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The Daily Pennsylvanian is the University of Pennsylvania's Independent Student Newspaper
Issue date: 12/6/07 Section: News

Developers want to pass go, collect $200; neighborhood hesitant

Katie Karas

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Parents looking for lodging in University City while visiting their children could soon have a more affordable option if the proposal for a new off-campus hotel is approved by local organizations and the University's Board of Trustees.

A coalition made up of Campus Apartments, private developer Tom Lussenhop and the real-estate company Hersha Hospitality are in the process of developing and approving a plan to lease a site from the University on the corner of 40th and Pine streets. But the coalition's plans for an 11-story extended-stay hotel have sparked controversy among neighborhood residents and organizations.

The hotel, which could open as soon as fall 2009, would be part of the Hilton franchise, Lussenhop said.

There are currently only three other hotels in University City - the Inn at Penn, the Sheraton, and Penn Towers - all of which are owned by the University.

Lussenhop, who was Penn's managing director of real estate in the 1990s, said the new hotel would serve as a less pricey option. He cited tentative prices as under $200 a night, and said rates would drop significantly for guests staying longer than five days.

Lussenhop also said the hotel is a much-needed project because there is currently no extended-stay hotel in the area for families of patients staying at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.

"The health system is growing," Lussenhop said. "It needs anything that can facilitate that growth and make guest and patient stays more comfortable."

The proposed site for the hotel is a significant source of contention for local residents. While the developers maintain that the 40th Street corridor is commercial, many residents say the area is a residential neighborhood and that an 11-story buidling is not appropriate.

Mary Goldman, a resident of the 4100 block of Pine Street, has lived in the neighborhood since 1959. One of her chief complaints is the height of the hotel, which she worries will block light and create wind tunnels near her home.

To address concerns about the hotel's height and mass, the architect revised the plans to include a three-story transitional building that sets the highest portion of the hotel back from the street, Lussenhop said.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 5 of 5

Alan Krigman

posted 12/06/07 @ 11:06 AM EST

Individuals living in the vicinity of 40th & Pine/Baltimore wishing to express reasons for supporting, opposing, or being undecided about this proposed project may register their opinions by going to www. (Continued…)

alumn

posted 12/06/07 @ 5:36 PM EST

Only $200 per night, wow, that's really cheap.

Alum

posted 12/06/07 @ 5:53 PM EST

Isn't that the old haunted nut house that Cigarette Sally used to live in? Yeah, that's def where I want to stay during homecoming next year . . .

Goose

posted 12/07/07 @ 2:49 AM EST

Fantastic idea. Hopefully it'll bring life to those boarded up storefronts at the corner of 40th and Baltimore too.

CIndy.

posted 12/19/07 @ 6:33 AM EST

[...]My thumb up. Probably one of the best I've ever stayed at, even if I prefer American-style hotels as the New Yorker[...]

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