Chinatown Stitch has lost federal funding. Here’s what’s next.

Philadelphia leaders officially learned this week what they’d feared for months: Federal funding for the $207 million Chinatown Stitch project is gone — and now they’re charting a new path forward.

Why it matters: It’s a huge blow for Chinatown, jeopardizing the future of a decades-long push to cap the Vine Street Expressway that cuts through the neighborhood.

State of play: State and local officials are back to “grant shopping” to fund the project, John Chin, executive director of the Philadelphia Chinatown Development Corporation (PCDC), tells Axios.

  • The already-funded preliminary phase — including finalizing a design — will continue while stakeholders search for new funding to begin construction in 2027, City Councilmember Mark Squilla tells Axios.

Zoom in: The latest design, unveiled during this week’s Art Commission meeting, includes a capped lush park between 10th and 12th streets.

  • It would have landscaped pathways, a playground, statues, garden terraces, a plaza with a shaded pavilion and a stream.
  • City officials will continue to make tweaks to the plan based on community feedback.

By the numbers: The project lost $150.5 million in federal funding after cuts from President Trump’s recently passed “big, beautiful bill.”

  • The project had already secured an initial $8.4 million in federal funds, which remains available.

What they’re saying: The U.S. Department of Transportation has “cut any remaining unobligated balances” for the Stitch project, a spokesperson for the Federal Highway Administration tells Axios…

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