Meetings, Forums, Town Halls

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Meetings, Forums, Town Halls

Germantown United CDC’s launch event

Repost from PlanPhilly

Germantown United CDC gets tough love from community rejuvenators

MARCH 1, 2012 | By AMY Z. QUINN

The community development experts who came to Northwest Philadelphia on Wednesday to meet with Germantown United Community Development Corp. and offer advice didn’t pull any punches in talking about the challenges ahead.

Everyone in the community won’t agree with what you’re doing — and they don’t have to, one advised.

Be willing to go to great lengths to get people involved — even if it means sometimes playing on their fears, another said.

Understand that gentrification will mean that some people will leave — and that’s not always a bad thing, yet another said.

And most of all, they offered, be ready to fight against low expectations — from within and without.

“People have low expectations, and it gives them an excuse not to engage,” said Colvin W. Grannum, president of the Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Corp., which began revitalization efforts in New York City in 1967.

Similar challenges

At the panel discussion, held on the Germantown Friends School campus, Grannum talked about some of the challenges the nation’s first community development corporation has faced in the 45 years since it was started by U.S. Senators Robert F. Kennedy and Jacob Javits.

While Bed-Stuy had riots that touched off its downward spiral, Germantown doesn’t have one signature traumatic event that spurred its decline. Decades of middle-class flight were worsened by Germantown Settlement’s corruption and neglect. However, many of the challenges are the same, Grannum said.

His group had success early on with residential development, but that alone won’t rebuild a community, panelists said.

“The easiest thing to do is build houses,” said Grannum, but the greater challenge is creating a mix of residential, commercial and community uses. Some startups will fail while others will thrive, but many different approaches should be tried.

In Bed-Stuy, the CDC has backed everything from a Pathmark supermarket to artist space and schools, aimed at keeping residents working and shopping in the neighborhood.

“People just got in the habit of going outside the community to shop,” he said. Then, they assumed that “if they put something here, it’s not going to be good anyway.”

That struck a chord with the audience in Germantown, where the desire for more upscale retail bumps against the reality of the lower-income shoppers who frequent the commercial corridors on Germantown and Chelten avenues.

A new direction ahead?

Still, there was acknowledgment that Germantown seems poised to make a change.

“Germantown has some real assets to build on, and there’s real potential to create an organization that has some lasting power,” said Rick Sauer, executive director of the Philadelphia Association of Community Development Corporations.

One thing Germantown has working for it is its history. Founded in 1683, the neighborhood is home to 15 historic sites, seven of which are National Historic Landmarks. Each year, more than 40,000 visitors and school children come to see the neighborhood’s offerings, said Barbara Hogue of Historic Germantown.

But despite being a Colonial Historic District, it’s difficult to draw outside tourists and even tougher to keep them in Germantown once they arrive. Hogue has applied for a grant through the Pew Charitable Trust’s Heritage Philadelphia Program, in hopes of creating a festival in 2013 around a theme of the struggle for freedom.

Stephen P. Mullin, a former finance and commerce director and now principal at Econsult, talked about the importance of controlling the real estate involved, whether through CDC ownership or in working with property owners who are also vested in the community.

Engage those who want to gripe

Some of the most practical advice came from Sandy Salzman of the New Kensington CDC, which has put in 27 tough years trying to craft new development and a renewed sense of identity in Fishtown, Kensington and Port Richmond.

“There are always people who are going to get involved when they have something to gripe against,” she said. Her message: Even if residents come to the table to fight against something — in her neighborhood, it was the SugarHouse Casino — seize the chance to keep them involved.

Salzman said when her group started to notice artists and other creative professionals moving northward from Old City and Northern Liberties, there was a concerted effort to court them.

“We decided that we could either capture them and try to get them to stay, or we could just watch them keep on moving along,” she said

So, they created the Frankford Avenue Arts District and events like the Kensington Kinetic Sculpture Derby. Now, they are now watching the neighborhood fashion itself a new identity.

An audience-submitted question asked what Germantown should do to attract better retailers in the face of proliferating nail salons and beauty shops. Salzman suggested creating a beauty and fashion district to encourage quality.

John Churchville, Germantown United CDC’s first president, called it the group’s “coming out party.”

Character, culture and competence will be the group’s touchstones, he said, pledging an environment of transparency and action.

“We’re not here to fight and to fuss and carry on,” he said. “We are here to get something done.”

