Congregation
Rodeph Shalom is set to undertake a $13 million expansion of its synagogue at
Broad and Green streets, which was built in 1928 and is listed on the National
Register of Historic Places. The group’s board of trustees voted to approve the
expansion late last month, according to board member Mike Hauptman.
The addition was
designed by the architectural firm Kieran Timberlake, which also a developed a
master plan for the congregation about five years ago, Hauptman said.
It includes the
construction of a new event space for the congregation, fronting on Broad
Street at the south side of the property, which covers the entire block between
Broad, Green, Mt. Vernon, and 13th streets. The synagogue currently has two
gathering spaces, Hauptman said; one is too big for many occasions, and the
other is too small. The new, mid-sized space will be surrounded by columns of
translucent channel glass.
The expansion
will also entail a renovation of the south entrance to the main sanctuary and
the development of a new lobby, gallery space, a stairway and elevator to upper
floors, and new offices for clergy, along with a loading area for cars.
A landscaping
scheme was developed by Studio Bryan Hanes, the firm that designed the Sister
Cities Garden on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway. The approved plan is pared down
somewhat from an expansion announced last summer.
The congregation
was established in 1795, and first moved onto its North Broad Street site in
the 1860s, with the construction of a building designed by Frank Furness. The
current synagogue replaced the Furness building in the 1920s. Its interior was
renovated about ten years ago. From the 1950s until about five years ago, the
congregation also kept a synagogue in Elkins Park, but ultimately sold that
building to a different congregation.
Source: PlanPhilly
No comments:
Post a Comment