A 3-1/2-year battle over expansion at Villanova
University has ended with a vote by Radnor Township commissioners to approve
new dormitories, parking lots, and a performance center for the school.
The board voted 4-2, with one abstention, Monday night to
approve the $225 million project.
Work is expected to begin in the fall on the parking
lots, and two dorms near Lancaster Avenue are slated to be open by 2019, Chris
Kovolski, a university assistant vice president, said.
The dorms will house close to 1,200 students, most of
them seniors, and will include a bistro, apparel store, and convenience store,
he said. The new dorms will allow 83 percent of the undergraduate population to
live on campus, he said. Currently, about two-thirds of the 6,500 students do
so.
"It will provide important on-campus living options
that we know students and their families are looking for," Kovolski said.
The school also is building a pedestrian crossing over
Lancaster Avenue to minimize traffic disruption. The plan's opponents are
concerned the bridge will be underused.
The budget and timetable for the performance center are
pending, he said, because the project is dependent on donor money.
More students living on campus should reduce the numbers
commuting from Radnor, said Township Commissioner Bill Spingler. It also will
result in a significant amount of money in permits and fees, he said, and makes
use of space along the heavily traveled road that currently is used for
parking.
Spingler made winning approval for the plan central to
his work on the board, and with that accomplished he plans to resign Monday.
"I put my life on hold for the last year and a half
to make sure I was there to vote for this," he said.
Although it was clear that the plan's supporters had the
votes to pass it, opponents put up an aggressive fight.
They argued that the dormitories would not decrease the
number of students living off campus in Radnor, said Commissioner Richard
Booker, and that the construction work would be highly disruptive. The larger
issue, opponents said, is the concern that Villanova doesn't give enough back
to the township.
The university is exempt from many taxes and does not
make a payment in lieu of taxes, as some universities do.
Spingler said the construction project is expected to
generate $5 million in permits and fees for Radnor, as well as money for
traffic lights and parks and recreation. Some say that doesn't make up for the
services the school uses.
"That's a pittance," Booker said. "We
spend more of that on police in a couple months in supporting Villanova on
patrolling."
Little can hinder the project now that it has the
commissioners' approval, though.
"Going forward, they won. They're going to
build," said Sara Pilling, who lives less than three blocks from the
campus and was active for 40 months fighting the plan. "What kind of a
godawful mess is it going to be?"
Source: Philly.com
No comments:
Post a Comment