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New Amtrak Service Could Boost ‘the Sixth Borough'

By ANNIE KARNI, Special to the Sun | April 20, 2007

Amtrak is planning to roll out new service on its much-maligned and often-delayed Acela route this July, providing nonstop service between New York and Philadelphia for the first time. The new route would also provide nonstop service to Washington from Philadelphia.

Cutting three New Jersey stops from the trip and shaving down commute times between New York and Philadelphia to about an hour could help solidify the "sixth borough" status of the City of Brotherly Love, real estate brokers and developers said.

About 1.5 million passengers a year use Amtrak to commute between New York and Philadelphia on a regular basis, and the number is growing, particularly among people in their 20s and 30s seeking more affordable housing, real estate brokers said. Amtrak expects the new line to boost its business clientele, a spokesman said.

"After 9/11, we had an influx of people coming down here from New York," a partner in the Philadelphia-based development firm Miles & Generalis Inc., Thomas Miles, said. "Today, there is tremendous development going on around the train station."

Two high-end condominiums with about 200 residential units each are under construction within walking distance of Amtrak's 30th Street Station in Philadelphia.

The next frontier for development in that city, according to developers, is across the Schuylkill River from the station, still within walking distance to the train. Residential units there are selling for about $400 a square foot, compared with an average of more than $1,000 a square foot in Manhattan. Residential real estate in Philadelphia has yet to exceed that threshhold, even in fashionable neighborhoods such as historic Society Hill and Rittenhouse Square.

"We have a price point that we won't get past at this point, and in New York there doesn't seem to be any limits," another partner at the firm Miles & Generalis Inc., Mr. Generalis said.

Easing the commute between New York and Philadelphia could push Philadelphia's prices higher.

Architect Richard Meier in 2005 designed plans for a 44-story residential glass tower near Philadelphia's train station, with apartments priced up to $5 million. "Those units were for a New York clientele and were in close proximity to the train station," Mr. Generalis said. Construction of the building has been put on hold because the units did not attract enough attention from buyers. It could be revived, however, as Philadelphia continues to draw New Yorkers to its streets, local developers said.

"When you take the commute from an hour and a half to about an hour, it will make people in New York who were on the fence consider living in ‘the sixth borough,'" a senior vice president at Coldwell Banker Preferred, David Krieger, said.

Some transportation professionals said Amtrak's high fares are a stumbling block to the creation of a seamless commercial and residential partnership between New York and Philadelphia.

"Because the fares are so high, Amtrak is still not creating the connections we ought to have between the two cities," the president of the Regional Plan Association, Robert Yaro, said in an interview yesterday.

Acela service between the two cities costs about $129 one way. A price tag has not yet been attached to the nonstop service, according to an Amtrak spokesman.

"Every other industrialized country has a high-speed rail system, creating synergy between cities and increasing the size of the marketplace to benefit both cities. We're so far behind, it's ridiculous," Mr. Yaro said.

In 2006, 24 million passengers rode Amtrak, and more than 9.2 million came through New York's Pennsylvania Station, a record for the railroad. "We feel that we're competitive with the airline industry," an Amtrak spokesman, Clifford Cole, said.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

The $258 roundtip fare to Philly charged by Amtrak for the Acela is outragous. Especially why you can take a... [MORE]

izengabe 

Apr 20, 2007 11:26

The Acela Express service by Amtrak has seats in Business Class and First Class only. They have Regional trains that... [MORE]

N. Smaltino 

Apr 21, 2007 16:08

"No country in the world operates a passenger rail system without some form of public support for capital costs and/or... [MORE]

JayKay 

Apr 22, 2007 15:26

Amtrak, and every other commuter line in the country, could make money if they went back to the beginning of... [MORE]

Bernard McCormick 

May 9, 2007 16:41

Per the point that the Acela is priced to demand, the other side of that equation is supply. The way... [MORE]

El 

Jul 13, 2007 09:11

It is not likely that many daily commuters will be attracted to non-stop Acela service at the prevailing level of... [MORE]

Bill Vigrass 

Apr 27, 2007 15:48

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