For Paseo Verde, APM chose to build on an empty lot that
Philadelphia Gas Works employees were using for parking right beside SEPTA’s
Temple University Regional Rail station. | Photo by Jeffrey Totaro
On a recent afternoon, Latifa Patton prepares three giant
aluminum baking pans full of aromatic macaroni and cheese with vegetables. The
kitchen of her three-bedroom townhouse in the mixed-income Paseo Verde
development in North Philadelphia is lined with succulents. The living room is
an oasis of potted palms, orchids and colorful cushions.
Patton says people ask how she can afford to outfit her
home this way. She makes $7.50 an hour at a work-study job; and with the help
of student loans, she supports her nine-year-old daughter and two-year-old son
while earning a degree in social work at Community College of Philadelphia. “I
go to thrift stores. I’m creative,” she says. “I love my house. It’s why I have
to make it comfortable.”
Before she was accepted as one of Paseo Verde’s first
tenants for its subsidized apartments, Patton and her children were homeless
and had been living in a shelter for a year. Now, she pays just $302 a month in
rent at Paseo Verde.
The Paseo Verde development, which cost $48 million and was
finished in December of 2013, combines environmental sensibilities with the
principals of sustainable community development. The mixed-income, mixed-use
project includes 120 affordable and market-rate apartments. The block-long
building is also what developers refer to as mixed-use. In addition to the
residential units, there are businesses facing the street on the ground floor.
The project is also certified LEED Platinum, the highest rating
given out for sustainable design by the U.S. Green Building Council, under the
Neighborhood Development (LEED ND) system, a designation for large-scaled
mixed-use projects by a single developer. This standard encourages the
implementation of design principles that aim to reduce water, energy and car
use in a neighborhood, rather than in a single building.
The driving force behind the project has its offices in Paseo
Verde’s south side. Asociación Puertorriqueños en Marcha (APM), a
Latino-based health, human services, community and economic development
nonprofit organization, was founded by a group of Puerto Rican veterans
returning from the Vietnam War in 1970 who wanted to provide services for their
community in Philadelphia.
When Nilda Ruiz, now the organization’s president and
CEO, was young, her mother wouldn’t allow her to go to the lower east section
of North Philadelphia alone. This area was, like its neighbors, devastated by
the gradual drain of manufacturing jobs.
“It had a lot of drugs, a lot of crime,” says Ruiz, who
grew up mostly in nearby Hunting Park. “[It had] abandoned lots. It wasn’t a
safe place for kids to walk around.”
She says these early impressions give her a greater
appreciation for the changes in the intervening years.
APM became involved in housing in 1989, beginning with 24
affordable rental units in North Philadelphia. Rose Gray, who started working
at APM as Director of Housing, led the first housing project, The city, she
says, had demolished many homes in an effort at urban renewal: “More houses
were being taken down.” The houses that remained were dilapidated, but because
the homes were inexpensive, many people with limited
means moved there, including a number of Puerto Ricans.
APM is interested in what Ruiz calls “holistic”
development. That meant recruiting a credit union and a supermarket to the area
that specialized in Hispanic food products, but also a turn for APM to
designing housing projects with an eye on health and sustainability goals.
In 2011, APM dedicated its first green development, the
LEED Gold Sheridan Street Homes, a block of 13 sleek,
eco-friendly homes designed by Interface Studio Architects for the Community
Design Collaborative’s 2005 Affordable Infill Housing Design Challenge. Shortly
afterward, APM attracted an innovative new partner, the Jonathan Rose
Companies, as a partner on creating Paseo Verde. The green real estate policy,
planning, development, owner’s representative and investment firm, which has
multiple offices around the country, completed construction of the 222-unit,
mixed-use, mixed-income Via Verde development in the Bronx the same year
construction began in Philadelphia.
For Paseo Verde, APM chose to build on an empty lot that
Philadelphia Gas Works employees were using for parking right beside SEPTA’s
Temple University Regional Rail station. The placement of Paseo Verde in a
location that will encourage the use of public transit is one attribute
contributing to its LEED rating. Other features that contributed included both
the use of a green roof and its lesser-known cousin, a “blue roof.”
Lined with the same rubber material used at the bottom of
a swimming pool, the blue roof can hold up to 20,000 gallons of rainwater,
which it slowly releases through three drains—an important addition to any
building given Philadelphia’s stormwater issues. The water management system is
so effective that the city’s water department has waived most of its stormwater
utility fees, which building owners pay to cover the costs of managing their
runoff. The comprehensive stormwater management plan also includes permeable
pavement. Paseo Verde also boasts solar panels; local, recyclable and renewable
materials; formaldehyde-free materials to enhance indoor air quality; and low-
or no-VOC paints and primers. The project’s envelope, which refers to the walls
of the building, and mechanical systems are also energy-efficient. Local firm
Wallace Roberts and Todd was responsible for the award-winning design.
