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2008-08-18

CITY SERVICES
The August PDAC update has been posted. read it here under the City Services section.  Click Here
7:18 pm edt 

2008-08-06

CITY SERVICES
How to make a police roll-call complaint

http://webmail.registeredsite.com/agent/mobmain?mobmain=1
3:55 am edt 

COMMUNITIES


Dear PlanPhilly member,
A PennPraxis-led analysis of what it will take to make casino site designs compatible with principles and values that were identified during the central Delaware civic visioning process headlined the last week’s top news.
Part I: News
Casino Workshop Concludes
Experts in transportation, sustainability, infrastructure and ecology rough out plan for making proposed casino plans compliant with civic vision and action plan. Other coverage: (1) Workshop underway; (2) How to make casino designs fit vision. Post your comments.
See other coverage in Daily News Local Page, DN Editorial Page, DN blog Philly Clout, Inquirer, and Metro.
Dilworth House process grinds on
Licenses & Inspections review board could soon rule on 16-story Washington Square condo; legal fight might then ensue. Post your comments.
Transit Oriented Design push in Philadelphia
NeighborhoodsNow is managing the planning and civic engagement process for the area around the 46th Street El station. Post your comments.
Looking beyond the exterior facade
Historical Commission's recommendation will have consequences for historic buildings that might have interiors deemed worthy of preserving. Post your comments.
Temple U. station gets a once-over
The challenge of bringing transit oriented revitalization to the area around 9th and Berks. Post your comments.
 
Part II: Events
Aug. 4-Oct. 31: Ed Bacon Foundation | 3rd Annual Student Design Competition
Aug. 6: Community Design Collaborative Open House
Aug. 13
:
Zoning Code Commission
Sept. 14
:
Bike Philly -- register today!

Best until next week,
Matt Golas, Managing Editor

**If you find this update valuable, please forward to your friends. If you haven't subscribed, do so by clicking here.
3:53 am edt 

BEAUTIFIACTION

HAWTHORNE MORE GREEN WITH FUTURE CITY PARK

http://webmail.registeredsite.com/agent/mobmain?mobmain=1
3:49 am edt 

COMMUNITY

Check out walkscore, a rating site for walkability in Philadelphia neighborhoods.

http://walkscore.com/rankings/Philadelphia
3:47 am edt 

CITY SERVICES

Harris Steinberg on Philly's re-energized Planning Commission.

Date: 6/24/2008

By: Brad Linder

Harris Steinberg heads Penn Praxis the clinical consulting arm of the University of Pennsylvania School of Design. Steinberg teaches city and regional planning at Penn. He also helped organize the Philadelphia Inquirer's 2003 public forum to explore the future of Penn's Landing and the Philadelphia Daily News' 2006 casino forum.

What steps does Mayor Nutter need to take to give the Planning Commission the power it needs to make a difference?

Mayor Nutter has called for all development proposals to start at the Planning Commission. This is a very significant proposal. Furthermore, he's requiring traffic and transportation studies for all projects that the commission will review. He is creating a rational review and approval process that begins with professionals. This has not been the case up until now.

In addition, he is calling for the formation of a Design Review Commission that will play a role in responding to the aesthetic impacts of si gnificant projects on the built environment. He has also indicated that he will ask City Council for a change to the Charter to grant more power to the commission. Currently, the Planning Commission is only advisory. Were he to grant it review and approval authority over development projects such as the Historical Commission has over buildings on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places, this would be a significant reform of the existing system.

Currently City Council and the Zoning Board of Adjustment have had control over planning while the Planning Commission has served an advisory role. Why isn't this working?

Council is susceptible to political pressure and lobbying (from both developers and community groups) and the resultant projects that were approved were not healthy ones on the whole. Rather than plan thoughtfully for the city or neighborhoods, City Council and the Zoning Board of Adjustment viewed projects on a case by case basis. In ge neral, the prevailing philosophy was that if we turned down developers, the city would shut down.

It was not a progressive way to make a city. We ended up with the Disney Quest
hole at 8th and Market, plans for extremely tall residential towers along the waterfront on large exposed parking podiums and other projects that do not contribute to the quality of life in Philadelphia in a substantive fashion.

Why is it important to have a centralized body overseeing development in a city like Philadelphia?

Planning and development go hand in hand. Well designed cities and places are desirable places to live, work and play. Philadelphia has a long legacy of sound urban planning that goes back to William Penn's original plan for the city in 1683. He created a strong framework for growth that balanced public good (our five original public squares and the street grid) and private development that has withstood the test of 350-years of time.

Ove r the years, particularly in the last 16 years, we've allowed the private sector to determine the physical form of the city with little to no oversight or guidance by professional planners who are trained to ensure that the public good is being represented. This, coupled with an antiquated zoning code, the tradition of councilmatic prerogative and successive mayoral administrations that saw any development as good development, precipitated the devolution of Philadelphia's planning environment into one in which development proposals were being reviewed and adjudicated in City Council or the Zoning Board of Adjustments. Neither of these bodies have the skills or expertise to make these decisions and thus many projects such as a Wal-Mart on the waterfront and parking garages along Chestnut Street were permitted without understanding their impact on traffic, pedestrian amenities, storm water management, and urban form.

Empowering the Philadelphia City Planning Commission to over see all development in the city is significant. To be a city of choice in today's economy is to place strong emphasis in quality of life. The City Planning Commission is uniquely positioned to oversee development
within the broader context of place and economic development.

http://www.whyy.org/news/itsourcity.html

3:15 am edt 

CITY SERVICES

PDAC UPDATE

August 7, 2008 - 3RD DISTRICT POLICE CAPTAIN TOWN HALL MEETING - Weccacoe Playground, 400 blk. Catharine St. - 7-9PM
 
August 12, 2008 - SOUTH DIVISION INSPECTOR TOWN HALL MEETING - New Hope Temple Baptist Church - 711 S. 12th - 6-8PM
 
 
No PDAC July 2008 Meeting.
 
Remember: Police Statistics for each district can be accessed through website ppdonline.org

2:29 am edt 


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Hawthorne Empowerment Coalition
1318 Catharine St -Philadelphia, PA 19147
Phone: 215-735-1225
General Email: info@hecphilly.org
Zoning-Specific Email: zoning@hecphilly.org