Philadelphia Planning Commissioners on Tuesday recommended
the zoning board grant Children's Hospital of Philadelphia the zoning relief it
needs to build an office/research facility at 700 Schuylkill Ave., but their
approval was contingent on CHOP continuing to work with neighborhood business
and civic groups and seeking rezoning of their parcel to mixed-use commercial.
The Zoning Board of Adjustment already held a hearing on the
variance, which would allow CHOP to build 11 fewer loading docks than the
site's current zoning requires, but was waiting on a recommendation from the
Philadelphia City Planning Commission (PCPC) before issuing a decision.
While technically the sessions held on this project at
various city agencies, committees, and community groups are about those loading
docks, the docks have barely been mentioned. Discussions have instead centered
on the development's connections to the surrounding neighborhoods and the
river, pedestrian and cyclist safety, and urban vs. suburban style development.
Presenting for CHOP, Donald Clinton of Cooper, Robertson
& Partners came to the Philadelphia City Planning Commission with a list of
changes the hospital has made to its plan in response to concerns raised by
project neighbors, Councilman Kenyatta Johnson, and PCPC's Civic Design Review
Committee:
- Elimination of one of the two previously planned curb cuts off of the South Street Bridge to alleviate concerns about bicyclist and pedestrian safety.
- An increase of commercial space on South and Bainbridge streets.
- A commitment to continue meeting with neighborhood residents and businesses through this first phase of development and all future phases.
- Enlargement of the ground-floor cafe, an amenity for CHOP employees but also neighborhood residents, especially after business hours and on weekends.
- A promise to pursue a zoning change that would allow for more commercial space on the property and commercial use that is not directly related to CHOP.
- The building of a pedestrian bridge over the CSX tracks to connect people to the Schuylkill Banks Trail, and to complete all public open space, in phase one.
- Traffic-calming devices.
- Bike share onsite.
- Continuation of the shape of the tower down to the river, so the CSX required crash wall isn't just a blank wall.
Clinton said CHOP was creating the space for active use at
Bainbridge and Schuylkill but doubts there's a market for retail. “We're
looking at uses that don't depend on the market, such as the credit union CHOP
uses,” he said.
“There was a really robust dialogue about what should happen
and a lot of goodwill on both sides,” said Commissioner Nancy Rogo Trainer, who
chairs the PCPC's Civic Design Review committee, which also weighed in on the
proposal. “I don't think anybody's likely to be entirely happy,” she said. “But
to me, going from two curb cuts on the South Street Bridge to one is a really
good thing.”
She said that and other positive changes came out of the CDR
process, and she praised both the community groups and CHOP for making that
happen.
Steve Cobb of Councilman Kenyatta Johnson's office said the
changes meant Johnson could support a favorable recommendation from the PCPC.
Representatives from South of South Neighbors Association, South St. West Civic
Association, South Street West Business Association, and other neighbors and
observers also thanked CHOP for the changes made.
But there were some remaining concerns. Prominent among
them:
- The belief by many that CHOP was treating this project as an island separate from the surrounding neighborhood.
- The project needs a strong comprehensive plan for all phases of development not just for the first one.
- More information is needed about how traffic from those future phases will impact the neighborhoods.
- Is the wall around the parking structure on Schuylkill Avenue really necessary?
- It would be better to rezone the area for mixed use commercial, and have a wider variety of uses, like a neighborhood does.
The Design Advocacy Group's Kiki Bolender said she can “see
the joy” in the center portions of CHOP's plan, even in the faces of the
illustrative people sitting beneath the trees in the open space. But
“everything around the edges where you meet the neighborhood seems grudging.
Why can't there be life in those edges?”
Regarding the elimination of the second South Street Bridge
curb cut, Clinton, the architect, said CHOP, too, was concerned about cyclist
and pedestrian safety, but the second cut was in place to help lessen problems
stemming from vehicles coming around the hairpin corner at 27th Street and to
provide access for the LUCY bus and emergency vehicles.
There are other options for LUCY, he said, including using
the #40 bus stop. The fire department tested the hairpin corner, and they can
make the turn, he said.
The area where the driveway would have been is not viable for
commercial use because of potential flooding, he said, but it could be
landscaped.
PCPC Chairman Alan Greenberger said he had concerns about
both cyclist and pedestrian safety and this hairpin turn, and he wasn't sure
that eliminating the second entrance would work out. So he suggested that CHOP
not put anything in the space where that entrance would go, just in case it was
later determined the project needed it. “If you retain the potential of it, and
I don't see why you can't, then the possibility is there.”
Greenberger noted the need for more detailed plans for
future phases. “I would like to suggest, to insist, that planning involve
coordination with the community groups and planning commission,” he said.
He agreed with Clinton that there was no demand for retail
at Schuylkill and Bainbridge now. It's good that CHOP is providing the space,
he said, but the bank is “too easy a way out.” It would be better, Greenberger
said, to come up with some creative use for that space that doesn't necessarily
try to make money. It's a small space, he said, so CHOP doesn't need the
financial numbers to work for it.
Source: Philly.com
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