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Launching The Green City Strategy

Strategy for a Green City, January 2004

As we entered the new millennium, the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society unveiled a "Green City Strategy" for Philadelphia. Based on the 30-year work of PHS's Philadelphia Green program, the Strategy is a distillation of extensive experience in reclaiming vacant land, community greening, and long-term landscape management. Rooted in the premise that open spaces are essential to the viability of the city, the Strategy calls for a significant investment in Philadelphia's green infrastructure as a tool for revitalization.

"The Green City Strategy considers greening as fundamental, not only in any serious effort to improve the quality of life in Philadelphia, but also for the city's economic development," says J. Blaine Bonham, Jr., executive vice president of PHS. Indeed, research from Chicago, Los Angeles, and St. Louis shows that housing values, home ownership, and median household income all increase when there is close proximity to green spaces, while violent crimes and property crimes decrease. Investing in a greener city promises other benefits as well, according to Patrice Carroll, metropolitan initiative coordinator for the USDA Forest Service, Northeast Area. "Studies show that greening-especially in high-density areas like Philadelphia-offers a broad range of social and environmental benefits as well, including stress reduction and improved air quality," she says.

The Green City Strategy includes a considerable effort to address the problem of Philadelphia's burgeoning amount of vacant land, which contributes to the downward spiral of blighted neighborhoods. It calls for clearing vast amounts of trash and debris from untended land and transforming it into clean, usable spaces that can attract new development or become permanent open space. It promotes the enhancement of community gardens, neighborhood parks and gateways, and commercial corridors, as well as beautifying communities with colorful containers and offering horticultural education and training opportunities.

In 2001, PHS was invited to become a consultant to Mayor John Street's Neighborhood Transformation Initiative (NTI), an ambitious citywide anti-blight campaign that includes-among other objectives-the demolition of vacant buildings and removal of debris from abandoned land. The city subsequently adopted the Green City Strategy as part of NTI and, in June 2003, awarded a $4 million contract to PHS to begin implementation of the Strategy, with the aim of making a substantial impact in a single year-from July 2003 through June 2004.

Taking advantage of this unprecedented commitment from the city, PHS proposed specific projects for fiscal year 2004 that will dramatically improve the appearance of selected neighborhoods. The components of this initial phase of the Green City Strategy reflect key priorities for NTI, a three-pronged approach that includes: concentrated greening in six target areas, community-based vacant land maintenance, and citywide greening projects. These efforts are integrated with PHS's ongoing work, leveraging further support and longstanding partnerships, such as those with The Pew Charitable Trusts, the William Penn Foundation, and the city's Office of Housing and Neighborhood Preservation.

The work completed so far demonstrates that greening can yield dramatic results and conveys the message that the city is serious about its mission of neighborhood transformation. The immediate visual improvements bring hope to residents of formerly blighted areas and help build support for investment in the city's green spaces. Following is a mid-year progress report.

Target Neighborhoods

Working with the city, PHS chose six "target neighborhoods" for concentrated greening efforts, using the following criteria: plans for demolition of abandoned buildings, strong community-based organizations, a history of work with Philadelphia Green, a concentration of public and private investment, a supply of green infrastructure, and geographical distribution. The neighborhoods include Eastern North Philadelphia, North Central Philadelphia, West Philadelphia/Mantua, South Philadelphia, Frankford, and East Mount Airy. Following is a mid-year progress report.

Vacant Land Stabilization
Goal: One thousand parcels (1 million square feet) of vacant land "cleaned and greened"
Completed to date: 660,000 square feet stabilized; 60% of stabilization work underway

Since 1999 PHS has partnered with the city's Empowerment Zone office to reclaim hundreds of parcels of trash-strewn vacant land in the American Street Empowerment Zone in North Philadelphia as well as in the New Kensington community. Through this experience, Philadelphia Green has developed a highly successful model for "stabilizing" vacant land by replacing unsightly abandoned lots with "clean & green" landscapes of grass, ringed with trees and wood fencing. Coupled with the city's efforts to demolish abandoned buildings in the six target neighborhoods, stabilizing vacant land in these communities will immediately improve their appearance, discourage further deterioration, and build momentum for other enhancements.

Signature Greening Projects

Goal: One high-profile greening project in each of the six target neighborhoods
Completed to date: "Ridge on the Rise" event transformed four blocks in Strawberry Mansion

As more and more vacant land becomes "clean & green" and more neighborhood blocks are transformed, community interest in greening increases. This creates the opportunity for community engagement in higher-profile greening projects, such as gateways and other public spaces. Working closely with NTI staff and City Council representatives, PHS will identify one key greening opportunity in each of the six target neighborhoods.

