After years of planning, Swarthmore College is beginning
construction of an inn, bookstore, and roundabout.
The project will result in traffic changes along Route 320,
and the inn will bring the first liquor license to an otherwise-dry Delaware
County borough.
Borough and college officials say the development, which has
been planned for more than 15 years, will improve a dangerous intersection and
connect the college to its community.
The project's opponents, however, have not given up.
Even as construction crews begin work on the roundabout this
week, residents opposed to it are planning to file an appeal in court.
Jacki Miller, a Swarthmore resident leading the effort, said
she worried that the roundabout would cause "inevitable queuing during
rush hour."
The intersection at Chester Road near the borough's SEPTA
station is already busy, and drivers use Route 320 as an alternate route when
I-476 is congested.
The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, which owns
the right-of-way along Route 320, approved the roundabout plans. Swarthmore
College will pay for construction.
The borough council also voted to approve the development
plans earlier this year.
Borough Council President Ralph Jacobs said the roundabout
would improve the safety of a dangerous intersection.
"My view is that there is overwhelming support for the
roundabout in the community," Jacobs said. "I think the number of
people who are opposed to the roundabout is really a very, very small number of
people."
Miller said she fears that the roundabout will slow traffic
too much, forcing cars to wait along Chester Road for their turn to enter it,
or increasing congestion on other roads in Swarthmore.
"For those of us that have lived with the stoppages on
320 and what happens to the traffic when it sheds through the borough itself,
it's not good enough," Miller said.
Stuart Bowie, a lawyer who lives in nearby Wallingford and
is involved in opposition to the roundabout, said the appeal he plans to file
in Commonwealth Court in Harrisburg would request a formal public hearing on
the roundabout. Even though construction has begun, the group says it will move
forward with its fight.
Construction on the roundabout will last about six months,
said Jan Semler, Swarthmore College's director of capital planning and
construction.
The new inn, which also sparked some opposition because it
will have a liquor license, is expected to open in 2016.
Swarthmore Borough is dry, but the inn will include a
restaurant with a liquor license. A voter referendum in 2001 allowed for a
liquor license, but only in a hotel in a restaurant on the college campus. The
possibility of a bar in Swarthmore also led to a lawsuit from concerned
residents, though a Delaware County judge this year upheld the exception to the
borough's dry status.
Jacobs, the borough council president, said there had been
opportunities for residents to support and oppose the project at a number of
meetings over the last several years.
"I don't think that the inn and restaurant and college
store are going to dramatically change the character of the town," he
said. "I guess in one sense I think there will be significant
improvements, but in another sense I don't think they will really change the
positive character of the town at all."
Source: Philly.com
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