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The Reading Viaduct, also called The Rail Park, is a disused elevated rail line in the Callowhill district of
Philadelphia Philadelphia ( ), colloquially referred to as Philly, is the List of municipalities in Pennsylvania, most populous city in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania and the List of United States cities by population, sixth-most populous city in the Unit ...
,
Pennsylvania Pennsylvania, officially the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, is a U.S. state, state spanning the Mid-Atlantic (United States), Mid-Atlantic, Northeastern United States, Northeastern, Appalachian, and Great Lakes region, Great Lakes regions o ...
, that has been partly transformed into a
rail trail A rail trail or railway walk is a shared-use path on a Right of way#Rail right of way, railway right of way. Rail trails are typically constructed after a railway has been abandoned and the track has been removed but may also share the rail corr ...
. The viaduct opened on January 29, 1893, and originally led to
Reading Terminal The Reading Terminal ( ) is a complex of buildings that includes the former Reading Company main railroad station, station located in the Market East, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Market East section of Center City, Philadelphia, Center City in ...
in
Center City Philadelphia Center City includes the central business district and central neighborhoods of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. It comprises the area that made up the City of Philadelphia prior to the Act of Consolidation, 1854, which extended the ci ...
. It was abandoned in 1984 after Philadelphia's Center City Commuter Tunnel opened. In 2010, the Center City District and a new community organization, Friends of the Rail Park, began to evaluate options to convert the abandoned viaduct into an elevated park. Phase 1 of the park opened on June 14, 2018.


History


Railroad use

The Philadelphia and Reading Terminal Railroad was incorporated on April 13, 1888, leased by the
Philadelphia and Reading Railway The Reading Company ( ) was a Philadelphia-headquartered rail transport, railroad that provided passenger and freight transport in eastern Pennsylvania and neighboring states from 1924 until its acquisition by Conrail in 1976. Commonly called th ...
on May 1, 1891, and soon began construction. The viaduct was built by the Reading Company as an approach to the then-new
Reading Terminal The Reading Terminal ( ) is a complex of buildings that includes the former Reading Company main railroad station, station located in the Market East, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Market East section of Center City, Philadelphia, Center City in ...
. The viaduct and terminal opened on January 29, 1893.Reading Terminal, Philadelphia
/ref> The viaduct heads north from Reading Terminal and at Callowhill Junction, forks, with the Ninth Street Branch formally merging with the current
SEPTA Main Line The SEPTA Main Line is the section of the SEPTA Regional Rail system from the Zoo Interlocking in West Philadelphia to Lansdale Station in Lansdale, Pennsylvania. The line is long, and serves all 13 SEPTA Regional Rail lines. Service Serv ...
. The viaduct cuts through the street grid at a diagonal angle, creating several irregularly shaped lots. The primary section of the viaduct, the Ninth Street Branch, has four tracks. In 1984, the Reading Terminal closed, and Philadelphia's Center City Commuter Tunnel opened. The southern section of the viaduct, south of Vine Street, was razed in 1990 to make way for the
Pennsylvania Convention Center The Pennsylvania Convention Center is a multi-use public facility in the Market East, Philadelphia, Market East section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, designed to accommodate conventions, exhibitions, conferences and other events. The L-shaped ...
. The section south of the Vine Street Expressway ( I-676/
US 30 U.S. Route 30 or U.S. Highway 30 (US 30) is an east–west main route of the United States Numbered Highway System, with the highway traveling across the Northern U.S. With a length of , it is the third-longest U.S. Highway, afte ...
) was demolished to make way for the convention center. The rest of the viaduct still exists, as it was too cumbersome to demolish the structure. Additionally, the viaduct was full of pollutants that had to be removed before the structure could be demolished or repurposed. The viaduct includes a westward branch known as the City Branch. The City Branch diverges from the Ninth Street Branch at Callowhill Junction, traveling toward the former Reading Company main line at Belmont Junction. West of 13th Street, the City Branch descends into an
open cut Open-pit mining, also known as open-cast or open-cut mining and in larger contexts mega-mining, is a surface mining technique that extracts rock or minerals from the earth. Open-pit mines are used when deposits of commercially useful ore or ro ...
known as the Cut, which was operated by the
Philadelphia and Reading Railroad The Reading Company ( ) was a Philadelphia-headquartered railroad that provided passenger and freight transport in eastern Pennsylvania and neighboring states from 1924 until its acquisition by Conrail in 1976. Commonly called the Reading Railro ...
. The Cut was used until 1992; the final freight customer on the Cut was ''The Philadelphia Inquirer''.