The first project was completed on September 27 along the 2100 through 2400 blocks of Ridge Avenue, in the Strawberry Mansion section of the city. Working with the Cecil B. Moore/Ridge Avenue Business Association; Ridge on the Rise, a neighborhood business association; Project H.O.M.E., a community development corporation that offers housing and support services; and neighborhood residents, PHS led a one-day effort to stabilize vacant lots and plant flowers in 30 container barrels along the sidewalks.

Neighborhood activist Juanita Story-Jones was pleased with the results: "Greening is something we've needed for years," she said. "It makes this place feel like more of a community. It shows that this is a place for investment, a place to live, a place to enjoy."

Community-based Vacant Land Maintenance

Goal: Hire community-based organizations to maintain 1,760 vacant parcels
Completed to date: Eight organizations hired; 1,900 lots being maintained

The city has completed a surface cleaning of 31,000 vacant lots and will clean an additional 1,000 parcels of land. To encourage citizen stewardship of these lots, the city asked PHS to develop a community-based maintenance program, which will hire local organizations to mow the lots and remove trash. This fall, PHS selected eight organizations in four sections of Philadelphia that will be responsible for performing basic housekeeping of these parcels.

"This approach gives residents a direct role in improving the appearance of their own environment, investing the community in the success of the project," says Philadelphia Green associate director Maitreyi Roy. "We hope it will become a model for ongoing vacant land management efforts citywide."

Citywide Greening

The Green City Strategy calls for expanding the urban greening efforts that have been a hallmark of PHS's work through its Philadelphia Green program. Key categories of citywide greening include:
· Greening Neighborhood Commercial Corridors
· Neighborhood Parks Revitalization
· New Community Gardens
· Street Beautification Projects-"Garden Blocks"
· Education and Training Opportunities

Commercial Corridors
Goal: 6 sites
Completed to date: 5 sites selected; planning underway

Commercial corridor greening projects focus on landscape enhancements along strategic streets that can serve as a neighborhood's economic lifeline. For maximum impact, the Green City Strategy concentrates these efforts in areas where community redevelopment efforts are already underway.

Corridor greening projects are continuing at two sites-along Baltimore Avenue in the University City section of West Philadelphia and Germantown Avenue in Mount Airy. The city will provide NTI funds for four additional corridor improvements, and PHS has selected three: Ogontz Avenue in West Oak Lane; Girard Avenue near 30th Street; and Frankford & Cottman in the city's Mayfair section. Landscape designs are being developed by PHS staff and include traffic islands, small "pocket" parks, and container plantings.

Parks
Goal: 23 neighborhood parks enhanced
Completed to date: Project support for 31 parks

For the past 10 years, Philadelphia Green's Parks Revitalization Project has worked in partnership with local volunteer groups and the city's Department of Recreation to revitalize and improve neighborhood parks throughout the city. The Parks Project also initiated a new partnership with the Fairmount Park Commission, which oversees city parks not under the jurisdiction of the Department of Recreation.

Gardens
Goal: 20 New Gardens; 6 "Keystone Gardens" improved
Completed to date: 10 new garden sites identified

PHS is committed to the creation and support of community gardens and to teaching gardening skills to city residents. Funds from NTI will support the creation of 20 new community gardens. In addition, PHS will complete enhancement projects at six "Keystone Gardens" -long-standing, large-scale community gardens that receive ongoing Philadelphia Green support.

Garden Blocks
Goal: 30 "Garden Blocks," residential streets beautified with planters
Completed to date: More than 300 containers placed along 16 blocks

Garden Block projects are simple beautification endeavors that immediately improve the visual appeal of communities and bring neighbors together, in many cases for the first time. For maximum impact, PHS is working with clusters of contiguous blocks. Each block receives one planter per household, with at least 20 to 30 households participating on each block. PHS provides containers, soil and plants, assists with planting and maintenance, as well as training where needed. Two clusters have been completed, along East Lehigh Street and North 58th Street, in North Philadelphia.

Education & Training
Goal: 12 garden workshops
Completed to date: 6 workshops

PHS's courses and workshops-such as the longstanding Garden Tenders and Tree Tenders training projects-help city dwellers beautify their communities through horticulture, as well as build the capacity and independence of neighborhood groups. To reach more people, PHS created the City Gardening Series, which includes a new partnership with the Free Library of Philadelphia. Workshops will be presented at library branches, many in neighborhoods not previously served by PHS.

Looking Forward

The Green City Strategy holds tremendous promise for Philadelphia's continuing revitalization. Its long-term success, says Mayor John Street, "will be measured by the number of residents who choose to stay in their neighborhoods rather than move out of the city." But the Strategy's immediate impact is evident not only in the much-improved appearance of many neighborhoods, but also in the hearts and minds of residents, who are beginning to view these communities in a whole new light.

"Greening the lots is one way to bring back the beauty that was once here," says Alison Gardner of Tioga United. "It's uplifting. It shows the potential for what could be."

 

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