Op-Ed from today's DP:
 
Compliments of Al Krigman
  
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Jim Saksa | The Frankenstein on 40th Street


The  proposed towering hotel at 40th and Pine streets violates Penn's past 
promises  of responsible urban development  
(http://media.www.dailypennsylvanian.com/user/index.cfm?event=displayAuthorProfile&authorid=2657559)
 Yesterday was 
Easter Sunday, and across the world most Christians (and Jews  for Jesus!) 
celebrated the resurrection of Christ. 

It's a celebration of  renewal and rebirth, purposely scheduled to coincide 
with the advent of spring.  Around this time in the liturgical calendar, 
Christians examine their lives and  their faith in an effort to renew their 
connection with God. 

Penn's  doing some renewal of its own right now, but this renewal is most 
decidedly not  spiritual - it's urban. But the latest project west of campus - 
the Campus Inn  hotel on 40th and Pine streets - is less a holy resurrection of 
a dead and  dilapidated building and more an unnatural, unwieldy creation of 
Frankenstein's  monster - a grotesquely large beast despised by the local 
townsfolk. Like Dr.  Frankenstein, Penn is madly in love with its creation, and 
the 
pleas of the  local community seem to be falling on the deaf ears of driven 
developers.  

At Easter Mass, Catholics are asked to reaffirm their faith and renew  the 
vows made at Baptism. It's time for Penn to renew the vows Judith Rodin gave  
the University City community when she swore that Penn would never again  
stubbornly push our borders west while leaving all community dissent and  
disagreement crushed on the slaughter bench of history. 

So, following in  the Catholic tradition, trustees and administrators, please 
respond "We do" to  the following:

We acknowledge Penn's past sins of greed, pride and  gluttony embodied in the 
devastating and immoral bulldozing of the Black Bottom.  We do.

We swear to uphold Rodin's promise to the West Philadelphia  community to 
"never again expand Penn's campus to the west … into residential  
neighborhoods." 
We do.

We recognize that unilateral developments without  community support generate 
terrible amounts of animosity and opposition.  Moreover, we recognize that 
urban renewal projects that undermine a  neighborhood's sense of community will 
ultimately be detrimental to the  long-term stability of that neighborhood. We 
do.

We understand the  Delaware Valley Smart Growth Alliance, which praised the 
Campus Inn plan,  received funding from the Urban Land Institute, which in turn 
received funding  from Campus Apartments, which is a partner in the 
development of the proposed  inn. Thus, they're probably not unbiased and 
shouldn't be 
used in defense of the  inn. We do.

We acknowledge that the proposed cost per night - just under  $200 - is 
ludicrously high, so any argument suggesting this is needed to help  patients' 
families afford long stays is complete bunk. We do.

We  understand that a new hotel with next to no parking spots will create a 
massive  disruption of the currently less-than-stellar parking situation in the 
 surrounding neighborhood. 

After all, we now know that Jim Saksa has  received at least a dozen parking 
tickets in the past three years around there,  and it'll only get worse after 
the inn is built. We do.

We recognize that  an 11-story building in a neighborhood of 3-story 
buildings is preposterously  out of place, like Yao Ming in a midget 
convention. 
Furthermore, we respect the  opinion of the Inquirer's architecture critic, 
Inga 
Saffron, who called it an  "ungainly slab." We do.

At around this time during Easter Mass, Catholics  will turn to one another 
and offer a sign of peace, saying "Peace be with you"  as they shake one 
another's hands. Penn should turn to her neighbors with a sign  of peace and an 
open 
hand. 

None of the neighbors I've spoken to refuses  to develop the land. 

As Magali Larson, a former Penn professor who has  helped spearhead 
neighborhood resistance put it in an e-mail, "The neighbors  would LOVE 
low-rise 
commercial development. A sports store, a garden store, even  a liquor store, 
an art 
store with rental studios in the blasted house, a  five-story condo with 
parking … an architectural history/preservation lab  school, you name it."

If an inn is needed, why not across the Schuylkill?  Penn boasts of being a 
major civic leader and an integral part of the larger  Philly community. 

It's time we act like a real leader - a real neighbor  - and show a little 
Brotherly Love.


Jim Saksa is a College senior  from Toms River, N.J. His e-mail address is 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] You  Sir, are an Idiot appears on Mondays.



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