Isn't it about time that the Mayor started seeing  through the anointed
vision of Penn Praxis?

Al Krigman

This, from today's Philadelphia  Bulletin:

Developers, Community Groups Battle Over Waterfront  'Vision Plan'


Having Blurred ‘Vision’
By JENNY DeHUFF, The  BulletinWednesday, April 22, 2009

Philadelphia — Fears of the  Philadelphia City Planning Commission (PCPC)
allowing the destruction of  important waterfront entities bubbled over
during its monthly meeting yesterday  in Center City.

As part of its “vision plan” for the Central Delaware,  Penn Praxis, the
University of Pennsylvania body contracted to organize a  civic-led planning
process, has proposed creating a continuous, 7-mile trail  along the
riverfront, from Allegheny to Oregon avenues.

But increasing  “green” space and public access could mean the removal of
the Independence  Seaport Museum as a consequence.

Portions of the plan would  directly alter the makeup of Penn’s Landing,
which houses the museum. Renderings  include 8 acres of green landscape along
the waterfront. Whether or not this  includes destruction of the museum
remains unclear.


Two bills will be  introduced by City Councilman Frank DiCicco, D-1st, next
month to consider  remapping the Central Delaware riverfront to allow for
the Penn Praxis  plan.

The Nutter administration has expressed support for the action plan  for
the Central Delaware area as the city’s blueprint for waterfront  development.

Al Johnson, former vice president of AFSCME District Council  33 and a
business owner along the waterfront, called Penn Praxis Executive  Director
Harris Steinberg’s plan for the Central Delaware a “myopic  vision.”

“This is brain dead,” he testified before the commission. “I’m  not going
to stay for the overlays. It’s going to tear down the seaport museum.  We
need to go back to the drawing board.”

PCPC officials could not  confirm whether this was rumor or truth, but said
they spent many months in  community meetings to gather input.

Penn Praxis Executive Director Harris  Steinberg said the plan would
reconnect neighborhoods to the river’s edge, with  the intent to “honor the
river, design with nature, strike the right balance,  take a long view and
protect the public good.”

“For years, I’ve had a  vision for the Central Delaware waterfront with
neighborhoods, mixed use  development and true destination spots,” said Mr.
DiCicco. “Our goal was to  shape the political will for long-term growth. The
bill’s endeavor would do no  harm to the river, the property owners and the
community.”

“There’s  fiction going on here,” said Michael Sklaroff, former chair of
the Philadelphia  Historical Commission and current chair of the real estate
department at Ballard  Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll.

“Our major concern is that Harris  Steinberg has said there’s a
partnership between the public and private sector,”  said Mr. Sklaroff. “We 
don’t
have a partnership. You haven’t invited the private  sector to the table.”

Mr. Sklaroff said he invited Mr. Steinberg to  community development
workshops, but received no response.

“It’s the  sound of one hand clapping,” he told the commission. “The
theme is this, it  hasn’t been mapped, hasn’t been priced, and the people
affected have not been  identified so they know what’s involved.”

The legislation goes up for  City Council consideration next month.

Jenny DeHuff can be reached at _jdeh...@thebulletin.us_
(mailto:jdeh...@thebulletin.us)



**************Big savings on Dell XPS Laptops and Desktops!
(http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100126575x1220433404x1201394533/aol?redir=http:%2F%2Fad.doubl
eclick.net%2Fclk%3B214133109%3B36002181%3Bk)

Reply via email to