Norristown has assets that other towns would envy:
Excellent transportation access, proximity to employment centers, the seat of
one of the state's wealthiest counties.
Yet it has not enjoyed the prosperity of its counterparts
in Bucks, Chester, and Delaware Counties - Doylestown, West Chester, and Media,
respectively - and Norristown has issues that no other town would envy,
including high crime, poverty, and property-tax rates.
But after years of false starts, regional planners think
that a major highway-construction project could be just the thing that can get
the municipality on the road to recovery.
On May 17, the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission approved
funding for construction of a new exit off I-276 near milepost 331 that will
link up with a planned extension of Lafayette Street. The interchange is
expected to be completed by 2024, and the Lafayette Street extension is due to
open by 2019. Together, the projects will cost about $165 million, and
officials believe they will go a long way toward luring new development.
"I think it's going to have a very positive
effect," Valerie Arkoosh, a Montgomery County commissioner, said last
week. "It's already looking like this is going to be an example of 'If you
build it, they will come.' "
Indeed, Norristown officials say that they have received
overtures from developers who are interested in building on the land that will
become available with the Lafayette Street extension.
"We've had inquiries from about four developers so
far," said Jayne Musonye, director of planning and municipal development,
who said that they expressed interest in building properties ranging from
condos to a hotel.
But experts say that revitalizing the municipality is no
done deal.
"The general trend right now is to go back to the
city," said John Landis, chair of the University of Pennsylvania's City
and Regional Planning Department. "Norristown is not Brooklyn. People are
not going back to Norristown as urban pioneers."
Officials cite neighboring Conshohocken, which
experienced a major revitalization after the construction of the Blue Route
made it more accessible, as evidence that their plans for Norristown will work.
They expect that the new turnpike exit will be well-traveled. According to
estimates by the Delaware River Valley Planning Commission, the new interchange
will field 21,500 cars by 2040.
"This interchange will generate a lot of vehicles,
which is good for Norristown," said Matthew Emond, the county planning
commission's transportation chief.
But Landis said that the interchange would not generate
growth without requisite attractions, and that any new restaurants and retail
opening in Norristown would face stiff competition from existing shopping
centers in King of Prussia and Plymouth Meeting, which flank the municipality.
"Both of those already have turnpike and freeway
access, and both of them will fight to maintain their access to the
market," Landis said.
Eugenie Birch, the Nussdorf Professor at the University
of Pennsylvania's School of Design, said that she hoped that the attention
would translate into real improvement. The challenge, she said, was for the municipality
to create jobs that would lead people to move into Norristown, rather than
simply commute. And doing so will require that the city compete with
Conshohocken - the place it is trying to emulate.
"The question is how to create the kind of jobs that
people are going to want to walk to," said Birch. "Philadelphia and
Conshohocken have already captured some of that."
Still, there are signs that the municipality could make a
comeback. After roughly a half-century of population decline, Norristown grew
by roughly 10 percent from 2000 to 2010, and a number of new condo, townhouse,
and apartment complexes have sprung up throughout the municipality. Five Saints
Distilling, a small spirits company, recently opened in a converted old fire
station on East Main Street. And several other projects, including new trails
and the construction of a $275 million county government campus, are planned.
"All the work we've done for many years is finally
coming to fruition," said Musonye. "It's good to see."
But Landis said that while the county could revitalize
Norristown, it would be an uphill fight.
"If you can come together around the right
development proposal ... there is some room in the market," Landis said.
"[But] Norristown is a little late to the party, and the party is
over."
Source: Philly.com
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