(From left) Developers Bruce McCall Jr., Ken Weinstein,
and Nancy Deephouse, stand on the 100 block of Price Street in Germantown on
Monday, Mar. 16 2015. The trio is part of Jumpstart Germantown, a mentoring
program for developers which includes a two million dollar line of credit to
help renovate homes in the area. Andrew Thayer / For the Inquirer
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When developer Ken Weinstein meets with prospective
tenants for his commercial buildings, he says, the first question they ask is
"about the condition of Germantown," the historic Northwest
Philadelphia neighborhood where decades of disinvestment continue to take a
toll on housing.
Weinstein, whose focus as a commercial redeveloper makes
him acutely aware how blighted blocks can affect nearby businesses, said Monday
that he was launching "Jumpstart Germantown," an effort to push
residential redevelopment "to where it should be."
The plan, expected to get underway in April, is to
"unleash a force of small residential developers to renovate properties
throughout the neighborhood," he said.
Weinstein has developed residential and commercial sites
in the region for 25 years and has proposed a controversial renovation of the
Germatown YWCA into affordable senior housing. His firm, Philly Office Retail,
has rehabbed more than 200 vacant and deteriorated properties and manages
600,000 square feet-plus of commercial space.
There are three pieces to "Jumpstart
Germantown," which he believes could result in returning 50 residential
properties at a time to the market:
A mentoring program with at least eight small developers,
to be held at least three times a year.
A small-developers network that, among other goals, would
get rehabbers and investors communicating, Weinstein said. "We don't talk
to one another, and there is no reason for it. We are not in competition."
And financing, namely a $2 million credit line from
JPMorgan Chase that he said would be parceled out to the small developers to
acquire and renovate homes for sale or as rental properties. "Financing is
the biggest obstacle for small developers," he said, adding that details
of the program would be worked out soon.
There will be no government involvement, he said:
"Government partnership slows us down, and the strings attached tend to
hold us back."
Nor will there be appraisals involved in property
acquisition. "We know these neighborhoods," Weinstein said.
Loretta Witt of Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Fox
& Roach Realtors, who has lived in Germantown for 45 years, welcomed the
plan, saying neighborhood residents should "feel good about this
transparent, smart, long-term, goal-oriented approach" to revitalization.
"Development is good," Witt said. "Private
investment in our neighborhood is good. PHA [Philadelphia Housing Authority],
with the federal government, is developing homes at Queen Lane and Pulaski
Avenue. That is good. Our residential blocks are all the better for this
investment."
Garlen Capita, president of Germantown United Community
Development Corp., called the plan "a great opportunity and much
needed," noting that "there is not a lot of organized effort" in
residential redevelopment.
"This would be the start of something that would
result in long-term investment and growth," Capita said.
Even what looks like progress can be fleeting. Her
street, long on the upswing, suffered a setback when three houses went into
foreclosure. "It is an economically difficult situation," she said;
stabilization through the program will help.
In an improving real estate climate, investors are at
work in Germantown, "but giving them added resources should increase
activity, resulting in more properties being rescued and rehabbed," said
Ruth Feldman of Weichert Realtors McCarthy Associates, who sells there.
The effort will "lead to an influx of new residents,
which should lead to increased and upgraded commercial activity, which will
spur more investment/demand," she said.
Capita said the program targets not the big guys, but
people "like the police officer on my street who invests in
properties."
That includes developers such as Nancy Deephouse, a
part-time math teacher who lives in the neighborhood. She started rehabbing
properties in 2009 with a condo in the Art Museum area and has done a couple
Germantown projects.
"I've always been interested in being in business
for myself, and in the design elements of real estate," said Deephouse.
And also Bruce McCall of Mount Airy, a systems
administrator who has been dabbling in real estate since 2005, when he bought a
duplex he currently rents out.
McCall said that his efforts "have everything to do
with the customer," whether buyer or renter, and that when he decides what
a renovation should entail, "he puts himself in the buyer's shoes."
Witt said the effort will encourage responsible
development in Germantown: "We want investors to say: 'Yes, I am entering
a neighborhood of good citizens, and to the best of my ability, I will
develop/renovate a house of which both I and the community can be proud.'
"
PROGRAM
HIGHLIGHTS
There
are three elements to "Jumpstart Germantown":
A
mentoring program
with at least eight small developers at a time, to be held at least three times
a year.
A
small-developers network
that would get rehabbers and investors communicating.
Financing, namely a $2 million credit
line from banks that will be parceled out to the small developers to acquire
and renovate homes for sale or as rental properties.
Source: Philly.com
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