Commission recommends approval for hotel

Julia Harte

The Philadelphia City Planning Commission unanimously  recommended yesterday 
that the city's Zoning Board of Adjustment approve plans  to build an 11-story 
hotel at 40th and Pine streets. 

For the past year,  the hotel has been a source of contention between 
developers and local  residents. Yesterday's hearing gave each side the chance 
to 
make its case to the  Planning Commission.

The Commission can do no more than recommend that  the ZBA grant approval, 
and it's not clear when that decision will be  made.

Developers, including former Penn managing director of real estate  Tom 
Lussenhop and Campus Apartments, say the hotel would provide visitors to the  
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania with much-needed extended-stay  
housing.

They have also pledged to renovate an old Italianate mansion on  the site and 
incorporate it into the hotel. 

But residents of the area  around 40th and Pine streets complain that the 
hotel will generate traffic, take  up streetside parking, be an eyesore and 
turn 
into an ordinary hotel with a  denser flow of visitors than developers claim.

Developers tried to  address some of these fears yesterday at the hearing. 
According to Lussenhop,  Penn would guarantee about 75 parking spaces in its 
garages to hotel  guests.

Carl Primavera, the developers' lawyer, said the approval  application 
submitted to the ZBA stipulated that the hotel be used for  extended-stay 
visits 
only.

"It's a use that's in high demand, and it's a  site that's in no demand," he 
said, pointing out that no other developer has  expressed interest in the area.

Development would benefit the historic  yet abandoned mansion at the site, 
said Jonathan Farnham, executive director of  the Philadelphia Historical 
Commission. 

"There were signs that this  building was suffering," Farnham said. "This may 
be the last opportunity to save  it."

The Historical Commission has approved the concept of the plan but  has yet 
to give it final approval.

About 15 local residents attended  yesterday's meeting. One woman held up a 
large sign reading "NO HOTEL in our  HOOD!" while others voiced their concerns 
to the commissioners.

One such  resident, Mary Goldman, said she was particularly concerned about 
the traffic  the hotel would bring to an already crowded street. She also said 
she would not  welcome the intrusion of such a large commercial building into 
her quiet  residential neighborhood.

When she moved to the neighborhood 40 years  ago, Goldman said, "Penn 
promised they wouldn't come west of 40th Street. This  is west of 40th Street."

Like most members of the Planning Commission,  commissioner Nilda Ruiz agreed 
that the hotel's appearance might seem  "overbearing" at first.

But she "just doesn't see it being that much of a  problem" after the initial 
shock - she thinks residents will get used to the  sight and not notice it 
after a while, Ruiz said yesterday.

"You don't  live there," called out Glenn Moyer, another local resident. 
Addressing the  commissioners, Moyer complained that he felt "invisible" 
because 
his testimony  against the hotel plan seemed to be ignored by every city  
committee.



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