march 2013 / issue 47 gridphilly.com
S u S ta i n a b l e p h i l a d e l p h i a
t a k e o n e !
C h a n g i n g FaC e P r e s e r vat i o n
The
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House Rules Overbrook Farmâs fight for (and against) historical recognition
In tHe DaRk Growing, cooking and pickling oyster mushrooms
CommunIty CHest Investments you can believe in
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Nathaniel PopkinCo-editor of Hidden City Daily and senior writer of the film
documentary Philadelphia: The Great Experiment
Deneene C. BrockingtonDirector of Equal Dollars
Community Currency
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Human Development
FREE heirloom seeds and plants for your garden this season. The Philadelphia Seed Exchange, winner of Best of Phillyâs 2011 Best Garden Club Award, will be hosting a swap and information table. Everyone is encouraged to bring seeds, bulbs, tool and plants. Help build local food resiliency with open-pollinated heirloom seeds and plants!
SEED SWAP!HOSTED BY
Nic Esposito Urban Farmer and Novelist
Alex MulcahyGrid Publisher
Thursday
March 7Trinity Memorial Church22nd and Spruce Sts.
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benefitting Fair Food usually sells out. Just five weeks later on April 14 is the Philly Farm and Food Fest at the Pennsylvania Convention Cen-ter. Last year was a smash; more than 2,000 at-tended this spectacular gathering of farmers and local food purveyors. This year promises to be even bigger and better. Be sure to buy your ticket now and to check out an exclusive event guide in our April issue. When youâre there, donât forget to stop by the Grid booth and say hello.
alex j. mulcahy, [email protected]
Having already written some thoughts on preservation introducing the cover package on page 17, I thought Iâd catch
you up on some Grid happenings. Before I do, let me say how much we enjoyed collaborating with Hidden City Daily. Itâs likely many of you already know about their excellent journalistic work, but if you havenât visited hiddencityphila.org yet, I urge you to do so. Their love for the city, its buildings and people, shines through in every story, and I look forward to partnering with them again.
Speaking of websites worth visiting daily, gridphilly.com has been redesigned and re-launched. Thereâs a much cleaner interface (thank you to our designer, Danni Sinisi) and weâre in the process of ramping up our content production. We have to; there are just too many stories (and too few magazine pages) to do justice to Philadelphiaâs rapidly expanding sustainabil-ity scene. Weâd love to hear your thoughts on the new site, and if you learn of a story you think we should cover, please contact us at [email protected]. We get a lot of good ideas from readers.
March 7 will mark the return of Grid Alive, and Iâm pleased to announce we have a sponsor for the show: Clean Currents, an independently owned renewable energy company. Theyâre just getting their footing here in Philadelphia (theyâre based in Silver Spring, Md.), but Iâve met one of their co-founders, Gary Skulnik, a former Sierra Club and Greenpeace lobbyist and organizer, and theyâre committed to helping make Philadelphia a better place. Iâm excited to have them in the community.
Food lovers, you probably have the Brewers Plate on March 10 at the Constitution Center on your calendarâand it you donât, you better quick because this local beer and restaurants event that
Whatâs Going Onbookmarks for your web browser, events for your calendar
publisherAlex Mulcahy
215.625.9850 ext. 102 [email protected]
managing editorLiz Pacheco
art directorJamie Leary
designerDanni Sinisi
distributionJesse Kerns
215.625.9850 ext. 100 [email protected]
marketingMorgan Berman
copy editorAndrew Bonazelli
writersBernard Brown
Grace Dickinson Marisa McClellan
Leah Pillsbury Courtney Sexton
internAlex Jacobs
photographers Neal Santos
Gene Smirnov Emily Wren Albert Yee
illustratorsMelissa McFeeters
Jim Tierney
ad salesAlex Mulcahy
215.625.9850 ext. 102 [email protected]
published byRed Flag Media
1032 Arch Street, 3rd Floor Philadelphia, PA 19107
215.625.9850
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gridphilly.march 2013 / issue 47
10 green living Common Ground: Socially conscious, energy efficient community to break ground in Chester County
12 Food The Whole Food: Oyster Mushrooms | Real Love: A local chocolate maker shows the process from organic bean to sustainable bar
38 urban naturalist Bird Bath: Swallows find an unusual home in the off-season
40 events Plenty of workshops to get your spring garden growing, plus two local food and drink festivals and an annual film festival
46 dispatch A Penny Saved: How one reader used her savings to power good
this section is a partnership between Grid and hidden city Daily.
Writers from hidden city Joseph g. brin Jacob hellman stefan Kamph Dominic mercier nathaniel popkin, co-editor peter Woodall, co-editor
to read more stories by hidden city, visit hiddencityphila.org
page
17
18 layered Questions The challenge of deciding what to preserve and how those choices shape our cityâs future
20 accidental preservationists An ambitious developer and former dancer find themselves invested in projects on North Broad Street
22 Saving grace 19th Street Baptist takes a DIY approach to save their church
24 historical dispute A proposal for historic designation causes upheaval in Overbrook Farms
30 material issues The science of restoring the outside of Philadelphiaâs historic buildings
32 modern love The surprising appeal of a Northeast Philadelphia Thriftway
33 preserving magic Protecting Isaiah Zagarâs mosaic wonderland
34 undisputed champions Temple architecture students fight for Joe Frazierâs gym
36 preservation madness The allure (and addiction) of home renovation
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cially responsible way of living. Together the groupâs members, who include teachers, a U.S. Army contractor, a nurse, a geochemist and the president of Dansko, Inc., planned what they envisioned as an ideal community. Now, with guidance from Aye Partners, LLC and Re:Vision Architecture, the group is turning their plan into Three Groves Ecovillage.
âI learned about this type of co-housing com-munity, years ago and it filled a void that I saw in my life,â says Janet Hesselberth, a founding member. âI felt the need to connect with the peo-ple I live with and I felt a need to connect with the greater community and the environment.â
Three Groves is designed with a focus on green space and communal living. It joins a group of planned communities, such as Danc-ing Rabbit in Missouri, Earthaven in Asheville, N.C., and EcoVillage in Ithaca, N.Y. The 37 LEED Platinum-certified homes in the village will have net zero energy outputs; outfitted with solar and thermal cells, theyâll ultimately generate sellable, renewable energy.
But before Three Groves could begin the de-sign process, they had the challenge of finding a suitable location. After a long search, they chose an area in Chester County just outside West Grove, on seven-and-a-half acres that was once part of a farm. However, when the group approached the town of West Grove with their
proposal, they were met with skepticism. Resi-dents in the area were nervous about the plan and the âhippie communeâ connotations of communal living. âWe have done a lot of out-reach and educating in the town,â says Sandy Wiggins, a principal at Aye and chief developer on the project. âNobody is in opposition at this point.â The group even succeeded in changing the townâs zoning codes to allow for co-housing.
Now in the final stages of land development and a groundbreaking set for late spring, Three Groves is well on its way to opening its doors to families. The homes in the village will cost about $400,000 and include all common ameni-
ties. âWhen you think about your typical neighborhood, itâs the acre lot with a house on it," says Hesselberth. âThe homes are isolated, theyâre each their own little island. You drive down the road, you push the button, the garage door goes up and you never
actually have to talk to your neighbors.âThree Groves will be a 10-minute walk from
downtown West Grove, and is designed as an anti-suburbia, boasting green spaces in place of streets (harkening back to the âvillage greenâ), a permaculture landscape of medicinal and edible plants, a woodshop, an orchard and a common house where members will share everything from meals and laundry, to gym equipment and childcare.
Ten of the homes have already been sold, and the village has a listserv of more than 1,500 in-terested participants. Places like Three Groves are satisfying a âbroad hunger for community that many people donât know how to articulate that they have.â says Wiggins. â[The communi-ties] are putting new items on the menu of living choices.â
To learn more about Three Groves Ecovillage, visit threegrovesecovillage.org
An intentional community plans to breaks ground in Chester County this spring by courtney sexton
Common Ground
left The Three Groves Ecovillage will have 37 LEED Platinum-certified homes. below A view from the common house where members will share meals and facilities, including a gym and laundry room.
