HARRISBURG - In a state that boasts one of the nation's
richest rosters of historic buildings, the long-awaited historic-preservation
tax-credit program has become a reality.
Two years after Gov. Corbett signed a bill creating tax
incentives for restoring older buildings, the first recipients have been named
- among them three high-profile projects in Philadelphia.
The Department of Community and Economic Development said
Monday that it had awarded a total of $3 million in tax credits to 15
commercial projects in 10 counties, including, in Philadelphia, the
redevelopment of the old Liberty Title & Trust building next to the
Convention Center; the restoration of Park Towne Place Apartments on the
Parkway; and the adaptive reuse of St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Germantown.
Advocates have worked for two decades lobbying lawmakers to
approve tax-credit legislation in Pennsylvania, as more than 30 other states
have done.
"It's very good news," said Rep. Robert Freeman
(D., Northampton), who has been fighting for the bill's passage for years.
The credits - for up to 25 percent of project costs - were
supposed to be rolled out in 2013, but were delayed as guidelines were
developed, Corbett administration officials said.
As recently as a few weeks ago, the program appeared
endangered. It was among several on the chopping block during the budget
struggle as the legislature sought to reduce spending. But in the end, it was
included in the $29.1 billion budget.
While the overall state funding and individual credit awards
are small, combined with federal tax credits, the incentives add up, supporters
say.
"With the larger federal credits, they hold great
potential for being a catalyst for revitalization in communities where they are
used," said Freeman. "And they bring home the fact historic
properties are part of our state's great heritage and great assets to be
utilized."
Ken Weinstein of 6008 Development Associates said his
project to restore and convert the former St. Peter's complex in Germantown
into a Waldorf School would not be completed without the $250,000 state tax
credit.
"This tax credit is significant," he said,
"because it allows us to finish the fourth building that we didn't have
funds to finish."
The building, known as the chapel, was designed in 1873 by
Philadelphian George W. Hewlitt. He and his partner, Frank Furness, were among
the most celebrated American architects of the 19th century.
Weinstein said he also received $1 million in federal tax
credits, which made his $6 million project in a transitional neighborhood like
Germantown feasible.
Realen Broad Street Partners won a $250,000 tax credit to
restore the old Liberty Title & Trust, at Broad and Arch Streets.
Developer Dennis Maloomian declined to give the total
project cost, but said combined federal and state credits would allow him to
move forward with his project to turn the 21-story Art Deco tower into a hotel.
"We want to restore and renovate it," said
Maloomian of the 1926 building that has sat derelict for a decade. "We are
taking advantage of every opportunity."
The third approved project in Southeastern Pennsylvania is
for the restoration of the Park Towne Place Apartments in Franklintown, an
International Style complex of four buildings built in the late 1950s. Park
Towne Place Associates L.P. was approved for $158,000 in tax credits.
Source: Philly.com
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