Sharswood Community Planning Workshop

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Community Planning Workshop A background report for the AICP Community Planning Workshop of April 14, 2007. The workshop is part of the 2007 National Planning Conference of the American Planning Association, held in Philadelphia.

LOCATION 1

Public Housing Rec. Center Girard College 2

Neighborhood Overview The Community Planning Workshop will focus on the neighborhood, a low-to-moderate income community located in North Philadelphia. The neighborhood is located to the north of Girard Avenue, between Ridge Avenue and 27 th Streets. The northern boundary is Oxford St. Racial composition is predominantly African American. is an inner-city neighborhood that has struggled through decades of disinvestment and socio-economic distress. The housing stock in is typical of North Philadelphia. Most of the housing is comprised of two and three-story rowhomes made of brick with minimal decoration beyond the cornice. Some have wood front porches, as those found at the corner of 26 th and Master Streets. has many locational advantages which create potential for revitalization and renewal. is located just a mile from the highincome Center City area. The neighborhood is situated immediately to the north of Girard College (an historically significant campus shown at the bottom of the aerial photo), and it is directly east of the Brewerytown neighborhood where new and rehabilitated housing is being developed. On the aerial photo a public housing complex can be seen near the top of the image, along with large amounts of vacant land and vacant lots. Some of the vacant land has been developed with new homes since the photo was taken in 2005, but much of the vacant land remains as an opportunity for planning and community design. A major new rental housing development was recently completed in the heart of the neighborhood, and there is a strong community association representing. The community is blighted, distressed and affected by poverty and the fear of crime. However revitalization is taking hold and private developers are looking at possible development of market-rate housing. Residents are concerned about development pressures, and they want to maintain affordable housing. We will meet homeowners and civic leaders who are striving for neighborhood improvement. Neighborhood History, a small residential section of North Philadelphia, has a history similar to many working-class communities in Philadelphia. Prior to the mid-nineteenth century, the area around was wooded with little traffic. Ridge Avenue, a former Native American trail, allowed travelers from the City to connect to the hinterlands. Development began in with a major institution, Girard College. Founded in 1832 at the bequest of Stephen Girard, the City of Philadelphia created Girard College to educate poor, orphaned white boys in grades 1 to 12. As a result of a competition, the City chose Thomas U. Walter to design the school s Founders Hall, a massive Greek temple. Today, the walls of 3

Neighborhood History (continued) the campus provide a strong landmark and boundary to the neighborhoods that surround it, and the school offers an oasis to many students. The construction of Girard College coincided with widespread urbanization in the City. As the Industrial Revolution began to take hold, Philadelphia became its epicenter. Manufacturing companies, both large and small, began to spring up in North Philadelphia, offering thousands of jobs. Just about every item was soon made in Philadelphia, making it the Workshop of the World. One such product was beer. German immigrants settling in Philadelphia helped create the burgeoning German brewing industry. The large brick and brownstone breweries featured ornate detailing typical of German architecture and their clustering created the neighborhood of Brewerytown. The breweries employed hundreds of workers, with most living near the factories in Brewerytown and the neighboring community. The housing in these communities was built by the breweries themselves and large investors who built speculatively, especially William Elkins and P.A.B. Widener. The breweries prospered with the Schuylkill River as the water source and several railroad lines built by Elkins and Widener along s western edge. As North Philadelphia developed, Ridge Avenue became an important commercial corridor linking Center City and the northern neighborhoods. The existence of a strong commercial spine, steady manufacturing jobs in the community and the creation of schools and other institutions allowed to thrive after the Civil War. Besides the breweries to the west, several factories existed in and provided jobs, including Philadelphia Traction Company, Pennsylvania Lawnmower Works, a planning mill and iron foundry and the Freihofer Vienna Baking Company. The neighborhood had many institutions, including the Women s Medical College and hospital, just north of Girard College, several public schools and churches that reflected various denominations. Methodist, Baptist, German Evangelical, Catholic, Presbyterian and Methodist Episcopal churches could be found scattered throughout the neighborhood at the turn of the twentieth century. Professional baseball is part of s history. Jefferson Park, also known as Athletic Park (26 th & Jefferson) was home to the Philadelphia Athletics of the American Association. The site is now the Athletic Recreation Center. The A s also played nearby in Columbia Park between 1901 and 1908 (site bounded by 29 th, Columbia, 30 th, Oxford in the nearby Brewerytown neighborhood). After World War II, the neighborhood was negatively impacted by suburbanization, white flight and population decline; and public housing became a major new element in. Unemployment and poverty increased substantially. A large number of homes in were abandoned because of disinvestment, neglect and loss of population. During the 1960s, local residents protested against the admission policies of Girard College; and as a result, the rules were relaxed to offer admission to boys and girls of all races. Today there are many positive trends including an active community association, rising home values and new rental housing complexes. The City s Neighborhood Transformation Initiative (NTI) resulted in large scale demolition of vacant homes and aggressive land acquisition by the City, facilitating new development and making the area more attractive for private investors. Many greening projects have been implemented under NTI. 4