1 0 g r i d p h i l ly.co m M a r C h 2 0 1 3
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foodfood
for The gardener Anna Herman, local food writer and gar-
dener, has been home-growing mushrooms for six years. Her ex-perimentation with the fungi, which ranges from shitakes to maita-kes, began with an oyster mushroom kit from a local permaculture workshop. Currently, she grows mushrooms on her Mt. Airy kitch-en countertop where she has been experimenting with coffee grounds and wood chips as fertilizer, both she says have worked well. To get started in your own home Herman advises either buying a mushroom-growing kit or attending a workshop. âItâs something you can grow in the winter. And one of the most satisfying things is that they are an item you can grow without almost any light at all,â says Herman. âYou can literally grow them in your basement if you wanted.â
from The Farm Unlike other fruits or vegetables, mushrooms donât contain chlo-
rophyll, the chemical that enables most plants to take in energy from the sun and produce glucose. Therefore, when farming mushrooms, the grower must provide the substrate, or food source, for the mush-rooms. At Phillips Mushroom Farm, one of the largest producers in Kennett Square, this substrate is cottonseed hulls and wheat straw. âWe mix the two together, add water, pasteurize and then put all the contents into a bagâalmost like a big garbage bag that has slots cut into it,â explains Jim Angeluccis, who started his 40th year as gen-eral manager of Phillips this past December. âJust before the cot-tonseed hulls and straw are put into the bag, we inoculate it with culture, or what they call spawn.â Angeluccis says it takes about 14 days for the spawn to colonize the substrate. âThen, it will start to fruit where the bags are slotted because you get a gas exchange of carbon dioxide and oxygen.â Phillipsâ farm assembles 3,500 of these bags per week. He agrees that the best way to grow mushrooms at home is a pre-made kit. âIt is a very involved process,â says Angeluc-cis. âIf you wanted to do a project, it would be to buy one of those kits and youâd get the principal.â
We can find an estimated 10,000 kinds of mushrooms just in North America. Of these, only 250 are edible, but stillâthatâs a lot of options. Diversity can be an asset to the typical cook
and eater, but what makes the mushroom a staple in the locavore kitchen is its adaptability to be grown outside and inside. Mushrooms are essentially available year-round, making them a popular local ingredient, even in the last few weeks of winter.
This is especially true for Philadelphia, which is located less than an hour from Kennett Square, the âmushroom capital of the world.â Kennett Square farmers grow 65 percent of the mushrooms eaten in the U.S., and the area is home to large farms like Phillips (see p. 11)âthe first successful indoor shiitake grower in the country. One of Phillipsâ best sellers is oys-
ter mushrooms, which are sold by large supermarket chains like Wegmanâs and Giant as well as local vendors who re-distribute to Philadelphia restaurants.
Though easy to buy locally, mush-rooms can be grown at home too. Local gardener Anna Herman suggests start-ing with the popular, but unique, oyster mushroom.
grace dickinson is a food blogger, photo enthusiast and recipe creator. These passions are brought together on FoodFitnessFreshAir.com, where she chronicles her experiments in the kitchen.
Putting the fun in fungistory and photos by
grace dickinson
The Whole food
OysterMushrooms
Nutrition 101 Nutritionally, mushrooms are high in minerals. Oyster mushrooms in particular are a good source of iron, niacin, potassium and riboflavin, and have less than 40 calories per cup.
what to look for Oyster mushrooms perish easily, so look for key signs of freshness, like a smooth cap and tight gills, and be sure to use them quickly. Choose mushrooms that are firm with plump white stems, and avoid those that feel slimy.
12 g r i d p h i l ly.co m M a r C h 2 0 1 3
for The kitchen For Washington Squareâs vegan
restaurant Vedge, mushrooms play an important role in the all-vegetable menu. âMushrooms are our go-to, kind of a trailblazer against meat and potatoes,â says Richard Lan-dau, co-owner and executive chef, alongside his wife Kate Jacoby. âPsychologically, people envision vegetables on the side of something. Mushrooms are a really great way to transition from that because they are meaty and they take on amazing flavor.â Landau, who buys all his mushrooms from a distributor based in Kennett Square, says he par-ticularly likes oyster mushrooms for their delicate flavor. âTheir greatest asset is when you get the feathery ones,â says Landau. âWhen that happens, I think it becomes one of the greatest mushroom vectors you could possibly eat ... the way itâs so crispy and just delicately nutty and earthy at the same time.â In the following recipe, Landau chose to play off the oyster mushroomâs chewy texture in a hearty, winter stew. Expect a summery corn chowder version in the Vedge cookbook, due out in June.
Vedge, 1221 Locust St. vedgerestaurant.com
for The pantry Mushrooms will keep up to a week when
left unwashed and stored in a brown paper bag on the re-frigerator shelf (not in the crisper!). To preserve for longer, try refrigerator pickling!
Cover blanched oyster mushrooms with rice wine vin-egar, black pepper, rounds of fresh ginger, and a dash of toasted sesame oil.
Cut clean button mushrooms into wedges and marinate in a combination of red wine vinegar, extra virgin olive oil, crushed garlic, red chili flakes, Italian herbs and coarsely ground black pepper.
Let pickles rest in the fridge for 24 hours before eating. Serve them as a pre-dinner nibble. âMarisa McClellan
Learn more about food preservation at McClellan's blog foodinjars.com
�� Heat olive oil in a large stock pot until it ripples. Add onions and garlic, and brown for 2 to 3 minutes. Add the mushrooms, salt and pepper, and brown for an additional 3 to 5 min-utes. Add sherry and reduce by half.�� Add stock, tomato paste, porcini
powder, carrots and celery root, sim-mer 10 minutes. Add the squash and simmer until tenderâabout 8 to 10 more minutes. Stir in the herbs and remove from heat. Serve immediately.
2 Tbsp olive oil½ cup diced onion2 tsp minced garlic1 lb oyster mushrooms,
bases trimmed, roughly chopped
1 tsp salt1 tsp pepperž cup dry sherry2 quarts vegetable stock1 cup diced carrots2 cups diced celery root 1 cup diced butternut
squash1 tsp tomato paste2 tsp porcini powder2 tsp chopped thyme2 tsp chopped rosemary
Oyster Mushroom Stew with Winter Vegetables (Serves 6 to 8)
from the kitchen of Vedge
M a r C h 2 0 1 3 g r i d p h i l ly.co m 1 3
foodfood
Real love one-of-a-kind chocolate bars begin with the bean by liz pacheco
p h OTOS by a l b e rT y e e
No two LoveBars are exactly alike. Wrapped in hand-painted designs by local artists, the single-origin bean bars
are entirely crafted here in Philadelphiaâfrom bean to bar. âWe see the process through the whole way,â says Joe Bernstein, a partner in the company. âItâs more a labor of love.â
The idea for LoveBar was born in 2008, when founder Tegan Hagy, then working for the Food Trust, had the opportunity to attend Slow Food In-ternationalâs bi-annual conference in Italy. There she met some cacao farmers from Tabasco, Mexico who had just experienced terrible flooding.
âI had spent the past five years of my life thinking about food access, thinking about sus-tainable food ⌠living what I preached and really believing in it,â says Hagy, who has a degree in food anthropology. âI realized I had never really thought about chocolate. And that kind of blew my mind.â
After Italy, Hagy started learning about âbean-to-barâ chocolate. While there are other chocolatiers in Philadelphia, she found out they
purchase chocolate then, melt it down to make bons bons; no one was connecting the chocolate process from grower to consumer. So, using her connection with the Tabasco farmers, Hagy went to Mexico and learned from a small-scale cacao grower how to make chocolate. Today, much of the chocolate for LoveBar comes from that or-ganic farm.
When she returned to Philadelphia, Hagy and her friend Phillip Asbury, a visual artist, bought a grinder and started experimenting. âWe would make chocolate in his little kitchen with these incredibly tiny, ridiculous machines, and wrap the bars and sell them in the galleries.â
This April, LoveBar will celebrate its third year as an incorporated business. Hagy has since upgraded her work space to a more spacious kitchen in the renovated Globe Dye Works build-ing in Frankford. There she, Bernstein and their third partner, Rachael DâAngeli, hand-make the chocolate bars in micro-batches, working with only one bag of beans at a time to ensure fresh-ness. When the Mexican chocolate is unavail-
able, Hagy will buy cacao from certified organic or Fair Trade co-ops with whom sheâs directly communicated.
âWe wanted to do something that we love,â says Hagy. âSo it wasnât a love story in the tradi-tional sense, but a love story for really our cityâŚwe wanted to create something [for] everyone.â
1
14 g r i d p h i l ly.co m M a r C h 2 0 1 3
LoveBar, $7-$9.50 at Capogiro (117 S. 20th St. and 3925 Walnut St. locations), Shane Confectionery (110 Market St.), Milk & Honey Market (4435 Baltimore Ave.), Pennsylvania General Store (Reading Terminal Market, 51 N. 12th St.), phillylovebar.com
2
3
4
1 LoveBar chocolate is made entirely by hand in micro-batches. Rachel DâAngeli and Joe Bernstein begin the process by sorting the beans, then roasting them and sorting again. 2 Once roasted and sorted, the beans are put through a cracker to separate the shell from the nib. The nib is used to make the chocolate. 3 The nibs are ground into a paste, and sugar and cocoa butter, if needed, are added. After grinding, the chocolate is tempered and poured into molds. 4 LoveBar chocolate comes in three varietals: 60, 70 and 80 percent ranges. The bars are wrapped in paper hand-painted with designs by local artists.
M a r C h 2 0 1 3 g r i d p h i l ly.co m 1 5
1 6 gridphilly.com m a r c h 2 0 1 3
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years. According to one study thatâs how long it takes to recover the energy lost in demolishing a building and replacing it with a new, energy-efficient one. While we do need new buildings, and itâs thrilling
to see structures built that incorporate green building practices, itâs essential that we understand the value of what already exists. Preservation is perhaps a quieter aspect of sustainability, but philosophi-cally, itâs at the subjectâs root. Beyond the sustainability concept of âembodied energy,â thereâs also a strong community component to preservation. What do we value enough to keep? And what do these choices say about who we are?
