Development
Though it often has a negative connotation, development represents the absolutely crucial element of demand to use the urban form. Once completed, the development project ends up helping to define the built environment for future generations. Without development, there would be no city to plan. Despite the stigma often attached to it, development can meet both community needs and earn a profit when its design and program contributes to the larger urban framework.
It is important that development be regulated so that it supports the public health, safety, and welfare of a neighborhood, though this can be difficult to achieve today given the pressures facing the public sector due to rising social services needs and decreasing tax bases. Private developers often have leverage in these cases, which can lead to some unhealthy compromises that negatively affect our built environment. It is possible for development to be over-regulated, which often discourages investors from investing in particular cities. Philadelphia is often seen as a city that has outdated local controls, which in turn delays the development approval process. However, the re-zoning process currently underway by the Zoning Code Commission should go a long way in addressing this. The goal is to set standards that encourage a balance of public good and private development.
Tire slasher arrested | School District leadership | reinforcing Lincoln Drive | Strip revival | Nugent Home reuse
Apple Lofts goes residential | Buck owners a bit less deadbeat | OCF v. Point Breeze, still | Rina Cutler as visionary bureaucrat | Bobby Henon vs. bad landlords
Parks & Rec budget shift | Planning Commission supports Norris Square rezoning | townhouses for Rivers Edge | Mercy Street gardening | Grand Jury looks at Buck fire | SEPTA’s nerve center | Moyer rules
LED traffic light savings | strengthening East Falls through school closing | South Street West’s boom | PHA mum about Liddonfield | Inky wins Pulitzer | weird 2012 weather
Could Philly benefit from another casino?
The Inquirer’s Jennifer Lin looks at the economic context of Bart Blatstein’s proposal to build a casino-entertainment complex at the Inquirer-Daily News building. It could result in a lower revenue for the state.
Poll: A casino on Callowhill?
Developer Bart Blatstein wants to build a casino behind the Inquirer building. Tell us what you think by taking today’s Word on the Street poll.
Farewell Fante-Leone pool
US Construction plans to demolish Bella Vista’s Fante-Leone pool to build new housing. While near-neighbors won’t miss the pool, many want to see the decorative classical entryway repurposed as part of the new development or in a park nearby.
High Noon at Norris Square: Dueling over St. Boniface and rezoning
Council Member Maria Quiñones-Sanchez and Norris Square Civic Association are in a pitched fight over the redevelopment of St. Boniface Church on Norris Square and a rezoning proposal that would kill the project.












Recent Comments