BOUNDARIES, SCHOOLS, PARKS 5

LAND USE 6 Generalized Land Use

POPULATION LOSS 2,000,000 1,800,000 1,600,000 1,400,000 1,200,000 1,000,000 800,000 600,000 400,000 200,000 0 10,000 9,000 8,000 7,000 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 Philadelphia 1980 1990 2000 1980 1990 2000 7

2000 POPULATION BY RACE White African American Asian Latino Other 0% 3% 1% 5% African American African American 91% 4% 8% 2% African American White 42% 44% Philadelphia 8

NUMBER OF RESIDENTIAL SALES 9 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Census Tract 138 Census Tract 139

MEDIAN RESIDENTIAL SALE PRICE 90000 80000 70000 60000 50000 40000 30000 138 139 City 20000 10000 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 10

VACANCY RATE 0.4 0.35 0.3 0.25 0.2 0.15 0.1 0.05 0 1990 2000 Tract 138 Tract 139 City 11

DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE Philadelphia Households Households in 2000 590,071 1,743 Average Household Size in 2000 2.48 2.63 Age % under 18 years of age, 2000 21.3 24.4 % over 64 years of age 14.1 16.7 Housing Housing Units 1990 674,899 3,262 Housing Units 2000 661,958 2,553 Owner Occupied Housing Units 1990 373,601 909 Owner Occupied Housing Units 2000 349,633 671 Commute to Work Workers 2000 569,761 1,127 -- Drove alone 280,315 323 -- Carpool 73,156 129 -- Transit 144,936 530 -- Walk 51,564 102 Socio Economic Median Family HH Income 1999 37,036 18,522 % population below poverty level, 1999 22.9 44.7 % unemployed 2000 10.9 21.2 Tracts 138, 139 12

Planning Issues -- Development Opportunities Major vacant sites and infill opportunties House types; quality of design Target populations for new housing: income levels and possible mixed-income housing Commercial Revitalization Ridge & Cecil B. Moore Avenues Commercial District Lack of shopping in Rising property values and market rate development Gentrification Affordable housing Impact on real estate taxes; impact on elderly homeowners Rental Housing vs. Homeownership Public Housing in Bringing the population together as a whole Institutions as Neighborhood Anchors Role of neighborhood schools and Girard College in community life Design of institutional buildings and community facilities in Crime and Safety Youth Activities, recreation Community action; town watch Designing for defensible space Community Heritage and History Commemorating neighborhood landmarks and the role of in Philadelphia s history African-American History Professional baseball in and North Philadelphia 13 Public Transportation Bus routes are on the periphery of the neighborhood Population is dependent on public transit Note: Issues are preliminary, for background purposes. Specific discussion topics will be provided at the workshop.

Philadelphia City Planning Commission http://www.philaplanning.org Janice Woodcock, AIA, AICP, Executive Director Gary Jastrzab, Deputy Executive Director Richard Redding, Director, Community Planning Division Questions about the Community Planning Workshop? Contact Michael Roepel, Community Planner Michael.roepel@phila.gov Tel. 215 683 4637 14