“The completion of Paseo Verde brought Philadelphia closer to
being America’s greenest city,” says Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter, “and
continued our commitment to providing quality affordable housing.”
Between common areas and the individual units, based on the energy
model for the building, Paseo Verde’s “projected energy savings” is anticipated
to reach at least 25 percent, versus a code-compliant building.
“That is important because [for] occupants of affordable housing
[utility bills are] a higher cost of their monthly budget,” says Jon Jensen, an
advisor on the project at New Jersey-based MaGrann Associates. Jensen adds that
local and state governments with affordable housing funds have increasingly
given an edge to projects with green components, if not outright requiring
them.
The U.S.
Green Building Council (USGBC), developers of the LEED green
building rating system, says that 109,059 of the units registered under LEED
for Homes are considered market rate, versus 53,738 classified as affordable. A
separate nonprofit organization, the Green Building Certification Institute (GBCI),
acts as a third party to verify that a project has complied with the system. In
2010, at the beginning of the project, USGBC awarded the project an Affordable
Green Neighborhoods Grant for $27,665 as part of a national competition.
Paseo
Verde stands out in the greater Philadelphia area, according to Janet Milkman,
outgoing executive director of the Delaware Valley Green Building Council. For
a community organization to do all the work to meet LEED standards is, she
says, “really exemplary.”
The
building garnered so much respect from the DVGBC that it was one of the winners
of the 2014 Groundbreaker Awards, among other winners Shoemaker Green at the
University of Pennsylvania, and The Hamilton Family Children’s Zoo and Faris
Family Education Center: KidZooU.
Paseo
Verde “demonstrates that exceptional Sustainable Design (LEED ND Platinum and
LEED for Homes Platinum Certification) can be achievable for both affordable
and market-rate accessible housing,” the DVGBC wrote in September. “The project
helps reconnect this North Philadelphia neighborhood to the rest of the city
and region, and provides access to employment/economic opportunities.”
Milkman
hopes that the recognition the project received will inspire others. “APM went
above and beyond what a typical, cash-strapped nonprofit development
organization is going to do,” she says.
Paul
Freitag, who directs development for Jonathan Rose Companies, says Paseo
Verde’s design also focused on its effects on residents’ health.
“[People
with lower incomes] are also more impacted by environmental health factors,”
particularly asthma, he says. In response, Freitag says it pays to opt for
cleaner materials, encourage public transit use, or even design a building that
is built to encourage more people to take the stairs.
At
Paseo Verde, a health clinic and a pharmacy both rent space on the ground
floor. Sabri Ibrahim was looking for a location for the fourth branch of his
small chain, Pharmacy of America, when he heard about Paseo Verde. Ibrahim knew
the neighborhood well. He’d arrived at Temple in 1994, but, “If not for Paseo
Verde, I would not be there,” he says.
“It’s
not the safest area,” he concedes. “But, I think with Paseo Verde and
construction around it on this street and block, the immediate neighborhood is
definitely going to be a much better place to live in and do business in the
next couple years.”
APM’s
constituency is evolving. Increasingly, upwardly mobile Puerto Rican residents
have moved to the northeast and to Berks County. Today the neighborhood is
roughly split between African Americans and Latinos—no longer just Puerto
Rican—but also a number of resettled Palestinian refugees and Asian immigrants.
The
non-subsidized apartments at Paseo Verde, which comprise about three-fifths of
the building, are envisioned as “workforce housing,” Freitag says, for staff
and graduate students at adjacent Temple University. Temple’s presence has
increased housing prices in adjoining neighborhoods.
As
a first-generation college student, APM’s Ruiz says she had trouble connecting
her studies to what she wanted to do with her life. “That’s why I get excited
about mixed-income [neighborhoods],” she explains. “If you have a police
officer or a professor living next door,” they can help to answer questions
like, ‘What should my major be or if I want to work after high school, what
should I do?’ ”
Beth
Miller, executive director of the Community Design Collaborative, says APM has
done the long-term planning to ensure that their tenants with lower incomes
will not get pushed out.
“We
talk about the g-word [gentrification] and things like that, but they’re in
action preserving equity and affordability in a neighborhood that just had been
very much forgotten,” she says.
APM
has started planning to preserve and rehabilitate its original developments,
including retrofitting them to be more energy-efficient. Renovation, Gray says,
is less sexy than new construction, but equally important.
“We
believe in mixed-income, but managing so no one loses the opportunity to stay
in the community,” says Gray, now Senior VP, Community and Economic Development
for APM. “We didn’t do this for people to move out. We did this to create an
environment for them to stay.”
Source:
GridPhilly
No comments:
Post a Comment