Construction of
a $45 million Philadelphia Housing Authority headquarters in North Philadelphia
is officially underway.
The planned five-story building in North Philadelphia
will replace the agency’s Center City location and occupy about 136,000
square feet on a triangular site on the east side of Ridge Avenue between
Jefferson and Master Streets.
Officials
touted the project at a groundbreaking Tuesday as the largest economic
development project to land in the area since the 1960s and one of the
largest PHA has undertaken in recent years.
“This is a real
shot in the arm for this neighborhood,” said City Council President Darrell L.
Clarke.
The
neighborhood, locally known as Sharswood-Blumberg, is in the midst of a $500
million redevelopment by PHA. The headquarters is meant to act as an
economic driver for rebuilding the community.
The glass and
terracotta building will house many of PHA’s 1,200 employees. A ground floor
will have a bank and a cafe. The location will also feature 50 parking spaces
and 18 Indego bike-share parking docks along Jefferson.
Designs for the
building, to be constructed by Shoemaker Construction Co. and Synterra Ltd., came under harsh scrutiny last fall, when the city’s
Civic Design Review Committee lambasted the plan. Some committee members argued
that the square office building was too “suburban looking” and ignored the
triangular shape of the space it would occupy. The committee asked the
designers to consider its suggestions and return. At a meeting in
October, the committee approved a design similar to the original.
PHA Director
Kelvin Jeremiah said the groundbreaking represented a triumph over multiple
hurdles, from arguments over the design of the building to the process of
securing through eminent domain 1,300 properties to make way for the
headquarters and new PHA housing.
“Some said this
day would never happen. Others were critical of the design. Others said we
should move out of here, but let me tell you: We are here and this is
happening,” Jeremiah said.
Jeremiah said
the building is set to be completed in the fall of 2018 and is fully funded
through a $30 million bond and $15 million from PHA. The headquarters will
become an anchor for the neighborhood transformation plan, which aims to create
a mix of 1,200 affordable, market rate, and rental housing units. A supermarket
is to open at Ridge and Jefferson in 2018 and PHA recently bought the Vaux High
School building, which will reopen to a ninth grade class in the fall.
Mayor Kenney
said the development shows the city’s commitment to longtime residents in a
neighborhood where, a few blocks south, newly constructed, more expensive homes
are rapidly rising.
“We can all coexist, but we need to coexist
equally, and I think this investment in this spot right now will set down a
standard that this neighborhood may change, but it’s not going to change
everything,” Kenney said. “The folks who have lived here … and contributed to
this neighborhood will continue to do so.”
Harold Reading,
69, has lived on the 2200 block of Ingersoll Street since he was a baby.
Growing up, he
said, his block had close to 30 houses on it. Now there are five, scattered
among overgrown grassy lots.
“We were all
one big happy family; now it’s a ghost town,” said Reading, who attended the
groundbreaking and said he was ecstatic about the development plans. PHA sent
him home with one of the ceremonial groundbreaking shovels.
“Look, I was
here when the riots happened, and I’ve seen a whole lot of other things,” he
said. “I thought the neighborhood was just going to be a forgotten place.”
Source: Philly.com
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