NewsWorks has partnered with independent news gatherer PlanPhilly to provide regular, in-depth, timely coverage of planning, zoning and development news.

Permalink: https://whyy.org/articles/germantown-panel

Speak Up, Speak Out for Germantown at District Plan Meeting January 8th

Like each of the Philadelphia2035 District Plans, The Upper Northwest Plan is informed by a series of public meetings to ensure that the plan’s goals are compatible with community needs. Meetings will be held on weekday evenings in the District at transit-accessible locations. Explore the Upper Northwest District website.

The first public meeting will be:

Monday January 8, 2018, 6:30pm
7301 Germantown Ave, Philadelphia, PA 19119
Brossman Center, Lutheran Theological Seminary of Philadelphia

In the event of snow: If the School District of Philadelphia is closed or has early dismissal on January 8th, the meeting will be cancelled. The Philadelphia City Planning Commission will send an email when the meeting is rescheduled (Germantown United CDC will forward this to our subscribers).

How to get there:

  • Bus Route 23
  • Regional Rail Chestnut Hill West: Allen Lane Station
  • Regional Rail Chestnut Hill East: Sedgwick Station
  • Parking lot and accessible entrance available

How do you want to see Germantown grow and prosper? Be there to share your vision.

The plan will address topics like:

  • Housing
  • Jobs and businesses
  • Zoning (regulates what can be built where and what a property can be used for)
  • Transportation
  • Rec centers, parks, other city-owned properties
  • Protecting historic buildings and sites
  • And more!

At this first meeting, representatives from City Planning will present a summary of the information gathered so far about:

  • What each property is being used for (commercial, residential, single-family/multi-family, etc.)
  • The current zoning for every property
  • Information on District’s population and economy, including residents’ race, age, level of education, how many work within the district vs. outside, and more.
  • Then we’ll break into small groups to hear from attendees about strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and barriers.

Download a flyer to share with your neighbors >>

Can’t make it to the public meeting? Visit the Upper Northwest District page to participate online.

About the district

The Upper Northwest district, oriented around the Germantown Avenue commercial corridor, is known for its historic homes, tree-lined streets, and excellent public transportation. The district is situated to the east of Wissahickon Park. Key issues are revitalizing greater Germantown, supporting historic preservation efforts throughout the district, planning for transit-oriented development along the Chestnut Hill East and Chestnut Hill West rail lines and at Wayne Junction Station, improving the pedestrian-oriented Germantown and Chelten commercial corridors, and retrofitting an historically and architecturally significant housing stock to meet the needs of contemporary households.

Germantown Business Community Workshop March 30

We’re organizing a series of workshops and general meetings for new and existing businesses in Germantown. Our first event is a virtual workshop on Thursday, March 30 at 5:30pm. Register on Zoom: https://bit.ly/gubizmar23. We’ll be joined by guest presenters from the Urban League of Philadelphia, The Business Center, and the City’s Commerce Department to talk about lending opportunities, grants, and other resources specifically for small businesses. A Q&A will follow.

Questions? Contact Matthew George at 215-856-4303 Ext. 5 or [email protected].

It is easy being green

GU’s Second Annual Forum is May 8, 2013 6-9pm at Flying Horse Center 312-316 West Chelten Avenue. Come see how you can make Germantown more Sustainable. Opening remarks by Councilwoman Cindy Bass. Space is limited, so please RSVP: [email protected].

PANELISTS

Robert Fleming Director of Sustainable Design at Philadelphia University. Dwayne Wharton Director of External Affairs, The Food Trust. Kelly Maillie PHS Roots to Re-Entry -Green Job Training and Placement Program Aine Doley and Emaleigh Doley, sisters and co-organizers of the W Rockland Street Project, a citizen-driven effort to revitalize one street in Southwest. Vivian Nabeta Director of Arts, Culture and Tourism for the City of New Haven, Connecticut, where they’ve launch Project Storefronts. Zack Bird, a Germantown-based artist and muralist who has developed a method to use faux finishing to cover graffiti. Christine Knapp, Director of Strategic Partnerships at the Philadelphia Water Department.

TRADE SHOW PARTICIPANTS

  • Awbury Arboretum
  • Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia
  • Friends of Vernon Park
  • Kelly Green
  • PhilaNOMA
  • Rebuilding Together Philadelphia
  • Sustainable Business Network
  • Tookany-Tacony-Frankford Watershed (TTF)
  • Wyck Historic House and Garden