WEST CHESTER Developers with plans to build luxury homes on
a park cherished by many and a group opposing their project appeared Wednesday
night to have struck an unanticipated deal to preserve the land.
Under the proposed agreement, West Chester Borough would
purchase the 1.3-acre Barclay Grounds in installments over the next year using
grant funds it anticipates securing in 2014.
The complex maneuver could preserve the property, which has
come under the threat of development several times in the last 50 years,
indefinitely as a borough-owned park.
"Everybody's hearts and heads are in the right place
and in the same place," Mayor Carolyn Comitta said after Wednesday night's
standing-room-only Borough Council meeting. "All the main players want to
see the park preserved."
The Barclay Grounds, a plot of towering trees in front of an
estate house in the heart of the borough, is privately owned but has served as
a public park for decades. In February, local developer StanAb L.P. purchased
the land, and proposed tearing down many of the 130-year-old trees and building
four homes.
Outraged residents formed the Barclay Grounds Preservation
Alliance and began trying to raise the more than $1 million needed to purchase
the land. In September, the group persuaded the Borough Council to consider
seizing the land by eminent domain.
The council met Wednesday to debate that proposal, which had
stirred mixed reactions. Instead, it voted to enter negotiations to purchase
the land.
Under the sale agreement proposed by StanAb's attorney
Wednesday, the borough would need to make a $20,000 nonrefundable down payment
by the end of the year. The other two payments of about $600,000 each would be
delayed, one until the end of June 2014 and the other until the end of December
2014.
Representatives of the Brandywine Conservancy and the
Natural Lands Trust, as well as State Sen. Andy Dinniman (D., Chester), said
Wednesday that while state and county grant funding was not guaranteed, they
anticipate the applications would be approved in time to make those payments.
"This is something so special, so unique, that we
really need to take the chances that we as public officials often have to do to
make things happen," Dinniman said.
If the grants are not approved and the payments to StanAb
cannot be made through other means, the proposed development would move
forward, the group's attorney, Don Turner, said.
"It is virtually without risk or expense. . . . If [the
borough] receives the money, it buys the lots. It preserves it," Turner
said. "If it doesn't receive the money, then at some point, despite the fact
that we all tried, the property is going to end up being subdivided and
developed."
Some of the more than 100 residents in attendance still had
concerns, specifically with how the park would be maintained. Borough Council
President Holly Brown said that cost would be about $20,000 in the first year
and potentially less in the future.
"Now it's great we can do this for, quote, no money.
Which I've heard before," resident Gordon Woodrow said. "But I know
one thing: There is a guaranteed cost every year to operate it, and you don't
have the money to do that either."
Turner stressed Wednesday that a sale agreement has to be
negotiated by the end of the year.
Source: Philly.com
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