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Three two-story naval residential buildings facing along Pattison Avenue surrounded with landscaped gardens have been incorporated into the new use of the site as office buildings. These 1930s Naval Hospital buildings were consistent with the Art Deco architectural design in an institutional setting. The original use:
The Pattison Avenue facility remained open through 2015. It was a 200,000-square-foot warehouse, and was designed to allow railcars to come into the building. The warehouse contained 28 climate-controlled rooms for banana storage and ripening. Each held up to 1,500 cases of bananas. [11]
Route 71 replaced weekday midday service from Pattison Avenue to the Philadelphia Naval Business Center on February 22, 2004; Extended to Penn's Landing in June 2016 due to being permanently assigned with articulated buses due to limited space to layover at Front and Market terminal with Route 48 also an articulated assigned route.
The Broad Street Line (BSL), [a] currently rebranding as the B, [b] is a rapid transit line in the SEPTA Metro network in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.The line runs primarily north-south from the Fern Rock Transportation Center in North Philadelphia through Center City Philadelphia to NRG station at Pattison Avenue in South Philadelphia; the latter station provides access to the ...
Broad Street is a major arterial street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.The street runs for approximately 13 miles (21 km), beginning at the intersection of Cheltenham Avenue on the border of Cheltenham Township and the West/East Oak Lane neighborhoods of North Philadelphia to the Philadelphia Navy Yard in South Philadelphia.
NRG station (formerly named AT&T station, and earlier Pattison station) is the southern terminus of SEPTA's Broad Street Line, located at 3600 South Broad Street, at the intersection with Pattison Avenue in the South Philadelphia area of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. [5] The station's naming rights were sold to NRG Energy in 2018. [6]
GM announced in August that at least 1,000 software jobs and possibly up to 1,500 jobs would be eliminated. The Detroit Free Press reported at the time that 634 of the jobs being cut then were at ...
Veterans Stadium was a multi-purpose stadium in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, at the northeast corner of Broad Street and Pattison Avenue, part of the South Philadelphia Sports Complex. The seating capacities were 65,358 for football, and 56,371 for baseball.