Tag Archives: Harrisburg State Hospital

Historically Speaking: In Harrisburg, much has been lost–but much has been saved, too

Illustration by Rich Hauck.

Each winter, I get to cover one of my favorite annual news stories.

As an old building buff, I look forward to Historic Harrisburg Association’s “Preservation Priorities,” a list of endangered historic properties that the organization updates every year.

First, I watch the presentation then I write a story detailing what’s in, what’s out, what’s old, what’s new for the year.

For 2024, the William Penn building topped the list (natch!), followed by the former Harrisburg State Hospital grounds and then our beloved, if beaten down, Broad Street Market.

The rest of the list reads like a who’s who of our area’s blighted, beleaguered and broken. The 30 or so properties on the “priority” and “watch” lists include everything from 19th-century mansions to historic bridges to old churches, schools and fire houses.

The common thread: all need new love, new life and, often, a new owner—as well as tons of money and vision to go from forlorn to fixed.

As much as I enjoy the presentation, I’m often left feeling empty afterwards, given the tragedy inherent in broken-down buildings and in how many linger on the list from year to year.

Last year, in this space, I expressed some of that frustration by emphasizing the negative—the loss of so many of downtown Harrisburg’s once-beautiful buildings, which has left, in its wake, an abstract jumble of structures, parking garages and empty lots. I did that to contrast our situation with that of Lancaster, a thriving small city whose historic core remains largely intact.

I stand by my opinion that Lancaster’s success can be credited, at least in part, to the retention and restoration of its federal and Victorian-era built environment.

However, this year, in this column, I want to flip that script.

When I arrived in Harrisburg in 2009, I remember my first walk through Midtown.

On a bitter, mid-winter day, I took a stroll up 3rd Street, starting at Forster and ending at Reily, before winding back, mostly to check out this new city I had landed in.

On that walk, I felt a bit like Gary Cooper in “High Noon.” In the climax to that 1952 film, Cooper’s character, Marshall Will Kane, walks down the main street alone, the dusty road deserted of townspeople, who have sealed themselves up inside their homes and businesses.

My walk felt just as forlorn. I wandered the street without encountering a soul, passing one boarded-up building after another. I wouldn’t have been surprised if a tumbleweed or two had come bouncing by.

Had I just waited 15 years, until 2024, I would have had an entirely different experience. Since that first walk, the boards have been ripped off and the buildings brought back, including for all of the landmark structures along that half-mile stretch.

Some of these restorations and adaptive reuses are truly remarkable.

Arguably, the new era dawned when GreenWorks Development turned the enormous Evangelical Press Building into beautiful classroom space. Down the street, Midtown Scholar then remade a forlorn retail strip into one of the best independent bookstores in the country. Two blocks away, H*MAC took on the daunting challenge of reviving the shuttered, sprawling PAL building, resulting in an extraordinary transformation into a live music venue, restaurant and bar.

The list continues: ModernRugs, Susquehanna Art Museum, Pursuit/Union Lofts, Carpets & Draperies, COBA, Millworks. On that day 15 years ago, I walked past all of these buildings, which, at the time, were unused, unloved and falling apart.

Even better—these have all been discrete projects, not done by some mega-developer or large corporation, but, one by one, by local people who have poured their time, dollars and souls into them.

So, yeah, sometimes I need to slap myself out of my funk. Am I upset that, for the nth straight year, the 200-year-old Balsley House downtown continues to deteriorate? I sure am. But we need to celebrate our wins, too—and those wins have been real and substantial.

As he introduced the 2024 version of “Preservation Priorities,” Historic Harrisburg Executive Director David Morrison explained why his organization undertakes this exercise each year.

“By compiling this list and publicizing it, it has played a very significant role in encouraging these important properties to be preserved,” he said. “When we publicize them, sometimes it spurs the owner into doing something about it. Sometimes, it spurs somebody to look into purchasing the property. So, it’s a very effective tool for promoting historic preservation.”
Agreed. Now, let’s take it from here, Harrisburg.

Lawrance Binda is publisher and editor of TheBurg.

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Historic preservation priorities announced for 2024, William Penn tops list

William Penn High School (illustration: Rich Hauck)

A Harrisburg school building tops a list of local “preservation priorities,” as an area historic preservation group has unveiled its annual list.

On Monday night, Historic Harrisburg Association (HHA) detailed its list of endangered historic structures in the greater Harrisburg area.

“By compiling this list and publicizing it, it has played a very significant role in encouraging these important properties to be preserved,” said David Morrison, HHA’s executive director, reflecting on past efforts.

In an hour-long presentation, HHA board President Jeb Stuart outlined the group’s priorities for 2024, with the former William Penn High School topping the list of preservation priorities.

Last year, the Harrisburg School District proposed demolishing the century-old school, which has been vacant and deteriorating for over a decade. That proposal met pushback from the community and alumni, resulting in the appointment of a task force to weigh other options for the building and property. Those options are due to be presented imminently to district officials.

“There is agreement that the property can be saved and should be saved,” said Morrison, who sits on the task force. “I think there’s a good chance that a good outcome will result from this effort.”

The sprawling Harrisburg State Hospital complex, located mostly in Susquehanna Township, was second on the list. The commonwealth had been trying to sell the property, with Dauphin County as a proposed buyer, but that deal later fell through.

The Broad Street Market takes the third spot on the list. Last year, a fire devastated the market’s 150-year-old brick building, which has been shuttered since. The older stone building remains open, but reconstruction has not yet commenced on the brick building’s restoration, which could take years.