When we at Grid were planning to tackle preservation, we were im-mediately drawn to the amazing work already being done by Hidden City Daily, an online news organization that excels in their coverage of the cityâs neighborhoods and buildings. An idea emerged: Could Grid and Hidden City collaborate? This section is the answer. The following stories look at some of the inspiring work being done by Philadelphians to preserve the buildings they love, ensuring that our cityâs future will be filled with the treasures of the past.
a special editorial partnership
Learn more at hiddencityphila.org
THE FUTURE OF THE PAST
At the heart of this grappling with our inher-ited streetscape is the confounding and deeply ambiguous practice of preservation. Historicâor landmarksâpreservation came into modern con-sciousness in the 1950s after the demolition of two monumental icons of the railroad age, Philadel-phiaâs Broad Street Station and New Yorkâs Penn Station, and the loss of countless neighborhoods to new highways and expanding universities and hospital centers. The preservation movement gal-vanized various democratic instincts all at once. In Philadelphia, it led to the nationâs first preser-vation ordinance in 1955, a well-intentioned but weak law that was strengthened in 1985 to protect historic buildings from demolition.
But in many ways, the preservation instinct runs counter to the American mindset and those who have opposed it often base their argument in the mantra of private property rights. Though basic property rights are routinely regulated through zoning, height and use limitations, etc., it is preservation that draws this kind of ideologi-cally narrow response.
In a kind of opposite ideological tact, for de-cades progressive thinkers, including Koolhaas, have seen preservation as distinctly reactionary,
steeped in nostalgia and myth. One of my favorite books to set up the conflict between the desires to preserve the old and build the new is the novel Re-turn to Dar al-Basha, by Tuni-sian writer Hassan Nasr, about the emotional power of Tunisâ old city (one of the worldâs largest sites of preservation). âThat old house and all those old neighborhoods need to be
torn down,â says a character in Nasrâs book, âso they can be rebuilt with structures that have the amenities that correspond ⌠to modern life ⌠These old neighborhoods were built on injustice ⌠exploitation and tyranny ⌠the oppression of women, on the expropriation of workersâ rights.â
Part of the critique, which I share, is that pres-ervation begs us to defer to this not so gentle past, whose building materials we assume were stron-ger and more beautiful and craftsmanship better. But the danger of quieting the equally powerful instinct to build anew is that it saps our own con-fidence and architectural vision. In Philadelphia, where developers, fearful of risk, so often pander to the past, the field of contemporary architec-ture has been stunted by mimicry. Originality has been shunted.
As the pastâas if it were architecturally uni-formâforcefully weighs down on present-day designers, the regulatory mechanisms for pres-ervation have withered, creating an odd reality: great old buildings are routinely demolished while new ones are made to look old. Developers have recently been exploiting loopholes in Phil-adelphiaâs preservation ordinance; meanwhile the underfunded Historical Commission is hard
strapped to add new buildings and districts to its protected list (New York, the cradle of destruc-tion, has more than 100 protected and promoted historic districts. Philadelphia has nine).
But the broken system is an opportunity for Philadelphians to expansively reimagine what they hope to achieve with preservation and to decide within the scope of present-day desires, among them
sustainability and green construction, how best to build on our past. There are very strong reasons for wanting to protect buildings related to the development of 20th century African-American culture, Italian-American, Chinese-American, and Jewish neighborhood life in particular and immi-grant life in general, and the mills and factories that for 150 years defined the rhythms of city life and lend our present-day neighborhoods scale and density. There is emerging support for the preser-vation of large and small examples of mid-century modern architecture, perhaps especially those that emerged from the modernist instinct to break with the past. Very few of these kinds of buildings are at present protected in Philadelphia. How we go about preserving them within the collected lay-ers of the Philadelphia cityscape is a wonderfully challenging and sometimes exasperating task that is likely to absorb us for years to come.
nathaniel popkin is co-editor of Hidden City Daily, senior writer of the film documentary Philadelphia: The Great Experiment, and author of Song of the City: An intimate portrait of the American Urban Landscape and The Possible City: Exercises in Dreaming Philadelphia.
If, as the architect Rem Koolhaas writes in Delirious New York, âcreation and
destruction are the poles defining the field of Man-hattanâs abrasive culture,â in Philadelphia, it is adaptation and accretion that nourish our urban experience. We feed on the peeling and unpeel-ing of layers, on acts of discovery that bind usâin sometimes powerful waysâto the ideals and aspi-rations of those who came before us.
GR ID + H IDDEN C ITY
1 8 gridphilly.com m a r c h 2 0 1 3
What in our past IS worth preserving, and how does
LAYERED QUESTIONS
STORY bY NATHANiEl POPkiN PHOTO bY PETER wOOdAll
it shape our cityâs future?
This former auto showroom was converted into an office building in 1963 and then a homeless shelter in 1987. Last summer, it was repainted and and restored as headquarters for Stephen Starrâs catering business.
m a r c h 2 0 1 3 gridphilly.com 1 9
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The field of preservation is filled with people moti-vated by a passion for architecture or history. But not everyone starts out that way. In fact, some of the most interesting preservation projects in Philadelphia are being pursued by unexpected people. We call them âaccidental preservationists.â Two such people, an ambitious developer and a former dancer, are hard at work on North Broad Street where theyâve found themselves deeply invested in reviving buildings that without their help might no longer exist.
ERic BlUmENFEld | Eb REalTY ManagEMEnT
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bY liz PAcHEcO
ACCIDENTAL PRESERVATIONISTSBeautiful buildings and fascinating history
cast a spell on the unsuspecting
Eric Blumenfeld claims heâs been working in real estate since he was four years old. âAll the other kids got to play on Saturday and my father used to drag me to work,â he says. But the former English majorâwho as a freshman decided not to study accounting, he says, because the registration lines were too longâdidnât formally join the real estate and development world until after college at his fatherâs behest. In the late 1980s, Blumenfeld had the opportunity to buy many of his fatherâs properties and founded his own company EB Realty Management. While the company has various projectsâmany involving historic buildingsâthroughout the city, North Broad Street is by far the greatest in scope.
âTen years ago I [would] show up on North Broad Street,â says Blumenfeld, âand I would take bankers down here and they would look at me, like âyouâre out of your mind.ââ But standing on the rooftop of the Thaddeus Stephens School of Practice at Spring Garden and Broad Streets, Blumenfeldâs vision now seems less laughable.
Looking up the block, thereâs the renovated and now rainbow-painted mid-century building where Stephan Starr has headquartered his catering company. Thereâs the deteriorating but magnificent Divine Lorraine Hotel, which when finished will become luxury apartments and restaurants. Across the street is Lofts 640, a former factory converted into luxury apartments, and whose neighbors include two Marc Vetri restaurants and a Stephan Starr outpost. Up another couple blocks is the Metropolitan Opera House, a beauty from 1908 thatâs partially used as a church, and is slated to see the addition of a music venue, art gallery and restaurant as well. And donât forget the 1926 Thaddeus Stevens School, where a two-story art school
and luxury apartments are planned. Thatâs not all; Blumen-feld has also envisioned a new public school campus on the four acres he owns behind the Divine Lorraine.
The plan is ambitious, and Blumenfeld speaks exuber-antly about the possibilities. âLook where you are,â he says, pointing to a map of North Broad Street. âYouâve got Temple [University] and City Hall and you have a plethora of really beautiful old factory buildings that have suffered from obsolescence.â Many of these old factory buildings, as well as the school, opera house and hotel, are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, making Blumenfeldâs projects eligible for rehabilitation tax credits offered by the federal government. With this financial boost, the redevel-opment of North Broad Street has become more realistic. No construction has begun, but Blumenfeld is nearing the final planning stages for the Thaddeus Stevens and Divine Lorraine buildings where he has already done significant clean up.
âIt starts with looking at something like these buildings. They tell sto-ries,â says Blumenfeld. âYou canât walk through the Metropolitan Opera House without hearing the walls telling stories. Once you get sucked into that vacuum, there is no turning back. You canât be for tearing that down. You have to be for how do we recreate it?â
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divine lorraine hotel photo by: Chandra Lampreich
metropolitan opera housephoto by: Yves Marchand & Romain Meffre
In the 1970s, Linda Richardson was pursuing a career as a professional dancer and actress. But the North Philadel-phia native soon realized that communities of color and womenâs organizationsâboth of which she was a partâdidnât have the networking connections to get funding for their work.
In response, Richardson founded the African Ameri-can United Fund, which provides grants to small social, economic and cultural organizations. As part of United Fundâs work, she helped create the Avenue of the Arts, which includes the North Broad Street Joint Ventureâa coalition of African-American cultural institutions on the 2200 block of Broad Street. As Richardson began rehab-bing rowhomes for the Venture, she heard from neighbors that the Uptown Theater, located on the same block, was deteriorating.
