Construction Tops Out at The Box Factory Lofts at 31 East Columbia Avenue in Fishtown

Box Factory Lofts at 31 East Columbia Avenue. Rendering credit: SITIO ArchitectureBox Factory Lofts at 31 East Columbia Avenue. Rendering credit: SITIO Architecture

A recent site visit by Philadelphia YIMBY has observed continued construction progress at the eight-story, 63-unit Box Factory Lofts at 31 East Columbia Avenue in Fishtown. Designed by SITIO Architecture + Urbanism, the structure expands the original Box Factory Lofts, a four-story prewar industrial building located at 21 East Columbia Avenue with 20 rental units. The new building will add 67,342 square of feet to the development and introduce a new shared lobby for the two structures, as well as a common courtyard. The new building will feature ground-level retail, elevator service, covered parking for ten cars (including three car share and one accessible space) and 30 bicycles, and a roof deck. Permits list Equinox Management and Construction as the contractor and indicate a construction cost of $13 million.

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. March 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. March 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. May 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. May 2023

The development spans a lot bordered by East Columbia Street to the south, Blair Street to the east, and North Front Street to the west, where it faces the elevated Market-Frankford Line. Prior to construction, the existing loft building, which rises around 60 feet tall and stands on Blair Street on the site’s eastern side, was accessible from its interior western side via a walk across a large parking lot. A low-rise prewar commercial building, decorated with a razzle dazzle mural, stood to the south.

Construction has made significant headway since our relatively recent visit in March, having added two more floors to its broad structure, reaching its final height. Windows have been mounted within the tall, narrow apertures, moving the structure closer to its final appearance, although it is yet to receive any of the rest of the curtain wall exterior.

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. May 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. May 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. May 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. May 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. May 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. May 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. May 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. May 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. May 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. May 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. March 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. March 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. March 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. March 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. March 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue. Photo by Jamie Meller. March 2023

31 East Columbia Avenue is shaping up to be a significant addition to the Front Street corridor, adding a significant number of new housing units and making for a distinctive presence in the neighborhood. The building towers over its surroundings in a distinctive manifestation of density appropriate for the valuable space along one of Philadelphia’s scarce subway lines. The design is attractive, notable for its astute vertical fenestration, robust cantilevers, and distinctive V-beam support at the main entrance. We look forward to seeing the appearance of the curtain wall, which promises to be the next step in the construction process.

31 East Columbia Avenue. Rendering credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism

31 East Columbia Avenue. Rendering credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism

31 East Columbia Avenue. Rendering credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism

31 East Columbia Avenue. Rendering credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism

31 East Columbia Avenue. Rendering credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism

31 East Columbia Avenue. Rendering credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism

31 East Columbia Avenue. Site plan. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

31 East Columbia Avenue. Site plan. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

31 East Columbia Avenue. Site location. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

31 East Columbia Avenue. Site location. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

31 East Columbia Avenue. Building section. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

31 East Columbia Avenue. Building section. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

31 East Columbia Avenue. Building elevation. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

31 East Columbia Avenue. Building elevation. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

31 East Columbia Avenue. Building elevation. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

31 East Columbia Avenue. Building elevation. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

31 East Columbia Avenue. Ground floor plan. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

31 East Columbia Avenue. Site plan. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism

31 East Columbia Avenue. Building elevation. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

31 East Columbia Avenue. Building elevation. Credit: SITIO Architecture + Urbanism via the City of Philadelphia

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1 Comment on "Construction Tops Out at The Box Factory Lofts at 31 East Columbia Avenue in Fishtown"

  1. Love that the writers of this post are completely out of touch with how poorly this out of town developer treated their tenants and skirted the law. They didn’t care about ADA compliance when they took parking and elevator access away from tenants in order to start this atrocity of a project. Box Factory Lofts is terrible for the neighborhood and doesn’t care about citizens. They treat people like items on a balance sheet.

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