Weaving together Penn's campus
New Weave Bridge will connect parts of campus to athletic fields on eastern edge of campus
· February 2, 2009, 5:00 am
The Weave Bridge, which connects the area near campus to the athletic fields, opened to the public on Jan. 19.
The closure of the South Street Bridge threw a wrench into the daily routines of many Penn athletes. But with the new Weave Pedestrian Bridge, they will now make it to practice on time.
The bridge - which opened to the public on Jan. 19 and is part of the Penn Connects initiative - spans from the Amtrak Northeast Corridor train lines to Hollenback Center and the athletic fields to the south.
Mark Kocent, principal planner at the Office of the University Architect, wrote in an e-mail that the bridge will help connect Penn's campus to new and current athletic facilities, the Schuylkill Park and Center City.
"The bridge is well used daily by students and staff in the Navy ROTC program and by student athletes and coaches, all of whom need access to Hollenback Center," Kocent wrote.
He added that so far, the bridge spans over the train tracks and the western ramp wraps around Bower Field. It will be replaced by a new access path as part of the future Penn Park, another Penn Connects project.
College freshman Adrienne Lerner, a member of Penn's varsity soccer team, said she thought the bridge might be rickety from the way it was originally described to her, but found it to be "really nice."
Lerner used the Weave Bridge for the first time yesterday and explained that she began on the back side of Franklin Field along a long ramp. She then went down a wooden ramp and then onto a marked-off pavement area through the construction site in order to reach Hollenback Center.
Using this method, her journey to Hollenback took 20 minutes instead of the 30 to 35 minutes it would have taken via a back route on Baltimore Avenue, which was "way too long," she said.
Members of the baseball team drive to practice every day because it is still too far to walk, Lerner added.
Lerner and College junior Tom Jackson, a member of the lacrosse team, said their coaches explained the pedestrian bridge to them when they arrived on campus after winter break.
The lacrosse team has used the new bridge to reach the weight room at Hollenback Center every Monday and Wednesday since it opened, Jackson said.
He added that the walk takes an extra five minutes and is useful because he is "not really aware of another way to get to [the Hollenback Center] other than the pedestrian bridge."
"The bridge is designed to be fully accessible for ADA use, jogging, bikes and small vehicles such as golf carts," Kocent wrote, though he added that the Division of Public Safety has suggested that bikes should be walked on the temporary ramps.
The bridge, designed by Cecil Balmond and his London-based firm Arup, was engineered by Philadelphia-based Ammann & Whitney.





Comments (4)
cosmetyn
December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm
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The design of the new bridge is amazing.
Josh
December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm
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[QUOTE id="e91ce322-bc72-4401-8bb3-2a1b05b40802"]Who's going to keep those giant glass panels clean? Another avant-garde engineering success story! You know, the sketched normal-looking bridges the Sasaki plan designed as placeholders were more thought-through than this giant fail of a bridge.[/QUOTE] ... and I would have appreciated a more thought-through response than this giant fail of a post. Oh well. I think that its a fairly interesting design. It's nothing too ground-breaking, but having seen it in person, it's worlds better than any sketched normal-looking bridge out there. Congrats Cecil Balmond! Let's hope that the rest of the eastern campus expansion holds to the same design standards.
John
December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm
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Who's going to keep those giant glass panels clean? Another avant-garde engineering success story! You know, the sketched normal-looking bridges the Sasaki plan designed as placeholders were more thought-through than this giant fail of a bridge.
Earl Karper, Sr.
December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm
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Hmmm, the ATHLETES thought it was TOO FAR to walk - the sissies HAD to DRIVE - And so the prissy-ness and wimpy "I'm a sports star" attitude is already showing in these "poor little babies". Next let's see if some bone head antes up to the coming outrageous salary demands that should be laughed at.
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