The Rail Park


First phase

By the 1990s, the Reading Company's successor firm Reading International Inc. had offered to give the Philadelphia government $2–3 million to take over the viaduct. The city government did not accept this offer. In the 2000s, there were suggestions to convert the Reading Viaduct to a
rail trail A rail trail or railway walk is a shared-use path on a Right of way#Rail right of way, railway right of way. Rail trails are typically constructed after a railway has been abandoned and the track has been removed but may also share the rail corr ...
. This effort was led by two local artists, John Struble and Sarah McEneaney, who in 2004 formed a nonprofit called Friends of the Rail Park. Students at the
University of Pennsylvania School of Design The University of Pennsylvania Stuart Weitzman School of Design is the design school of the University of Pennsylvania, a private research university in Philadelphia. It offers degrees in architecture, landscape architecture, city and regional p ...
suggested converting the viaduct into a rail trail similar to the Promenade Plantee in Paris. The success of New York City's
High Line The High Line is a elevated linear park, greenway, and rail trail created on a former New York Central Railroad spur on the West Side of Manhattan in New York City. The High Line's design is a collaboration between James Corner Field Op ...
, a similar rail trail which opened in 2009, encouraged further efforts to convert the Reading Viaduct to a park. Although gates had been installed to prevent access to the decrepit viaduct, people still trespassed anyway, leaving debris and garbage there. Planning for the park accelerated in 2009 after the Center City District joined the project. The district's leader, Paul Levy, commissioned a study that found that it would cost $36 million to convert the viaduct into a park, versus $50 million to demolish it. In addition, Reading International owed $1.4 million in unpaid taxes and was required to conduct environmental remediation. In 2010, the Center City District and Friends of the Rail Park began to evaluate options to convert the abandoned viaduct into an elevated park. They also began raising money for the planned park. The next year, the planned park was included in a master plan for Philadelphia. However, residents of the nearby
Chinatown Chinatown ( zh, t=唐人街) is the catch-all name for an ethnic enclave of Chinese people located outside Greater China, most often in an urban setting. Areas known as "Chinatown" exist throughout the world, including Europe, Asia, Africa, O ...
neighborhood preferred demolishing the viaduct, as they feared that it would lead to
gentrification Gentrification is the process whereby the character of a neighborhood changes through the influx of more Wealth, affluent residents (the "gentry") and investment. There is no agreed-upon definition of gentrification. In public discourse, it has ...
. The Callowhill Reading Viaduct Neighborhood Improvement District was proposed to raise money for streetscape improvements around the viaduct, but the district was not created due to local opposition. The Philadelphia city and Pennsylvania state governments agreed in 2014 to provide money for the conversion of the Reading Viaduct into a park; the city initially allocated $1.8 million to the project. In 2015, the Center City District received another $1 million from the Philadelphia government. After the city proposed acquiring the spur from Broad to Callowhill Street, the City Planning Commission approved the acquisition in May 2015. Bryan Hanes was hired to design the first phase of the park, and the Philadelphia Art Commission approved designs in June 2015. The first phase of the project was originally planned to cost $9.6 million. The commonwealth of Pennsylvania provided a $3.5 million grant in September 2016, which covered all remaining funding shortfalls. Construction began on the Rail Park's first phase on October 31, 2016. The Rail Park's first phase added a boardwalk, benches, landscaping, and swings. The park's opening was delayed after workers discovered severe deterioration to the bridge that carried the park and Noble Street above 13th Street. The first phase opened to the public on June 14, 2018, having cost $10.3 million or $11 million. The city's mayor Jim Kenney predicted that the park would encourage development in the area. The Rail Park began hosting public art festivals in 2019, starting with the Site/Sound festival that October.


Second phase

Supporters of the Rail Park were raising $60 million for the second phase, including environmental work and land acquisition. This was complicated by the fact that the route had never been formally abandoned; this meant that the viaduct could theoretically be reopened for rail service at any time, even though it had been partially demolished. The old Spring Garden Street station, along the northern section of the viaduct, was razed in 2021. Work on the second phase stalled for several years, and the abandoned Ninth Street Branch portion was used as an illegal dumping ground. In June 2022,
Philadelphia City Council The Philadelphia City Council is the legislative body of the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the United States. It is composed of 17 councilmembers: ten members elected by district and seven members elected at-large from throughou ...
member Mark Squilla proposed legislation that would authorize the city to acquire the rest of the viaduct from Reading International. By 2024, Reading International wanted to sell the unused part of the viaduct for $50 million, a figure the Philadelphia government was unwilling to pay. The William Penn Foundation gave a $2 million grant in August 2024, and the federal government provided another $2 million for the park's second phase in January 2025, allowing design to proceed. In addition, the commonwealth of Pennsylvania agreed to provide $475,000 for the project, and additional funds were being raised from private sources. The second phase could connect with the proposed "Stitch", a highway cap above the Vine Street Expressway.


