Even in the middle of the day, Bolton Street between 25th
and 24th is so empty and desolate you can hear crickets.
A decade ago, the city aggressively razed vacant houses in
this pocket of North Philadelphia, leaving acres of vacant land.
But nothing has happened since then, and that's a critical
problem.
"There's no place else that is as forgotten as this
part of the city," said Kelvin Jeremiah, chief executive of the
Philadelphia Housing Authority.
A big part of the problem is the Norman Blumberg Apartments
- an eight-acre public housing complex with three high-rise towers and 15
barracks-style buildings.
The old-style project, with its high crime rate and
concentration of poor households, is holding back the neighborhood, Jeremiah
said.
Since becoming PHA's top executive this year, Jeremiah has
made renewal of Blumberg a priority for the Housing Authority. He has the
backing of Mayor Nutter and City Council President Darrell L. Clarke, as well
as the support of the Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority.
"We have to take back a community that has fallen to
blight, disrepair, and crime for too long," he said.
PHA recently applied for a $500,000 federal grant to create
a master plan for the area bordered by Cecil B. Moore Avenue to the north,
South College Avenue and Poplar Street to the south, 20th to the east, and 27th
to the west.
In the first phase, the Housing Authority plans to build 57
rental units on unused land at Blumberg and nearby vacant lots. In a sign of
support, the city's Office of Housing and Community Development recently agreed
to kick in $1.5 million. PHA will try to raise additional funds through federal
low-income housing tax credits.
Key to any plan would be replacing the Blumberg high-rise
towers with a low-rise community, and filling in vacant land with new housing
or commercial space, Jeremiah said. PHA has reached out to other developers
about collaborating.
"This is bigger than PHA," Jeremiah said.
At the same time, the Housing Authority is trying to address
the problem of violent crime at Blumberg. Philadelphia police data show that
the area has twice the rate of assaults, rapes, murders, and robberies as the
rest of the city.
Jeremiah said crime was standing in the way of the
neighborhood's renewal.
Three months ago, PHA replaced security guards working for
an outside contractor with its own armed police officers. Each day, pairs of
PHA officers make unannounced "vertical patrols" through the towers.
Officers also are stationed in guardhouses at the entrances of the family
apartment houses.
Public housing residents describe life at Blumberg with the
blunt words of the crime-weary.
"Hell," Jeanette Gaines, a 55-year-old grandmother
and 10-year resident, said as she watched her granddaughter at the playground
at Blumberg.
"The worst," said Elisha Rodgers, a 29-year-old
mother of three. "My kids can't come out here to play without something
happening."
Residents are still talking about the July 12 shootout that
left a 20-year-old man dead in the middle of the project's plaza.
Jeremiah was warned about Blumberg's notoriety when he
arrived here two years ago from the New York City Housing Authority. To judge
for himself, he made two trips at night over the summer, driving alone along
Oxford and Jefferson Streets.
'Scary'
"There was all kinds of business activity and people
trying to sell me things," Jeremiah said.
"It's scary," he continued. "No child should
have to live under those circumstances."
When PHA bolstered its police presence, he said, "bad
elements" brazenly warned him that Blumberg was "theirs."
"This is not theirs," Jeremiah said.
Built in 1967, the gargantuan Blumberg project has 510 units
of housing encompassing the area between Jefferson and Oxford Streets and 22d
and 24th.
In the last 15 years, other high-rise projects in the city
have fallen like so many dominos.
Raymond Rosen, Schuylkill Falls, Southwark Plaza, Cambridge,
Martin Luther King, Mill Creek, Norris Homes - all have been demolished and
replaced with low-rise development, aimed at creating a broader income mix of
renters and homeowners.
With the Blumberg neighborhood, key stakeholders - the
city's Planning Commission and Redevelopment Authority, as well as nonprofit
and private developers - are lining up behind PHA.
"Sometimes, the public sector has to take the first
step so the private sector can take the second, third, and fourth steps,"
said Milton Pratt, a senior vice president of Michaels Development Co., a
national developer that has built affordable rental properties near Blumberg.
A major problem with the Blumberg area - the inordinate
number of vacant houses and lots - could actually become its greatest asset,
developers and public officials say.
The area has more than 1,000 blighted homes or vacant lots -
a third of which are owned by public agencies, including the city, its housing
development nonprofit, PHA, or the Redevelopment Authority.
Officials for those agencies have pledged to use their land
to support a redevelopment effort.
"Everyone is moving in the right direction here,"
said Alan Greenberger, deputy mayor for economic development. He said the city
had made a commitment to PHA to bring its public land "into a larger
vision" for the surrounding neighborhood.
The Redevelopment Authority has 39 parcels in the targeted
area. In addition, the Philadelphia School District has closed two schools near
the Blumberg project: Reynolds Elementary and Robert Vaux High School.
"We have a huge opportunity here to move something
forward," said Brian Abernathy, executive director of the Redevelopment
Authority.
The potential of the Blumberg neighborhood is helped by its
proximity to faster-growing areas such as the Fairmount section to the south
and Brewerytown to the west.
"Look at the amount of vacant land around the
perimeter" of Blumberg, Council President Clarke said. But while calling
the area "an ideal location," he added that "no one is going to
build without some level of government subsidy."
'Wonderful'
PHA is finding support for a Blumberg renewal from other
developers, including Project HOME. The nonprofit is building a wellness center
with the YMCA and Jefferson University Hospital inside the target area.
"This could be a wonderful, wonderful step
forward," said Project HOME cofounder Sister Mary Scullion, who lives just
a few blocks from Blumberg.
The particulars of a redevelopment - how much it would cost,
what it would look like - would be part of a master plan, Jeremiah said. If PHA
receives the $500,000 federal planning grant, the city has agreed to commit an
additional $400,000.
"At every level," Jeremiah said, "there is
support because of the shared vision of what needs to happen."
Source: Philly.com
No comments:
Post a Comment