Built in 1929 in the Art Deco-style, the Uptown Theater was once a hub for African-American pop culture, hosting acts like James Brown, Stevie Wonder and Martha and the Vandellas. But after closing in 1978 (with a brief reopening in the â80s), the theater went from cultural center to dete-riorating landmark. In 1982, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
âWe were saving the Uptown,â says Richardson about her initial reasoning for taking on the project. âWe didnât consider ourselves preservationists in the traditional sense of the term because we thought of preservation [as]
stodgyâmaintaining Independence Hall. But we are pres-ervationists.â
With support from the community, Richardson formed the Uptown Entertainment and Development Corporation (UEDC) in 1995. Under her leadership, the nonprofit raised enough money to stabilize the building, repair the roof and, in 2002, purchase the theater. UEDC is now finishing the Entertainment and Education Tower, a 19,000-square-foot space, which will be available for rent, while continuing to raise money to restore the auditorium and balcony.
Richardson initially created UEDC to save the Uptown, but her vision has expanded. âI think that the building is just not a preservation in the traditional sense,â she says, âbut a catalyst for community change, heritage, tourism, sustainability and more importantly, jobs for members of our community.â
UEDC holds neighborhood clean-up campaigns and youth training programs for careers in the music and en-tertainment industries. Theyâre also developing an African-American heritage trail that will link 21st century cultural sites along a walking and biking path.
âWe see ourselves not in the traditional preservation,â says Richardson, âbut in sustaining a culture and history and development of heritage tourism.â
Uptown Theater, 2233 Broad St., philadelphiauptowntheatre.org
liNdA RicHARdSON | UPTOwn EnTERTainMEnT and dEvElOPMEnT CORPORaTiOn
FEB26
African American historic preservation Trail project pilot This panel discussion will discuss the economic and social impacts of neighborhood improvement, historic preservation and cultural enrichment. Hosted by the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission, the panel kick-offs the implementation phase of the African American Historic Preservation trail project.
Tues., Feb. 26, 5:30-7:30 p.m., free, African American Museum, 701 Arch St. For more information, visit philadelphiauptowntheatre.org
m a r c h 2 0 1 3 gridphilly.com 2 1
Uptown Theaterphoto by: Yves Marchand & Romain Meffre
But among endangered churches, 19th Street Baptist, designed by the firm of eccentric ar-chitect Frank Furness, stands outâas much for its green serpentine stone as the DIY strat-egy employed by the community to ensure the churchâs survival.
Early photographs show the steeple reach-ing well over one hundred feet high, but today only a section of the towerâs stone base remains, and a fence cordons off the entire building due to the crumbling façade. When the Depart-ment of Licenses and Inspections threatened
to demolish the church, a few members of the congregation decided their only alternative was to stabilize the structure themselves.
Typically, before repair work can begin on a historic building, a preservation plan must be in place, engineers
must be consulted, and fully insured contrac-tors vetted. These were simply untenable pre-requisites for 19th Street Baptist, where large patches of sky were visible through holes in the churchâs roof, and plants had begun to grow up from the rotting floorboards. âThose of us with trade skills, we got together and said, âLook, how do we keep this building from fall-ing down?ââ recalls Butler.
Aaron Wunsch, a University of Pennsylvania professor in historic preservation, explains that many of the cityâs worthy buildings have been
lost because their stewards wouldnât roll up their sleeves. âThere is such a thing as a grass-roots, hands-on approach to preservation that necessarily complements the institutional ap-proach,â he says.
Wunsch helped the congregation apply to the National Trust for Historic Preservation for a modest emergency repair grant. Then, last winter, Wunsch, Butler (a carpenter), parishio-ner Vincent Smith (an electrician) and Deacon Blackson filled a pick-up truck with sheet metal and lumber at Home Depot, and began to devise an ad-hoc system to patch the churchâs roof.
Over a few weekends, and with under $5,000, they sealed the roof, buying time to raise funds for a formal restoration (former Mayor W. Wil-son Goode has helped with fundraising efforts). âItâs true, one of us could have fallen off the roof as we stripped off the rotten asphalt,â Wunsch admits. But the risk has paid offâthe building is saved.
Look around usâchurches are dropping like flies,â says Lloyd Butler, a deacon at 19th Street Baptist Church
in South Philadelphia. Itâs a familiar story in a city with some 200 vacant churches; shrinking congregations canât meet maintenance costs for their old buildings, which sit boarded up until the rare chance they might be reused. In some cases a developer will buy out the congregation, knock down the church and build new housing. Butler says he witnessed four demolitions last year alone.
STORY bY jAcOB HEllmAN PHOTOS bY PETER wOOdAll
SAVING GRACEA congregation rolls up
THEIR sleeves and saves their church
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The historic 19th Street church was in serious disrepair before congregants took it upon themselves to repair the roof.
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Nearly every detailâinterior and exteriorâof Larry and Jean Andreozziâs 10-bedroom house is precisely restored, as if time hadnât touched the home since it was built in 1894.
Actually much of Overbrook Farms, the West Philadelphia neighborhood tucked along the cityâs border with Montgomery County, feels a lot like it did when tycoons, politicians and industrialists built it as the first Main Line suburb in the late 19th century. Stone houses with gables and manicured lawns sit on quiet, tree-lined streets. âThe houses had their own individual architects, marvelous craftsmanship, and marvelous building materials,â says Andreozzi, standing near a door frame of quarter-sawn oak that heâs lovingly restored. Andreozzi is a master woodworker, and for the past 15 years this house has been his hobby.
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STORY bY STEFAN kAmPH PHOTOS bY AlBERT YEE
historical disputeof Overbrook Farms be resolved?
Will the stalled designation
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âpeople come to our house and see the value of restoration,â he says, looking up the original staircase at a huge stained-glass window. An-dreozzi is one in a group of residents pushing for the City to designate the neighborhood as an historic district on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places. This recognition would prohibit demolition and legally require the owners of the more than 400 homes to keep their street-facing exteriors looking more or less the way they did a century ago. In 1984, the neighborhood was named a national historic district, but that designation doesnât protect buildings from being torn down or altered. Since then, two architecturally significant houses have been demolished and others have been converted to boarding houses for St. Josephâs Uni-versity students.
Despite the cultural value an historical desig-nation brings to a community, the path to district recognition hasnât been easy. Some residents and businesses worry that their freedomâand moneyâare threatened by well-meaning preservationists. Meanwhile, the Historical Commission, which City Council authorizes to protect the cityâs architectur-al heritage, lacks the staff capacity or political will to take a stand. THE THREaT Of dESignaTiOn
In 2004, members of the Overbrook Farms Club decided to seek historic district recognition from the City. The process got off to a smooth start, and club members held a fundraiser to pay for a con-sultant to write the nomination. But after a blister-ing political battle over the historic designation of another West Philadelphia neighborhood, Spruce Hill, the commissionâs work on the Overbrook
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larry and Jean Andreozzi live with their family in a 10-bedroom home built in 1894. For larry, a master woodworker, the home
has been his hobby for the past 15 years.
Farms nomination faltered. It was left uncon-sidered for seven years.
Finally, in 2011, after renewed pressure by the Overbrook Farms Club and the Preservation Alliance, commission staffers began to review the nomination in preparation for the designa-tion committee to vote on approval. At this late point in the designation process itâs typical for the commission to make sure property owners donât suddenly alter or demolish their buildings. So, in September 2011, the commission informed homeowners by letter that theyâd have to ask the commission for permission to make any sub-stantial modifications to their homes, effective immediately.
In a season where anti-government Tea Party protests dominated headlines, this was not good press for the preservation effort. RJ Krohn, a resident and the electronic musician known as RJD2, circulated a petition opposing the effort. Dozens of residents turned up to a November 2011 hearing to voice their opinions. One resi-dent said he thought designation amounted to the Historical Commission âtaking his property without compensation.â Another called the club members behind the nomination âNazis.â
V. Chapman-Smith, an historian at the Na-tional Archives, joined in opposition to the district. She says she appreciates her houseâs historical detailâshe spent $8,000 carefully restoring her front porchâbut is worried that some residents wouldnât be able to afford this burden. She also worries that the city wouldnât let people update their homes for things like en-ergy efficiency. âThe original owners saw that house as an organic thing, never staying exactly the way it was when they first built it,â she says now, more than a year after neighbors began to organize against the district. Without such ad-aptations, she explains, a neighborhood would
become obsolete. âIf we save everything, we kill ourselves.â
One of the most vocal op-ponents to the district was the Talmudical Yeshiva of Phila-
delphia, a rabbinical school that has consid-ered expanding its campus. The yeshiva owns several historic houses that are included in the nomination. While the school has already torn down one architecturally significant house, the historic district designation would prevent them from demolishing others.
The grassroots effort soon drew the attention of the then-new Fourth District Councilman Curtis Jones, Jr., who represents a wide swath of West Philadelphia including Overbrook Farms. âPeople were divided on the issue of historical certification,â he says. âPeople that were against it expressed to me... that the recession was im-peding their ability to repair their home. So I listened to both [sides].â
THE all-POwERfUl CiTY COUnCil Jones has asked the commission to table the dis-cussion until his constituents could get more information. âThis is the kind of designation that once you do it, you have committed to a di-rection for the neighborhood,â he says. âRather than act in haste, I wanted to give people anoth-er opportunity to discuss it, to reach a mutual compromise.â
Five months later, following Jonesâ request, Alan Greenberger, the Cityâs commerce direc-tor and a deputy mayor, sent a letter to the commission instructing them to put aside the nomination process until his office could con-nect with all the interested parties. Thatâs where the process stalled.
