makes the project seem more credible.”</p>
<p>The Head House initiative is a portion of a much larger overhaul, estimated at $400-600 million, of the Penn Station complex. This includes the renovation and installation of new Acela train platforms funded by Amtrak—which will double the current amount of the famously fast trains—further preserving the space, and creating mixed-use opportunities in the space surrounding the Head House.</p>
<p>“Something that’s frustrated me about Baltimore is that you have these great pockets, but they don’t blend together seamlessly,” Renner says. “I see Penn Station as a connector.”</p>
<p>And now, the vision is moving full steam ahead. The team recently announced equity funding from Blueprint Local, which invests in entrepreneurs and real estate opportunities in economically distressed areas across the country. </p>
<p>It is Blueprint Local&#8217;s first investment in Baltimore under its Opportunity Zone Platform, which addresses designated Opportunity Zones around the country that prioritize private investment over public funding in jumpstarting a given area. Blueprint Local&#8217;s contribution will help developers proceed with the Penn Station redevelopment plan. More progress updates on rejuvenation efforts are expected throughout 2020, and the team will hold another in a series of public meetings about the project in the coming months.</p>
<p>“We want people to know this is really happening,” Pula says. “This is a very valuable and historic building that is deserving of being rehabilitated. Penn Station is a front door to Baltimore.”</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/penn-station-renovation-secures-crucial-funding-from-state-tax-credit/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Hoen &#038; Co. Lithograph Building Launches New Farmers’ Market This Weekend</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/hoen-co-lithograph-building-launches-new-farmers-market-this-weekend/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Lauren Cohen]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Aug 2016 12:21:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A Hoen & Co. Lithograph Building]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cross Street Partners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gather Baltimore]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Tha Flower Factory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban farming]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[To learn more about urban farming, pick up a copy of our August issue, on newsstands now.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p "="">Having spearheaded the revitalization of old industrial properties like Canton’s Can Company and Woodberry’s Clipper Mill, <a target="_blank" href="http://www.crossstpartners.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer">Cross Street Partners</a> co-founder William Struever knows a thing or two about bringing life to local landmarks.
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<p>Fittingly, the real-estate mogul has taken over the centuries-old <a target="_blank" href="http://hoen.co/" rel="noopener noreferrer">A. Hoen &#038; Co. Lithograph Building</a>—best known for printing some of the earliest National Geographic maps—in East Baltimore and plans to transform the site into a mixed-use development offering production facilities, office space, and a café.
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<p>Though construction won’t begin until the first quarter of 2017, Cross Street Partners is kick starting its efforts by launching a new community initiative this weekend.
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<p><a target="_blank" href="https://www.facebook.com/events/272319916484821/" rel="noopener noreferrer">The Hoen &#038; Co. Farmers’ Market</a>, a project aimed toward restoring food access in the Collington Square neighborhood, will debut on Sunday, August 14 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. in the parking lot of the old lithograph building on the 2100 block of East Biddle Street.
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<p>“We have this large space at our disposal, so we wanted to find a way to activate what has been a vacant building for 35 years,” says Adam Rhoades-Brown, Cross Street Partners’ development project manager for Hoen &#038; Co. “Having something that is ultra-local and walkable for the people who live in the neighborhood is really important.”
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<p>This weekend’s launch will highlight unique arrangements from urban agriculture champion Walker Marsh of <a target="_blank" href="http://thaflowerfactory.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer">Tha Flower Factory</a>, eats from new <a target="_blank" href="http://r.housebaltimore.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer">R. House</a> tenant <a target="_blank" href="https://www.facebook.com/stall11baltimore/?fref=ts" rel="noopener noreferrer">Stall 11</a> (think steamed buns filled with bean curd, teriyaki mushrooms, or miso caramel and toasted coconut), and an array of local fruits and vegetables from <a target="_blank" href="https://www.facebook.com/GatherBaltimore/?fref=ts" rel="noopener noreferrer">Gather Baltimore</a>—a Hamilton-based food justice organization that collects surplus produce and distributes it to under-served residents.
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<p>“It’s nuts how much food is always leftover from farms and farmers’ markets,” says Gather Baltimore founder Arthur Morgan. “We still have a lot of work ahead of us, but there are a lot of good people in Baltimore doing big things for those who don’t have access to it.”
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<p>At the farmers’ market, Gather Baltimore’s produce will be sold in five-pound grab bags for $1 or mix-and-match bags at 50 cents per pound.
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<p>Rhoades-Brown says that, because all of the vendors are social-impact driven, it helps the market to serve its greater purpose.
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<p>“It’s all a part of the broader vision that we have for Hoen &#038; Co.,” he says. “Businesses that have a socially-minded focus are exactly the kind of tenants that we’re trying to attract to the project.”
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<p>Slated to premiere in 2018, the revamped 75,000-square-foot factory—a joint effort between Cross Street and City Life Builders—will eventually be an anchor development providing job-training programs, community space, and retail destinations.
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<p>Though the opening lineup will start out small, the goal is for the market to gain a larger following as the Hoen &#038; Co. project progresses. This weekend’s pop-up will serve as a test to see if the concept catches on with the community. While the market finds its footing, Cross Street Partners hopes to continue organizing other engagement programs, such as transforming a vacant lot nearby into a community garden.
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<p>“One thing that has really impressed me is the buy-in from all of the different organizations that are excited about doing something to make a difference,” Rhoades-Brown says. “It’s been great to have that kind of interest in setting something like this up.”
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<p "=""><em>To learn more about urban farming, pick up a copy of our August issue, on newsstands now. </em></p>

<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/hoen-co-lithograph-building-launches-new-farmers-market-this-weekend/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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