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Planners OK 216-unit apartment complex at 4th and Race

The project now moves to the Zoning Board for consideration Aug. 29.

The Planning Commission approved of the development at 401 Race St. despite concerns raised by the Civic Design Review Committee. (Barton Partners Architects courtesy of PlanPhilly)
The Planning Commission approved of the development at 401 Race St. despite concerns raised by the Civic Design Review Committee. (Barton Partners Architects courtesy of PlanPhilly)Read more

The City Planning Commission voted on Tuesday to support developer Priderock Capital Group's proposal to build a 4-story, 216-unit apartment complex at 4th and Race streets in Old City.

The project, which will go before the Zoning Board later this month, disappointed the Civic Design Review Committee in two meetings over the summer. The committee felt it was overly suburban, not ambitious enough for the site, and unnecessarily cheap in terms of materials.

Nancy Rogo-Trainer, a commissioner and chair of the Civic Design Review Committee, summarized the committee's feelings on Tuesday.

"We struggled with a way of saying, 'You should be more aspirational,' " she said.

The materials in particular are disappointing, she said.

"It's really kind of sad when someone building a block from Independence Mall thinks that standard brick is too deluxe a material, too expensive," she said. "To me, that speaks volumes."

Alan Greenberger, the commission chairman, said he didn't have any problems with the two variances the developer is seeking, for height and loading. He also said the prominence of the site may not be "what it's cracked up to be," given that the south side of the property faces a solid blank wall across Race Street. But he agreed with Rogo-Trainer about the larger economy bricks the developers are planning to use.

"Normal brick speaks to something about the context of Philadelphia and its residential world …" Greenberger said. "These 4-inch bricks look like a utility brick that speaks to a lack of generosity."

Ultimately, the Zoning Board will decide whether the project can move forward. That decision will be based, theoretically, on whether the developers can make a case that the underlying zoning creates a hardship on their property. The meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, Aug. 29.

PlanPhilly is now a project of WHYY/NewsWorks. It began in 2006 as an initiative of Penn Praxis inside the University of Pennsylvania School of Design. Though now part of WHYY, PlanPhilly still works closely with Penn Praxis in covering planning, zoning and development news.