Approaches

The main line of the
Philadelphia and Reading Railway The Reading Company ( ) was a Philadelphia-headquartered rail transport, railroad that provided passenger and freight transport in eastern Pennsylvania and neighboring states from 1924 until its acquisition by Conrail in 1976. Commonly called th ...
(originally the Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad and Northern Liberties and Penn Township Railroad) came into Philadelphia on the southwest side of the
Schuylkill River The Schuylkill River ( , ) is a river in eastern Pennsylvania. It flows for U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline dataThe National Map(). accessed April 1, 2011. from Pottsville, Pennsylvania, Pottsville ...
and crossed at a point northwest of downtown (this line is now used only by freight). It then passed into a tunnel under Pennsylvania Avenue and turned east just north of Callowhill Street. The original alignment turned south along Broad Street, with a passenger station at Broad and Vine. The line continued east past Broad Street for freight to the
Delaware River The Delaware River is a major river in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States and is the longest free-flowing (undammed) river in the Eastern United States. From the meeting of its branches in Hancock, New York, the river flows for a ...
, using Willow Street. The passenger station was later moved to half a block east of Broad Street, on the old freight line. The spur from the viaduct was built just east of this station. The other Reading line, originally the Philadelphia, Germantown and Norristown Railroad, and now used for passenger service by
SEPTA SEPTA, the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority, is a regional public transportation authority that operates bus, rapid transit, commuter rail, light rail, and electric trolleybus services for nearly four million people througho ...
, ran north on 9th Street from the east-west line on Willow Street. Its passenger station was at Ninth and Green, again where the new viaduct merged with the old alignment.


Park description

The Rail Park's first phase stretches from Callowhill Street to Noble Street, along the former City Branch, measuring long. To the west, it is accessed from Noble Street, where that road and the former City Branch cross 13th Street on a bridge; this is the park's ADA-accessible entrance. The bridge over 13th Street contains several planters. The rest of the park has wooden benches, trees, and raised gardens. There is also a mural on the viaduct, in addition to industrial-looking steel frames with swing sets. At the east end of the park's first phase, there is a staircase descending to Callowhill Street between 12th and 11th streets; a steel gate separates the park from the rest of the abandoned viaduct. The park is open between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. each day. The Friends of the Rail Park's original plans called for renovating not only the Ninth Street Branch section of the viaduct from Vine Street to Fairmount Avenue, but also the City Branch to
Girard Avenue Girard Avenue is a major commercial and residential street in Philadelphia. For most of its length it runs east–west, but at Frankford Avenue it makes a 135-degree turn north. Parts of the road are signed as U.S. Route 13 and U.S. Route 30. ...
. The Ninth Street Branch section, known simply as "The Viaduct", extends about and creates a "V" shape with the City Branch. West of the first phase is the Cut, an open cut from Broad Street to the Rodin Museum at 22nd Street. This connects with the Tunnel, which extends further west to Brewerytown and the
Philadelphia Zoo The Philadelphia Zoo is a zoo located in the Centennial District of Philadelphia on the west bank of the Schuylkill River. It was the first true zoo in the United States; it was chartered by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on March 21, 1859 ...
.


See also

*
30th Street Station 30th Street Station, officially William H. Gray III 30th Street Station, is a major intermodal passenger transport, intermodal transit station in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. The station opened in 1933 as Pennsylvania Station– ...
* Chinese Wall (Philadelphia) * Bloomingdale Trail, a converted elevated line in Chicago * Dequindre Cut, a converted below-grade line in Detroit


References


External links


Friends of the Railpark

VIADUCTgreene

Photo Tour: JJ Tiziou, "Philadelphia's Secret Garden", January 8, 2012
{{Authority control Bridges in Philadelphia Callowhill, Philadelphia Elevated parks Landmarks in Philadelphia Linear parks Railroad bridges in Pennsylvania Reading Company lines Reading Railroad bridges Urban public parks Viaducts in the United States