In an old, unwritten custom called âcoun-
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Rules ®ULATIONS
When properties are listed on the Philadelphia register of historic Places, owners must follow certain regulations.
All exterior alterations must be reviewed by the historical commission before any work can take place. This includes:
â Demolitions (partial or complete) â additions â Installation or alteration of decks, fences, awnings, signs and mechanical equipment â repair, replacement or removal of architectural features â replacement of windows, doors and roofing materials â masonry cleaning and repointing â Painting of facades
historical commission approval is not needed for:
â Interior alterations* â repainting wood and metal trim â replacing clear window glass â Landscaping and tree trimming â Seasonal decorations
*Department of Licences and Inspections will refer all building permit applications to the Historical Commission to confirm that proposed interior changes do not affect the exterior of the building.
properties listed on the philadelphia register are not required to:
â Undergo restoration or reverse alteration made to the building before the time of designation â Be open to the public
architectural details from homes in Overbrook Farms.
m a r c h 2 0 1 3 gridphilly.com 27
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cilmanic prerogative,â City Council members almost always vote on specific development projects in agreement with the councilperson who represents the district in question. By con-sequence, these elected officials hold powerful sway over the physical development of their districts.
Councilman Jones says that by nature he tends not to be heavy handed about making de-mands of City agencies and that his interest isnât in derailing the process. âI have an opinion, and itâs just one of many. Iâm thankful to them for respecting it.â
The reality, however, is that the commission was given its powers by City Council, which also controls its annual budget of around $385,000âbarely enough to keep staff on top of the build-
ings and districts presently on the Philadelphia Register, let alone process applications for new ones. Council has the power to dissolve the com-mission or cut its funding. And recent history shows that when a councilperson opposes his-toric designation, the commission wonât press its case too hard.
A decade ago, when Spruce Hill residents sub-mitted what many in the field considered a text-book nomination to turn their neighborhoodâone of the nationâs first Victorian-era streetcar suburbsâinto an historic district, the district councilperson Jannie Blackwell introduced a bill to City Council. The bill, which ultimately was unsuccessful, would have taken the power to designate historic districts away from the His-torical Commission and given it to City Coun-cil. Had the bill passed, council members would have gained near-complete authority to block preservation efforts in their districts. Though
anyone can nominate a building for historical preservation and in fact, many city landmarks wouldnât be here today if not for local residents, students, community groups and nonprofits. historic preservation happens on the city, state and national level, but only properties listed on the Philadelphia register for historic Places are protected from adverse alterations and demolition. For more information, visit preservationalliance.com
ordinAnce Amended to include structures, sites, objects and historic districts
A History of PhiladelphiaâsHistoric Register
1955 1983
SpeciAl legiSlATion iS pASSed to create the manayunk main Street historic District; the cityâs first recognized historic district
1985
philAdelphiA hiSToric commiSSion founded and first historic preservation ordinance passed in Philadelphiaâ only protects individual buildings.
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JUne 1971 Swann memorial Fountain in Logan circle protected as an historic landmark
JUne 1957 Thomas mill covered Bridge over Wissahickon creek protected as an historic structure
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The home of Stephanie Kindt and the original building plans from circa 1900.
Pennsylvania Historical Markers â commemorate people, places and events of national or
statewide significance. historic buildings donât need to be standing.
national Historic landMarks â Places designated by the Secretary of the Interior
as nationally significant â 67 in Philadelphia
national register of Historic Places â Places designated by the National Park Service as having
national, statewide or local significance â 500 individual properties and 600 historic districts in
Philadelphia
To view the Register, visit: phila.gov/historical/register.html
ordinAnce Amended to include public interior spaces
2009 2010
ciTy coUncil chAmberS first interior listed in the register of historic Places
WhATâS on The regiSTer?
â more than 10,000 historic properties
â 14 historic districts â 2 historic interiors â includes: homes,
churches, hotels, apartment buildings, cemeteries, bridges, street surfaces, parks, stores, watering troughs
Preservation easeMentsVoluntary donation by a private owner to an easement-holding organization, such as the Preservation alliance. This protects the property from demolition or adverse alterations by current or future owners.
proceSS â Nomination made to the historical
commission. â committee on historic Designation
schedules a meeting to determine approval of the recommendation. 3 to 4 months
â If the committee approves, the recommendation is passed to historical commission for review and action. 1 to 2 months
PLUS
Blackwellâs bill failed, it effectively derailed the Spruce Hill nominationâthe commission didnât appear willing to fight Blackwell, even though it technically could haveâand a decade later it casts a shadow over the Overbrook Farms case.
With only six staff members and a budget that pales in comparison to other big cities, the com-mission focuses most of its resources on what it considers its most important role: reviewing permit applications for buildings already on the Register. In addition, the commission has been fighting three contentious appeals over historic properties that could be demolished. âWe simply donât have the staff capacity to meet all expecta-tions,â says Jon Farnham, the Historical Com-missionâs executive director. âThe vast majority of the staff âs time is spent reviewing applica-tions. Thatâs what we do day-in, day-out.â
But on top of being hamstrung by its small budget, as long as Overbrook Farms remains ta-bled, the commission has been reticent to tackle new building and district nominations. âThereâs this sort of unspoken understanding that theyâre not going to move on any of the dozen or so nomi-nated buildings or the long-waiting Washington Square West district until they resolve whatâs go-ing on at Overbrook,â says Ben Leech, advocacy director at the Preservation Alliance of Greater Philadelphia. âThere are fates of buildings hang-ing in the balance.â
THE fUTURE Of OvERbROOk Despite all the talk about government intrusion, real preservation canât be mandated by an over-stretched city agency. It will always depend on the care of the individual homeowner. If every-one had the passion and resources of Andreozzi, their houses could be as well-preserved as his.
Andreozzi points out the meticulous tile mosaic in the entry foyer, and the ornate egg-and-dart mantelpiece. These kinds of extrava-gances are part of the cityâs three-century-long architec-tural heritage. Once theyâre gone, theyâre gone. But trea-sures like these are all over the neighborhood, in houses of the wealthy and the mid-dle-class, both neglected and lovingly preserved. âEvery house, in its own little way, is just like this house,â says Andreozzi.
Councilman Jones says that other issues affecting his district are taking precedent over dealing with the historic district conflict. Anyway, he says, it is the Historical Com-missionâs turn to act. âWe
anxiously await them. The ball is in their court.â Farnham says he is trying to figure out how
the commission might make an Overbrook Farms district easier to swallow. Possible chang-es include slight modifications to the districtâs boundaries or relaxed standards for renovations that are not visible from the street.
Meanwhile, according to City ordinance, those temporary restrictions outlined in the letter that got everyone fuming in late 2011 will remain in effect until the Historical Commission takes up
mArch 2012 Penn Treaty Park protected as an historic site
In addition to protecting buildings on the city level, there are also state and national protections available.
National Registers State and
m a r c h 2 0 1 3 gridphilly.com 29
The tile mosaic in larry Andreozziâs home.
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CIty HaLLânow a crisp white icon, but it was only last year that the buildingâs restoration was finally finished, undoing a half-century of neglect. Built with some 88 million bricks, the res-toration treated 200,000 square feet of masonry, 680 windows and 250 sculptures. The project drew on an army of building conserva-tion specialists, and employed some of the industryâs most advanced techniques. Itâs no wonder the process took a decade.
Modern conservation is a science, but it often must begin from a position of ignorance: old materials are simply unpredictable. City Hallâs tower is made from white Massachusetts Lee marble. But the buildingâs 30-year construction period was during the coal-burning era and when finished, City Hall was covered in soot and appeared gray. Press accounts even described it as limestone. To determine the appropriate cleaning technique the masonry restoration contractor tested inconspicuous spots to learn what worked, what didnât and what might damage the stone. Ultimately, explains Nan Gutterman, who works for Vitetta, the architecture firm that oversaw the proj-ect, they settled on a âlow-pressure micro-abrasive system at 25 to 35 psiââcolloquially known as sandblasting.
While the towerâs bronze sculptures canât be seen without scaffold-ing, theyâve also been restored to original detail from patina-encrusted oblivion. In the hundred years since they left Alexander Milne Calderâs studio, micro-crevices in the metalâs surface collected impurities and
hastened freeze-thaw cycle deterioration. Here, the Polish-trained conservator Andrzej Dajnowski imported a German laser technology never used on this scale. The laserâs beam not only vaporizes dirt, but re-melts a thin surface layer of the metal, eliminating the pitting from the casting process and making it literally better than new.
