Developers are hoping to build a 5-story apartment
building with a ground-floor restaurant on a vacant, triangular property at the
intersection of East Passyunk Avenue, 6th and Christian streets in Bella Vista.
Neighbors spent years trying to get the property
dedicated as a park. The property’s owner, Stuart Schlaffman, had previously allowed neighbors to clean up the property and
plant flowers and shrubs there, though he says that he’s always intended to
sell it. The Redevelopment Authority briefly made moves to try to acquire the
property from Schlaffman, who also owns Condom Kingdom on South Street, but
those plans were never realized.
Later, after the never-quite-a-park was dismantled and fenced off, excavators started
digging on the property in what seemed like preparation for a development.
Rumor was, they had simply made a mistake, and meant to dig at a property
across the street instead. Neighbors were concerned because the property, which
used to house a gas station, has environmental remediation needs.
Now, two developers really are hoping to build on the
property. Dan Rosin and Raphael Licht met with near neighbors to discuss the
proposal last week, according to Sam Olshin of Atkin Olshin
Schade, the architects for the project. The purpose of that meeting
was to get early feedback from the most-affected residents before a formal
presentation to Bella Vista Neighborhood Association scheduled for next
Tuesday.
Renderings of the proposal show a 57-foot
building, rising to 64 feet at the top of a pilothouse, with glassy restaurant
space on the ground floor. A commercial kitchen is included in the floor plans.
The renderings don’t include a number of residential units, but a zoning appeal says the developers are hoping to
build 12 apartments. No parking spaces are included.
Sam Olshin said that near neighbors’ concerns were
focused mostly on height and parking, and that the developers were willing to
talk through those concerns. A hearing before the zoning board—the current
proposal doesn’t conform to the height and lot-coverage limits of the CMX-2
zoning classification—is scheduled for January 6.
The final sale will depend on the acquisition of zoning
permits and the extent of environmental remediation required by the
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection.
Source: Plan
Philly
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