No wonder Brandywine Realty Trust is so cozy with Penn. Look what they got  
in return for agreeing to build Cira Center South in cooperation with the  
University.
 
Al  Krigman
Left of Ivan Grozny
  
____________________________________


 
Brandywine/Penn Plan $775M Cira  Centre South, By Marita Thomas, _Globe  
Street, August 31_ 
(http://www.globest.com/news/983_983/philadelphia/163680-1.html)  
PHILADELPHIA-Brandywine Realty Trust and  the University of  Pennsylvania 
have unveiled  plans for Cira Centre South, a mixed-use complex on 14 acres at 
30th Street between  Walnut and Market streets and redevelopment of the 
862,000-sf US Postal Service  building. Designed by New Haven, CT-based Pelli 
Clarke 
Pelli, which designed  Brandywine’s Cira Centre office building at  30th  
Street Station, the project calls for construction of  two towers that will 
combine 
office, residential, hotel and retail space in  addition to the rehabbed 
postal facility.  
Brandywine has acquired the  main post office building from the university 
for $28 million. In addition, it  has signed a 90-year ground lease with Penn 
for the post office truck terminal  annex, which now occupies a full block. 
That 
will be demolished to make way for  the Cira Centre South mixed-use 
components. These properties are one block from  the existing Cira Centre, 
which is 
north of 30th Street Station.  
Redevelopment of the five-story postal  service building and construction of 
a 733,000-sf, 2,400-vehicle parking garage  represents the opening phase of 
the project. The building will be converted into  offices for 5,000 employees 
of 
the Internal Revenue Service. The US  General Services Administration has 
signed a 20-year lease, beginning in 2010,  for the entire building.  
The renovation will preserve the building’s  facade, lobby and designation as 
a national historic site. The redevelopment  cost is estimated at $265 
million, prior to any historic tax credits, which may  be applicable. The new 
garage, half of which will be reserved for the IRS, is  expected to cost $110 
million. This phase is scheduled for completion in 2010.  During redevelopment, 
the 
US Postal Service will continue to occupy portions of  the building under 
three short-term leases for 220,000 sf through fourth-quarter  2008.  
Plans for Cira Centre South new  construction are preliminary and “subject to 
market conditions.” Initially they  call for two towers. One, on Walnut  
Street, is projected for as many as 50 stories,  containing up to 500,000 sf of 
office space, a 225-room hotel with conference  and ballroom space, and a 
50-unit residential condo aggregating 125,000 sf. A  tower on the Chestnut  
Street 
side of the parcel is projected to stand up to  30 stories high and contain 
approximately 225 residential rental units in a  total of 300,000 sf, with 
20,000 
sf of street and lobby retail.   
Jerry Sweeney, Brandywine’s CEO, tells GlobeSt.com that the towers are  
estimated to cost in the range of $400 million, depending on the final interior 
 
configurations, “which will depend on market and financial conditions.” They 
are  initially scheduled to follow phase one and be completed in 2012. Penn has 
 
agreed to lease 100,000 sf in the office tower for a 20-year term. Like Cira  
Centre, the Cira Centre South complex is a designated Keystone Opportunity  
Improvement Zone, which provides a 15-year abatement on city and state taxes  
through 2018.  
For Penn, Cira Centre South represents the  opening stage of its previously 
announced master plan, called Penn Connects,  designed to expand athletic 
fields, offices and open space that connects  University City and Center City. “
This marks a milestone for both our  institution and the Philadelphia region,” 
says Amy Gutmann,  president of the university, in a statement. “It will 
improve 
the urban  infrastructure and character of University City,  bridge the 
divide between the campus and Center City and create a vital new center of  
commerce for the region.”  
For Radner-based Brandywine, the project completes CEO Jerry Sweeney’s  
initial vision for Cira Centre, the award-winning tower, which was completed in 
 
2005. “As a fully leased redevelopment, the new IRS facility accelerates the  
continuing renaissance of University City, enhances the value of our existing  
Cira Centre office project and acts as a catalyst for future activity in the  
surrounding area, including our proposed mixed-use development,” adds CEO Jerry 
 Sweeney, in a statement. 



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