City Hall and other monumental buildings aside, Philadelphia is a city of brick rowhouses. A humble material, brick does not call forth glamorous conservation techniques, but this is why Brett Sturm, a student in materials conservation in the University of Pennsylvaniaâs historic preservation program, was drawn to it. âBrick is fascinating,â says Sturm. âItâs used in the 21st century exactly as it was used for the Tower of Babbleâas a fired, modular piece of earth.â
Sturm is finishing his masterâs thesis on a defunct brick manu-factory, and explains that the only significant innovation to hit the world of bricks involves the way theyâre fired. Kilns were once highly unpredictable; cold spots produced under-fired bricks that eventually crumble. Around the middle of the 20th century, ceramic engineers developed modern tunnel kilns, which put out denser and more robust bricks. Even with old brick, though, conservation is largely a matter of keeping roof and gutter leaks from washing out mortar, and an occasional re-pointing.
If youâve got an old rowhouse, avoid Portland cement-based mor-tar. Mortar is intended to be a sacrificial buffer, but Portland is less permeable than historic lime-based mortars and doesnât allow water to pass. Instead, water is forced through the brick, which will eventu-ally deteriorate.
bY jAcOB HEllmAN
Restoring old buildingsThe art and science of
If conservation science interests you, Pennâs program is one of the nationâs best. This summer the universityâs Fisher Fine Arts Library (in the restored Furness building) will host an exhibition on the history of brick. Learn more at library.upenn.edu/finearts
the issue again. That means Overbrook Farms is being legally treated as an historic district, and residents need to seek approval for out-side renovations.
With limited resources the commission isnât in a position to strictly enforce these regulations. It depends on inspectors from the Department of Licenses and Inspections to issue citations, which usually happen only once a neighbor complains. Nobody is patrol-ling the neighborhood, looking for infractions. Councilman Jones says that since fall 2011 heâs received no complaints from constituents about the restrictions. Residents are being left largely alone with their houses and their opinionsâthough for those who advocate preservation, the rules provide some comfort.
âRight now, weâre de facto under the regu-lations of the Historical Commission,â says Kevin Maurer, board president of the Over-brook Farms Club, who has worked to get the designation passed. âThe world has not come to an end.â
Material Issues
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An interior view of Stephanie Kindtâs home in overbrook Farms.
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deserves historical recognition
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This isnât surprising. The work of our most famous post-war architects, Louis Kahn and Robert Venturi, does little to in-spire public affection, much less love. Both Kahnâs Richards Medical Building (1960) at the University of Pennsylvania and Venturi and Rauchâs Guild House (1963) at 711 Spring Garden Street, are mentioned in most every architecture text book, yet have frustrated many a lay personâs attempt to understand their greatness.
Each architectural periodâVictorian comes to mind espe-ciallyâhas been loathed by the following generation or two, only to be lauded once a certain critical distance has been achieved. We may just now be ready to see the value in the austerity of raw concrete. Witness the recent groundswell of
support for protecting the Police Ad-ministration Building, or âThe Round-house,â at 7th and Race Streets built by Geddes, Brecher, Qualls in 1963.
Easier to enjoy are Philadelphiaâs few examples of post-World War II commercial vernacular architecture, none more exuberant than the Thrift-way on Frankford Avenue and Pratt Street at the end of the Market Frank-ford El. Built in 1954 for the Penn Fruit Company, and designed by George
Neff, the store is a glass and steel anomaly amid the brick storefronts of Frankford. Almost all the Penn Fruit stores from this period look more or less alike, but this one is by far the best preserved, and the only one with those marvel-ous candy-colored stripes painted on the ceiling. Letâs look past the everyday use and common form of this striking supermarket and put it on the Philadelphia Register before someone decides to tear it down.
peter woodall is co-editor of Hidden City Daily. Before that, he wrote a column on dive bars for Philadelphia Weekly, and worked as a newspaper reporter in Sacramento, Calif. and Bioloxi, Miss.
Nowadays, vintage stores are thick with âMem-bers Onlyâ jackets from the 1980s and car collectors covet the âclassicâ Honda Civics from the 1970s. But
appreciation develops more slowly when it comes to architec-ture: buildings must be 50 years or older to be eligible for the National Historic Register. In Philadelphia, however, there is no minimum age for a building to be called historic; and good thing because the city has a few late modernist buildings that are worth preserving, but have yet to make the list.
Why a North Philadelphia Thriftway
3 2 gridphilly.com m a r c h 2 0 1 3
Nearly 10 years ago, in 2002, Philadelphia nearly saw the loss of some of its more
unique artwork: the Magic Gardens. A mo-saic wonderland created by visionary artist Isaiah Zagar, the Gardens are considered responsible for helping revitalize the once derelict South Street. So when the owner of the once-vacant lot Zagarâs artwork now occupies announced he would sell, the community immediately responded with support. Their efforts saved Zagarâs work. âOtherwise,â says Ellen Owens, executive director of the nonprofit Magic Gardens, â[the gardens] would no longer be here.â
While Zagar now owns the three main lots, protecting the Magic Gardens is no easy feat. The roughly 50,000 square feet of murals are made from pottery, glass and found objects. They climb over walls (both inside and out), cover shops, alleys and private homes, spreading from the central Magic Gardens site across nearly 33 Phila-delphia blocksâmuch on private property.
One tool for preservation may be the creation of a âZagar zone of protection,â an idea posited by Sarah Modiano, a Columbia University preservation student. Modiano sees Zagarâs work as a singular visionary
art environment like Los Angelesâ Watts Towers and Brooklynâs Broken Angel. Those worksâwhich are discrete sculptur-al installationsâhave been named national landmarks and thus, given nominal pro-tection. But Owens notes that preserving Zagarâs oeuvre, which is largely integrated in the fabric of the neighborhood, will be a challenge.
In addition to the whims of property owners, the work is subject to seasonal expansion and contraction from rain, sleet and snow, as well as the eager hands of visi-tors. And because of the diverse materials there isnât a single straightforward method for conservation.
Currently, the sprawling murals are maintained by the spry, 74-year-old Zagar and a lone assistant. The Magic Gardens is now taking steps to assess general conser-vation, a complex undertaking considering the amount of materials used in each work and the artistâs vision. âIsaiah wonât always be able to be the caretaker here,â says Ow-ens, âso we need to be able to understand what he wants.â
Philadelphiaâs Magic Garden, 1020 South St., phillymagicgardens.org
Preserving MagicCan Philadelphia protect
Isaiah Zagarâs
STORY and PHOTO bY dOmiNic mERciER
dazzling folk art?
m a r c h 2 0 1 3 gridphilly.com 3 3
In 1971, Philadelphia boxer Joe Frazier won the so-called âFight of the Centuryâ defeating previously unbeaten and heav-
ily favored Muhammad Ali at Madison Square Garden. But despite being heavyweight cham-pion, Frazier struggled with the ambivalence of fans, many of whom were ardent supporters of the more transformative Ali.
Now, more than a year after his death, Phila-delphians are beginning to reevaluate the boxerâs legacy, with a particular focus on the gymâs posi-tive community impact on North Broad Street, where Frazier touched the lives of hundreds of young men who sought refuge from the streets in the physical training and discipline of boxing.
Last year, Dennis Playdon, a Temple Univer-sity architecture professor, enlisted his students in preserving the gym, which Frazier was forced to sell in 2008 and now houses a discount furni-ture store. The studentsâ work attracted the at-tention of the National Trust for Historic Pres-ervation, which named the gym to its 2012 list of most endangered historic places and designated it a âNational Treasure.â The National Trust has also commissioned a market study to determine future best uses for the site.
Working with the Preservation Alliance of Greater Philadelphia, the students have nomi-nated the building to both the Philadelphia and national historic registers. A listing on the Phila-delphia Register of Historic Places would protect the building from further major alteration or de-molition. Eventually though, Playdon would like to see the gym restored to a workout and training center, a use that resonates with Frazierâs legacy. Grid had a chance to talk with Playdon about the project, the âdigital gymâ the students are cre-ating, and how sustainability plays a role in the gymâs preservation.
how important is the north broad community to this project?They loved Joe Frazier. He was like a surrogate father to a lot of people in that area. He was al-ways approachable and helpful when he could be. And [he] was really important to a lot of busi-nessesâhe supported people, lent his name to projects and such.
Are there other buildings in philadelphia important to the 20th century African-American story in philadelphia?Thereâs the John Coltrane House. The Blue Hori-zon [boxing venue] has recently been closed and itâs being redeveloped in order to keep the Blue Horizon identity, but redeveloped into something else. Another one is the Uptown Theater, which is one of the oldest African-American theaters in the country, [and] housed huge amounts of history. And they are comparable, although the Uptown Theater is quite beautiful inside.
What is the âdigital gymâ and how will it aid the larger project of preserving the building?We won a small matching grant from the Na-tional Trust to build a website. Architecture students are really good at 3D modeling, and our idea was to put the gym back together virtually. So you could walk inside through the front door and enter the gym as it was and walk around, look at the walls and the pictures and the people. There would be links to news articles and press throughout the website so you could kind of re-live what it looked like.
This is another way of preserving the gym; to bring it back to what it was. Weâve had a great deal of luck with the movie [When the Smoke Clears, a documentary on Frazierâs life] that was put out. The photographic director has made available to us all the images. Within the next year we will have our website up.
