City
Councilman Mark Squilla said in an email Monday that he will delay
consideration of a bill he introduced that would allow
taller buildings than current regulations permit to be constructed along
Philadelphia’s Delaware River waterfront.
Squilla’s
decision came shortly after Rockville, Md.-based developer K4
Associates LLC said in a release that it had requested the bill be held.
K4’s
plan for its 10-tower Liberty on the River development in South Philadelphia is
seen as a direct beneficiary of the measure, which had been scheduled to go
before Council’s Rules Committee on Tuesday.
The
bill, introduced last
month, would amend the Central Delaware Overlay zoning district to include new
“height bonuses.”
Leaders
of the Central Delaware Advocacy Group, a coalition of river-adjacent
neighborhood associations, and other critics have assailed Squilla’s proposal,
saying it runs roughshod over previously negotiated guidelines for waterfront
development.
By
late afternoon on Monday, about 370 people had posted responses on an online petition, calling on
Squilla to withdraw the legislation.
K4’s
proposed project would be built on 18 acres it acquired in 2015 from Sheet
Metal Workers Local 19, in addition to an eight-acre panel — covered partly by
the union’s meeting hall — that it is negotiating to buy from the labor group.
The
developer said in its statement that it plans on working over the summer with
neighboring communities and constituent parties to “enhance” the overlay district.
Source: Philly.com
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