Walnut Street (Philadelphia)

Walnut Street
Walnut Street in Center City Philadelphia in February 2024 in front of Rittenhouse Square
Maintained byPennDOT and City of Philadelphia
Length5.57 mi (8.96 km)
Component
highways
SR 3006 from Front Street to City Hall
PA 3 westbound between 38th and Cobbs Creek Parkway in Philadelphia
LocationPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
West end PA 3 (Cobbs Creek Parkway) in Cobbs Creek
Major
junctions
US 13 / PA 3 (38th Street) in University City
I-76 (Schuylkill Expressway) in University City
PA 611 (Broad Street) in Center City
East endFront Street in Penn's Landing
NorthChestnut Street
SouthLocust Street

Walnut Street is located in Center City Philadelphia and extends to the Delaware River waterfront and West Philadelphia. Walnut Street has been characterized as "the city's premier shopping district" by The Philadelphia Inquirer.

A portion of the street commonly called Rittenhouse Row was ranked 12th in 2005 by Women's Wear Daily among its list of the most expensive retail streets in North America, with rents of $90 per square foot. The street is home to several "upscale dining, retail and cultural" establishments.

In 2013, rents rose to an average of $107 a foot, a growth of 34% over 2012 and the largest percentage growth of any retail corridor in the country.

Route description

Walnut Street is most known for Rittenhouse Square Park and its upscale shopping district in the high-end neighborhood of the same name. The majority of designer and fast fashion stores located on Walnut Street are situated on a four-block stretch between Broad Street and 18th Street, which is anchored by the park on the southwest corner. This area of Walnut Street and a few blocks to the east features a variety of shops, eateries, bars, hotels, and office buildings.

Walnut Street Theatre, located at 825 Walnut Street, is the oldest continuously-operating theatre in the English-speaking world.

Among the many attractions and historic sites on Walnut Street are Independence National Historical Park and Society Hill on the east and Washington Square, Washington Square West, the St. James Hotel (1226-1232), the Philadelphia Stock Exchange (1419-1411), the Sun Oil Building (1608-1610), the 1616 Walnut Street Building, Rittenhouse Square, Estey Hall (1701 Walnut Street), and the Church of the Holy Trinity.

The Walnut Street Bridge, completed in 1949, crosses the Schuylkill River. On the west side of the river, the street crosses over the Schuylkill Expressway.

Further west, Walnut Street bisects the campus of the University of Pennsylvania, an Ivy League university founded in the mid-18th century by Benjamin Franklin in the University City section of West Philadelphia. At Walnut and 47th Streets is the site of the old West Philadelphia High School, and the Paul Robeson House is located at the corner of 50th and Walnut Streets.

The street continues westward through Walnut Hill, Dunlap, and eventually Cobbs Creek, where the it ends.

Running parallel to Walnut Street, one or two blocks to the north, depending on whether the side street Sansom Street is counted, is Chestnut Street. Pennsylvania Route 3 westbound follows Walnut Street from 38th Street (U.S. Route 13) to its western terminus at Cobbs Creek Parkway.

Gallery


See also


This page was last updated at 2024-02-27 13:59 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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