Weâre starting to do oral histories that are stories from the people who knew him. Weâre getting interesting stuff. When we had a screen-ing of the film at Temple, so many people came along. Among them were former boxers who had trained at the gym with Frazier, and they were young men dressed in suits, which you donât get much of in North Philadelphia. They came dressed like that because Frazier told them they couldnât dress any other way. They had to be up-standing citizens to box at his gym. He insisted on proper manners. He brought these kids up.
What role do nationally recognized historic spaces play in philadelphiaâs sustainability initiatives?Well, itâs part of Philadelphiaâs identity. We have a lot of complaints about the imaginary Rocky, which was based in part on Frazierâs life⌠The gym is really important to the Frazier identity. The mayorâs office plans to erect a bronze [statue] at the sports stadium, but these are small efforts; the sort of ground zero is the gym. When you have a world champion in your midst, itâs usually an important figure.
Preservation is about taking things forward rather than going backwards. We preserve build-ings because theyâre part of how we identify our-selves with our city⌠Itâs only recently that the National Trust and preservation organizations have added the category of the importance of cul-tural identity to preserve buildings.
Sustainability doesnât stop with materials and things. Sustainability also has to do with the bringing forward of places. And [that has] to do with all of the people whoâve made the city what it is now. To ignore that and to only think of sustain-ability [as] materials and climate is to leave out the most important partâthe cultural. Preservation is the design of the future. Itâs the background weâve made in order to make the future.
bY mOllY OâNEill
UNDISPUTED CHAMPIONS
Temple students
for Smokinâ Joeâs gymmake the case
GR ID + H IDDEN C ITY
3 4 gridphilly.com m a r c h 2 0 1 3
It could have been a scene from the film The Money Pit. Christine and Anthony Shippam, owners of an 1894 Georgian Revival in Mount Airyâs Pelham
neighborhood, were lying in bed, rain dripping down on them. âHoney, did I tell you how much I hate this house?â asked Christine.
âDid I tell you how much I hate this house?â replied her husband Anthony.
âWe donât take vacations. We donât do anything else,â says Christine Shippam, five years into the project restoring what was one of the dozens of suburban dream houses designed by architect Mantle Fielding. âItâs become an addiction,â she says.
Like any addiction, this one forces its sufferers to make ap-parently irrational choices: refashioning every single detail of the houseâs exterior to appear authentic, circa 1894; rehanging every door and window; and hunting out restored period-cor-rect hardware instead of buying contemporary copies.
And yet the Shippams practice a rather sophisticated phi-losophy of restoration. âLeave the scars,â says Christine. âIf you canât fix it, let it be.â They figure there will be future stew-ards of the house compelled to pick up on things theyâve left un-restored.
For a time, the preacher Sweet Daddy Grace, founder of the
The addictive nature
GR ID + H IDDEN C ITY
Preservation Madness
STORY bY jOSEPH G. BRiN PHOTOS bY AlBERT YEE
of home restoration
United House of Prayer for All People, lived here. The Shippams preserved Graceâs âOn Airâ sign in the red, white, and blue radio room. Neighbors say the columns out front also were once painted red, white, and blue in the style of barbershop poles.
When the Shippams bought the house, they found all the woodwork ru-ined by textured paint and dogs. âThere have been times,â says Christine, âwhen weâve totally given up hope. But you canât stop. You canât back out of a commitment.â All the while friends and family keep asking, âwhy arenât you finished?â
Since the project began in 2008, the Shippams have weathered dust and dirt, break-ins and self-doubt, difficulties cushioned by a sense that the neigh-borhood itself has begun to improve. âPeople caring, that feels good. It helps others,â says Christine.
But when asked if she could imagine the day when the house was finished and the years fighting with contractors, tracking down replacement parts, and discovering seemingly endless problems were over, will she be happy to sit back and relax? Her answer: âIt would be lonely.â
3 6 gridphilly.com m a r c h 2 0 1 3
christine and anthony Shippam are five years into restoring their 1894 Georgian revival home in mount airy and the end isnât in sight.
m a r c h 2 0 1 3 gridphilly.com 37
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Giveaways ⢠Music ⢠Food ⢠Fun!
Iâve been dazzled more times than I can remember by the high-speed acro-batics of hunting swallowsâbut never in late December. Âś Rough-winged swal-lows arenât rare in the Delaware Valley. Like most of our insect-eating birds, the
swallows thrive in the Northeast during the summer and in the winter, head south where thereâs more to eat. However, when a breeding ground is provided for yummy chironomid midges (small flies) during the winter months, the swallows stick around.
by bernard brownurban naturalist
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Canât tell your juncos from your chickadees? Pick up Sibleyâs Field Guide, a comprehensive and user-friendly reference for our feathered friends.
Delaware Valley Ornithological ClubInterested in picking up a pair of binoculars and watching some birds? The Delaware Valley Ornithological Club is the perfect way to connect with other birders and learn whatâs what on field trips throughout the region. Visit dvoc.org to learn more.
Bird Bath Some swallows decide not to leave for the winter by bernard brown
Thus a couple weeks before Christmas I stood with environmental educator and birder Tony Croasdale, photographer Christian Hunold, and Philadelphia Water Department science technician Justin OâBrien at the Northeast Wastewater Treatment Plant. Above our head rough-winged swallows zipped through the sky, picking midges out of the air.
The relatively warm contact ponds (where treated wastewater is left to bleach to kill off any lingering mi-crobes) host a breeding population of midges through the winter. Apparently some of the swallows that en-joy them during the summer decided theyâd be better off around these ponds than flying the two thousand miles to Central America.
The Northeast Wastewater
Treatment Plant
3 8 g r i d p h i l ly.co m M A r c h 2 0 1 3 P h otoS by c h r i St i A n h u n o l D
Swallows live life on fast forward. We saw them rest for only seconds at a time be-fore taking off again; a cloud of birds darting and banking a few feet above our heads, they
were maddening to follow with sluggish human eyes. The wastewater treatment plant is a work of steel pipes and pumps with water coursing through rectolinear pools. The obvious artificial-ity made the experience of observing wildlife all the more surreal.
So many of our swallows, though, see no prob-lem in making a habitat from the built environ-ment. Think of barn swallows, which evolved nesting in caves, now make their homes primar-ily in our buildings. Similarly, other swallows, including the rough-winged, take advantage of walls that simulate their ânaturalâ cliff nest-ing sites. Moreover, there is nothing new about humans altering wildlife food supplies. For ex-ample, birdfeeders have extended the geographic range of cardinals. Maybe in the green space of our backyards itâs easier for us to ignore our in-fluence on our wild neighborsâ behavior, but at the inescapably industrial wastewater treatment plant, our tinkering is impossible to miss.
Birders looking to increase their Christmas bird count totals have been visiting the treatment plant swallows for years, spotting them through the perimeter fence. But, as OâBrien told us, in a post-9/11 world, the Water Department doesnât like people hanging around the plant with bin-oculars and high power zoom lenses.
There are plenty of places for birding in Phila-delphia, even if you wait until April to watch our swallows fly over our rivers and ponds. On that same visit to the treatment plant we heard more-typical winter birds singing from an adjacent patch of woods: Croasdale picked out Carolina wrens, white-throated sparrows, downy wood-peckers and cardinals. Two red-tailed hawks soared high above us as they scanned the rough-er land along Frankford Creek for prey.
We could have stood there mesmerized by the swallows forever, but we felt bad keeping OâBrien away from his work and I had to get back to the office myself. The swallows had no plans to leave.
bernard brown is an amateur field herper, bureaucrat and founder of the PB&J Campaign (pbjcampaign.org), a movement focused on the benefits of eating lower on the food chain.
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Contact ponds at the plant host breeding midge populations during the winter.
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feb15
Emerald Ash Borer: Coming Soon to a Tree Near YouThis workshop will cover strategies to
mitigate emerald ash borer-related risks. In-tended for horticultural professionals.
â Fri., Feb. 15, 8 a.m.-12:30 p.m., $10, Pennsylva-nia Horticultural Society, 100 N. 20th St., Fifth Floor. For more information and to register, visit pennhort.net/treetenders
feb16
Introduction to Orchids with Margie RobinsResident orchid guru Margie Robins
will cover watering, fertilizing, light require-ments, repotting and methods to encourage re-blooming.
â Sat., Feb. 16, 10-11 a.m., $10, Primex Garden Center, 435 W. Glenside Ave., Glenside. Register in the store or by calling 215-887-7500
feb16
Ecological Home Orchard with Phil ForsythPhil Forsyth, an edible landscape ex-
pert, will cover the basics of fruit tree care, in-cluding tree selection, pruning, and natural pest and disease management.
â Sat., Feb. 16, 1-2 p.m., $10, Primex Garden Center, 435 W. Glenside Ave., Glenside. Register in the store or by calling 215-887-7500
feb19
The Resourceful City: How Cities Flourish Despite ConstraintsDiana Lind, executive director and edi-
tor in chief at Next City, looks at cities that have developed unusual responses to their financial, spatial or social constraints.
