The First African Baptist Church, which has been an
anchor in the Graduate Hospital community of South Philadelphia since 1906, has
sold its properties for $2.05 million.
The church and its ancillary parcels at the addresses of
1606 Christian St., 1608 Christian St. and 1609-19 Montrose St. were sold to a
local development group that has been involved in other Philadelphia projects,
according to Ken
Mallin of MPN Realty, who arranged the transaction. The buyer was
undisclosed and is not HOW Properties, which had been interested in buying the
property.
The property was part of a preservation battle in which
some of the church's members sought to thwart a sale and have it continue on as
a house of worship.
The pastor of the church, The Rev. Terrence
Griffith, had concluded the property deteriorated to the point where it was
no longer safe, according to published reports, which also said the church
could no longer afford to financially support the property and sought to sell
it.
Prospective buyers had intended to demolish the structure
to make way for a multi-family project but that was met with resistance.
The building was constructed 110 years ago and the
Philadelphia Historical Commission, against Griffith’s objections, placed the
property on its register of historic places last fall. In light of that, the
developer will have to preserve the structures.
While the church could be a candidate for a residential
conversion, an adjacent surface parking lot is ripe for new, ground-up
construction.
For now, the developer has not yet finalized any plans
and is now mostly focused on fixing the structural issues, Mallin said.
The Graduate Hospital neighborhood has been undergoing a
rapid transformation with new development activity as well adaptive re-use of
projects and is among one of the city's hottest areas.
Source: Philadelphia
Business Journal
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