Presser, Nugent
homes win historic designation
Status does not
preclude demolition
by MICHAEL J. MISHAK
After hearing the emotional testimony of
community preservationists at meetings that
drew an almost unprecedented attendance, the
Philadelphia Historical Commission granted
historic status to the second of two
embattled Mt. Airy buildings last week.
On Oct. 8, the former Nugent Baptist Home
joined the former Presser Home for Retired
Musicians, which won historic designation on
Sept. 27. Both buildings are part of a
5.6-acre site on West Johnson Street slated
for development under a proposal by Blair
Christian Academy, a pre-K through 12
school, and Impacting Your World Ministries,
a nondenominational Germantown church.
Both the Presser, most recently known as
Mt. Airy Commons, and the Nugent, known as
Edgemont, homes became the subject of
controversy in August when the church
announced its plans to purchase the
surrounding property and raze all but one of
the sites three buildings. Though no formal
plans have been released, the church has
said it intends to develop the site for a
multi-use facility, which includes a
2,000-seat auditorium, a school and a
five-story parking garage.
Four separate community groups,
representing Mt. Airy and Germantown, raised
objections to any plan involving demolition
at both public meetings and Historical
Commission hearings. They are advocating for
one that would incorporate the existing
buildings.
Last month, the commission voted 7-3 to
designate the former Presser Home as
historic. Four of the commission's 14
members were absent.
"I think these decisions drew more public
interest and comment than any I've seen,"
said Historical Commission spokesman John
Farnham, who has worked for the commission
for more than two years. The commission
recorded four times its average attendance
at some meetings, he said.
Noted not only for their architecture,
both buildings were part of an early 20th
century movement to create special interest
retirement homes.
While State Rep. Rosita Youngblood
testified in support of historic designation
last week, Councilwoman Donna Reed Miller
voiced doubts. Miller said buildings she
previously supported for historic
designation remain vacant and blighted. "I
don't want to see designation prevent
development," she said.
No guarantee
While many saw historic designation as a
guarantee against demolition, the status may
not preclude it or other development
options, Farnham said.
The commission reviews dozens of
applications each month for work that
extends beyond restoration, he said. Some
are demolition requests.
Though rare, the commission has approved
the demolition of historic buildings. "The
designation does not automatically mean an
expensive restoration," Farnham said.
Petitioners must demonstrate that
demolition would either serve the public
interest, as was the case with the
Pennsylvania Convention Center expansion, or
that adaptive costs would constitute a
financial hardship, as was the case with
Temple University's plans to raze a row of
homes within a historic district, he said.
Rules are relaxed for nonprofit
organizations, he said.
Future uncertain
Questions remain about how historic
designation will affect the church's plans.
While messages left for Impacting Your
World Ministries went unreturned at press
time, the churchs architect, John A. Teets,
told community members at an August meeting
that historic designation could add another
$2 million to a project budget already
pushing $5 million.
Designed as a retirement home, Mt. Airy
Commons does not lend itself to adaptive
use, he said, and is particularly at odds
with Impacting Your Worlds plans to build a
new church.
It is unclear if the church, which claims
to have outgrown its current location, will
appeal the commission's decision. A
dissolved deal could reportedly cost the
church $100,000.
Marc Stier, president of West Mt. Airy
Neighbors, testified at both the Presser and
Nugent hearings in favor of historic
designation. Though he said he was
"thrilled" with the commission's decisions,
Stier emphasized the community's commitment
to considering any plan the church may
present.
"This is not about keeping the church
out," Stier said. "It's about keeping the
buildings the way they are."
Neighborhood groups seeking the
buildings preservation have vehemently
denied allegations of racism and religious
bigotry leveled by lawyers for Impacting
Your World Ministries during the
commission's hearings. Another angle
appeared late last month when Sherman Toppin,
Impacting Your World's legal counsel, wrote
in the Germantown Courier, "All that
accompanies the pursuit of this land,
including our involvement in the historical
preservation controversy, is also somehow
within God's will for our ministry not to
be determined by community groups,
historical commissions, reporters or
writers. To the extent that there are
opponents to [the church's] pursuit of this
land, we believe that those individuals also
oppose the spiritual directive given by
God."
"He has a real sense of a calling," Stier
said of the op-ed piece. "I'm sure they
don't mean to denigrate the community. It
just shows how strongly they feel about
this. People have different ways of
expressing spiritual commitment."
If Impacting Your World were to pull out
of its agreement of sale, he said, area
community groups would work vigorously to
find another developer. Four groups have
already expressed interest in the site,
Stier said. Two large developers have
mentioned the possibility of residences, he
said, while other uses include a bed and
breakfast and a co-operative retirement home
for longtime community residents.