Set along a stretch of strip malls, the baseball field and
wooded lot in Brookhaven Borough appear out of place.
Now the land - southwest of Edgmont Avenue between Dutton
Mill Road and Coebourn Boulevard - is slated to become yet another shopping
center.
Some residents are speaking out against a proposal to build
a supermarket, restaurant, and retail space on part of a 56-acre lot in the
highly developed Delaware County community.
What might be a routine debate over a shopping center in a
faster-growing community is, for Brookhaven, the largest project in recent
memory.
The proposal to develop one of the borough's only large
parcels of open space has also become a discussion about the future of
Brookhaven, which grew rapidly in the 1950s and 1960s but has remained largely
unchanged for several decades.
"Why do we need more retail development?" said Dan
Gallo, a resident who is speaking out against the plans. "We can't keep
our stores open anyway. We have closed storefronts and empty lots. Why are we
developing more?"
With little space left to grow, new development is rare in
Brookhaven. The borough has 8,000 residents and an already-crowded commercial
corridor on Edgmont Avenue.
"If you need to build something in Brookhaven, it's
probably got to be in someone's side yard," said Mary McKinley, the
borough secretary.
The Chester Water Authority plans to sell its open space on
Edgmont Avenue to developers, who propose a Giant Supermarket, LA Fitness,
restaurant, and retail space. The lot is across the street from a current Giant
store; the supermarket would relocate to a larger space in the new development.
As residents post lawn signs, hold protests, and pack public
meetings, most of their elected officials are keeping quiet.
Several borough council members did not return messages left
last week. Mike Maddren, the borough's solicitor, said he advised council
members against speaking publicly on the plans before they vote.
That vote could come as soon as next month, he said, but the
council will take time to review engineering studies and address concerns about
traffic and other issues.
"A lot of questions were raised" at a public
hearing last month, Maddren said, "and they have a lot to consider."
One councilwoman, Janice Sawicki, distributed fliers to
residents before last month's hearing that were critical of the rezoning
proposal.
Sawicki said she was not opposed to development in
Brookhaven. But she wants it to be done carefully. In 2009, the borough adopted
design standards intended to guide the redevelopment of its dated strip malls,
some of which are dilapidated and vacant storefronts.
"We knew how old our shopping centers are and that they
need to be redeveloped," Sawicki said.
The borough set lofty goals and visited Main Line
communities to see how they regulated development to encourage attractive
streetscapes and pedestrian-friendly settings.
"We were thinking generations down the road, what would
you want your town to look like if the town was being built today?" said
Mike Ruggieri, a former borough council member.
A 2009 report from the Delaware County Planning Department
named the Chester Water Authority property now slated for development as the
borough's largest privately owned open property and noted that it was much
larger than any publicly owned open space in Brookhaven. The report, which said
Brookhaven already had less than the recommended amount of open space,
suggested using that land for recreation.
Ruggieri said he feels that work has been forgotten. The
proposed shopping center does not follow the borough's adopted design
standards.
Developer Robert Hill, of New Jersey-based Retail Sites, did
not return messages about the project. Preliminary plans submitted to the
borough propose more than 151,000 square feet of retail space and about 770
parking spaces on 26 acres of the 56-acre property.
The existing baseball field, which the borough leases on
Edgmont Avenue, would be relocated to about five acres on another side of the
property. The Chester Water Authority would keep the remaining land.
Though the project has attracted attention this summer,
McKinley, the borough secretary, said the process would take time.
"It's just a huge, huge project," she said.
"And a lot of things have to be done."
Source: Philly.com
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