The Width And Arrangement of Streets : a Study in Town Planning

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A modification of this method, to fit it for use in regions of smaller property values, has been proposed by Charles A. Ferry, of New Haven. He suggests that when new lines are run for a street, in order that' it * Francis Fisher Kane, an attorney of Philadelphia, describes the case of the new Wanamaker store as one of the most interesting and significant which came up. This property, he writes, "has 250 feet on Chestnut Street and Market Street, and 489 feet on Thirteenth Street ^nd Juniper St
...reet, and is the only Chestnut Street property covering an entire block and having four fronts. Mr. Wanamaker 's witnesses claimed that the loss of the strip of ground, 5 x 250 feet, occasioned a damage amounting to $93,950, which they worked out at the rate of ■$75.00 a square foot. The city's witnesses testified that no property in the city bore out their theory more clearly than this, and that the market value of such a property with four fronts, 484 feet deep on a 60 foot wide street, was equal in value to a property 489 feet doep on a street -50 feet wide.

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