â Tues., Feb. 19, 6-7:30 p.m., free, University of the Arts, 320 S. Broad St. To register, visit corzocenter.ticketleap.com
feb21
Tree Tenders Lunch-time Series: Organizing a Community Tree Planting
Join the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society for hands-on tree care education at this series of lunchtime workshops.
â Thurs., Feb. 21, 12-1 p.m., $25 entire series/$5 per class. Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, 100 N. 20th St., Fifth Floor. Pre-registration required, visit phsonline.org
feb21
4th Annual Locavore Business Card ExchangeThis evening of networking and local
food is for anyone who would like to grow their business and learn more about the locavore movement.
â Thurs., Feb. 21, 5-8 p.m., free, Superior Woodcraft, 160 N. Hamilton St., Doylestown. To RSVP, email [email protected] or call 215-348-9942
feb21
Learning from Sandy: Is Philadelphia prepared for the next natural disaster?
Join area experts to consider the lessons learned from Hurricane Sandy and whatâs needed to make Philadelphia more prepared for extreme weather and the impacts of climate change.
â Thurs., Feb. 21, 6-8:30 p.m., free, The Academy of Natural Sciences, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Pkwy. To register, visit naturaldisasterpreparedness.eventbrite.com
feb21
Sowing Seeds of Sanity, Sustainability and SustenanceJoin a gathering of citizens with a goal of
restoring food choice freedom, and discuss the impact of the genetically modified organisms in our food supply.
â Thurs., Feb. 21, 7-8 p.m., free, Collingswood Library, 771 Haddon Ave., Collingswood, NJ. To RSVP, email [email protected]
feb23
Introduction to Rain Gardens with Doris StahlLearn about the basic of rain gardens
and how to create your own.
â Sat., Feb. 23, 10-11 a.m., $10, Primex Garden Center, 435 W. Glenside Ave., Glenside. Register in the store or by calling 215-887-7500
S low Sw e etSEric and Ryan Berley,
brothers and co-owners of Shane Confectionery, will discuss their recipe development philosophy, local product sourcing and values for a people-centered retail experience.
â Thurs., Feb. 21, 7-9 p.m. $20 in advance/$25 at door, The Restaurant School at Walnut Hill College, 4207 Walnut St. For more information and tickets, visit brownpapertickets.com/event/317175
feb21
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feb23
Rain Water Harvesting with Alden ZoveLearn to implement an easy to con-
struct rainwater-harvesting system, and how it can be integrated with permeable paver patios and rain gardens.
â Sat., Feb. 23, 1-2 p.m., $10, Primex Garden Center, 435 W. Glenside Ave., Glenside. Register in the store or by calling 215-887-7500
feb23
First Annual Kennett WinterfestBundle up and enjoy winter brews from more than 25 local craft breweries.
â Sat., Feb. 23, 12:30-4 p.m., $65/$15 designated drivers, S. Broad Street (between State and Cy-press Streets), Kennett Square. For more informa-tion and to register, visit kennettbrewfest.com
feb24
Up Close and Personal: Seed StartsThis edition of the monthly
homesteading workshop will focus on seed starting and garden planning.
â Sun., Feb. 24, 1-5 p.m., $39/$10 late fee after Feb. 21, erdenheim. To RSVP, visit thehomegrowninstitute.org/events
feb25
Full Moon Owl ProwlHike by the light of the full moon in this adventure of
searching and calling for owls at the Bucktoe Creek Preserve. Hike is suit-able for all ages.
â mon., Feb. 25, 6-7:30 p.m., $5 members/$10 non-members, Bucktoe Creek Preserve, 432 Sharp Rd., Avondale. Register at tlcforscc.org or by calling 610-347-0347
feb27 28
6th Annual Wild & Scenic Film Festival Celebrate the natural world with a lineup of acclaimed independent films and documentaries on outdoor adven-
tures and environmental issues. Ticket includes food and drink. This yearâs theme: âA Climate of Change.â
â Wed., Feb. 27-Thurs., Feb. 28, 6:30-9 p.m. $25 per day, Chester County Historical Society, 225 N. High St, West Chester. For more information and to register, visit tlcforscc.org
mar09
Wildlife in Winter Series Part III: MigrationJoin wildlife expert Holly Merker as she
discusses migration habits and patterns that en-sure survival of local fauna during the winter months.
â Sat., mar. 9, 10 a.m.-12 p.m., $5 member/$10 nonmembers, Bucktoe Creek Preserve, 432 Sharp Rd., Avondale. To register, visit tlcforscc.org or call 610-347-0347
mar10
The Brewerâs PlateFair Foodâs annual celebration of re-gional breweries, restaurants, farmers
and artisan producersâall independently owned and located within 150 miles of the city.
â Sun., mar. 10, 6-9 p.m. $70-$140, National Consti-tution Center, 525 Arch St. For more information and tickets, visit fairfoodphilly.org
mar05
Designing for the Planet Participate in an interactive program where the audience becomes problem
solvers. You are in charge of a large spacecraft and something serious has gone wrong. What will you do?
â Tues., mar. 5, 6-7:30 p.m., free, University of the Arts, 320 S. Broad St. To RSVP, visit corzocenter.ticketleap.com
mar07
Preserving the Nature of Streams and StructuresJoin a discussion on stormwater man-
agement and historic preservation incentives. Geared towards the practitioner, but useful to the homeowner, this workshop will include ses-sions on management and preservation.
â Thurs., mar. 7, 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m., free, Campion Stu-dent Center, St. Josephâs University, City Avenue. For more information and to register, visit sju.edu/stormwater
mar12
Sustainability Expo and Film Screening: King CornPennypack Farm & Education Center continues their 4th Annual Sustainability Expo and Film Series with
King Corn, which explores the subsidized crop that drives our nationâs politics and diet.
â Tues., mar. 12, 6-9 p.m., $10, Ambler Theater, 108 e. Butler Ave. For more information and to register, visit amblertheater.org/pennypack
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i L LUST R AT i o N By J i m T i e R N e y
A Penny SavedMindful spending is only some of the good you can do with your money by leah pillsbury
Not all of us have the privilege of a savings or retire-ment account, but for those that do, how often do you stop and ask: whatâs my money up to? Âś Thatâs the ques-
tion I posed to potential investors during my time as a fundraiser for the Mariposa Food Co-op expansion project. The more I asked this question, the more I began to understand that the money we save can be as powerful a tool for change as the money we spend.
As a fundraiser with Mariposa my job was to convince food co-op members and neighbors in West Philadelphia to park some money with the co-op for a few years. Their investments would help cover the costs of purchasing and renovating a new store, and once the co-op was in its new space, and turning a profit, investors would get their money backâin many cases with interest. The conversations I had inevitably in-cluded lines like: âWouldnât you rather see the money invested in your savings account be put to work for a project you care about?â I pitched it as an opportunity to align an investment with their values. Just as many co-op members were striving to make responsible choices with their consumer dollarsâbuying Fair Trade coffee or organic carrotsâI encouraged them to make a responsible choice with their saved dollars.
In the end, Mariposa raised more than $2.5 million to expand and relocateânearly one quarter of the funds came from individuals. The amounts ranged from $25 membership invest-ments to a $25,000 individual loan. The success of the expansion can be attributed in part to the generosity of more than 800 individuals putting their money to work in their neighborhood. It was inspiring, and the experience set me off on a personal quest to find more ways that I could invest money in projects I cared about. Along the way I learned a little more about money, a lot more about myself, and adopted a new vo-
cabulary comprised of terms like âin-vestment vehicles.â
The first investment vehicle I com-mitted was a loan to The Reinvestment Fund, a Philadelphia-based nonprofit fi-nancial institution that finances schools and housing, among other neighbor-hood revitalization projects. Then, I invested in RSF Social Finance, a non-profit financial services organization in San Francisco that lends to educational, agricultural and environmental social enterprises around the country and world. Somewhere in there I also made the choice to move my checking and savings accounts from a big bank to my local credit union. And, of course, I made a loan to the co-op.
I canât claim that this approach is new or par-ticularly innovative. The idea of investing in com-panies or projects whose missions you support, and divesting from those you do not, has a long history. For example, the 1980âs anti-Apartheid movement successfully organized large-scale divestment from companies doing business in South Africa. More recently, the California teachersâ pension fundâthe nationâs largestâtook the first steps towards divesting from gun and firearms companies, following the school shooting in Newtown, Conn. Philadelphiaâs pen-sion board is following suit, having voted to drop investments with gun-related companies should
they fail to adopt certain standards.While these strategies exist, itâs rare that in-
dividuals to invest with a social return in mind as much as a financial one. This isnât so surpris-ing, considering that my own journey to dis-covering new socially responsible investment opportunities wasnât always easy. Sometimes I felt hindered by my ignorance about finances or debilitated by the guilt of having more than I needed. However, the key, I found, was to keep at it, even when it got complicatedâbecause leaving my money untouched didnât harness its power. And why not use that power for good?
After completing the Mariposa Food Co-op capital campaign, leah pillsbury joined Common Market, a nonprofit local foods distributor, as their director of development. She can be reached at leahpillsbury.com.
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