“We hope to work very closely with the city and with the Pennsylvania Historical Museum Commission in making sure, to the extent possible, that this [fire-ravaged] section of the brick building will be rebuilt as it was,” Stuart said.

The fourth “preservation priority” was the former Camp Curtin Memorial Mitchell UMC Church. In 2021, a local developer purchased the church from the Susquehanna United Methodist Conference, proposing to redevelop it into housing. That project didn’t occur and, just last month, the church was sold to a Lancaster-based congregation called Ministry Int IPDA.

HHA listed two vacant Harrisburg firehouses as the fifth “preservation priority.” Sale of the Riverside Firehouse has been in limbo for years, as it sits on two different property parcels that have not yet been consolidated. Likewise, the Paxton Firehouse in Shipoke has long been empty, despite an attempt two years ago to turn it into a facility serving the homeless population.

HHA’s top-five preservation priorities differ significantly from last year’s when the Market Street Bridge topped the list, followed by Balsley House, a dilapidated, Federal-style building in downtown Harrisburg.

Moreover, HHA put about two-dozen buildings and structures on its “watch list,” meaning they’re historic properties of concern. These include the Market Street Bridge, Balsley House, Prospect Hill Cemetery Gatehouse, Zembo Shrine Center, the Walnut Street Bridge, Grace United Methodist Church, former Coca-Cola bottling works and several Front Street mansions, among others.

Balsley House

HHA’s 2024 “Preservation Priorities” was drafted by the organization’s preservation committee and still must be approved by the full board.

“When we publicize [these properties], sometimes it spurs the owner into doing something about it. Sometimes, it spurs somebody to look into purchasing the property,” Morrison said. “So, it’s a very effective tool for promoting historic preservation.”

You can watch Historic Harrisburg Association’s “Preservation Priorities” presentation on their Facebook page. The video also will be posted on their website.

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Historic Harrisburg outlines “preservation priorities” for 2023; Market Street Bridge tops list

The Market Street Bridge in Harrisburg (file photo)

A Harrisburg-based historic preservation group has released its annual list of endangered and threatened area landmarks, and, this year, a century-old bridge tops the list.

Earlier this week, Historic Harrisburg Association (HHA) officials announced that its top “preservation priority” for 2023 is the Market Street Bridge, a 95-year-old stone arch structure that spans the Susquehanna River.

Last year, the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation unveiled a multi-year plan to restore the bridge, which includes constructing a separate utility bridge along the bridge’s southern façade.

Sara Sweeney, chair of HHA’s preservation committee, said that the organization has been in discussions with PennDOT regarding this proposal.

“We continue to applaud PennDOT for its plan to restore the bridge and hope that, in the process, the original design and features are maintained,” said Sweeney, during a Facebook Live presentation outlining HHA’s 2023 “preservation priorities.” “We will continue to monitor progress as the design progresses.”

A PennDOT rendering of the south facade of the Market Street Bridge, showing the proposed utility bridge addition

This is the first year that the Market Street Bridge has been a top priority for HHA. In 2022, the list was headed by Balsley House, a 2,590-square-foot building located at 220 N. 2nd St. According to HHA, the Federal-style building, one of the oldest structures in Harrisburg, continues to be threatened and, this year, is ranked second on the list.

However, according to HHA, there may be hope for the long-vacant, blighted structure in the heart of downtown.

“We have heard that there is actually some interest in the property by a private party, and we are hopeful for movement in 2023,” Sweeney said.

Balsley House in downtown Harrisburg

The remaining three “preservation priorities” also made last year’s top-five list. They are:

  • The former William Penn High School at Italian Lake
  • The former Harrisburg State Hospital complex
  • Prospect Hill Cemetery Gatehouse near the city line

Balsley House has been on the list since 2018, William Penn since 2017, and the former state hospital since 2014. The Prospect Hill Cemetery Gatehouse went on the list in 2021 after a car hit the structure, severely damaging it.

In the presentation, Sweeney also noted several recent preservation “successes” and two preservation “losses.”

The successes include:

  • The former Lemoyne Middle School, which has been renovated and converted into an apartment building
  • The former Gerber’s Department Store, also known as the “Carpets and Draperies building,” which was renovated into a mixed-used structure in Midtown Harrisburg
  • The former Milestone Inn, which now serves as headquarters for Dilks Properties in Uptown Harrisburg
  • The Harrisburg History Project, a series of historical markers in Harrisburg that needed replacement and updating

A win: The restored Carpets and Draperies building in Harrisburg

Sweeney also noted two recent “preservation losses”:

  • Beidleman House, an Allison Hill structure on Market Street that was razed last year
  • The Jackson Hotel on N. 6th Street in Harrisburg, which collapsed in early 2021

Moreover, HHA put about 30 structures in and around Harrisburg on its “watch list,” meaning that they’re historic properties of concern. These range widely, but include such landmark buildings as the Broad Street Market, the former Coca-Cola bottling works on Allison Hill, the Riverside firehouse and even HHA’s own Historic Harrisburg Resource Center.

Two new properties were added to the watch list this year.

The first, Myers House, at 213 N. Front St. in Harrisburg, made the watch list as the owner, the Dauphin County Bar Association, may no longer need such a large space, said David Morrison, HHA’s executive director. The second “watch list” addition this year is Buck’s Tavern, a nearly three-century-old structure located in West Hanover Township, which is threatened by blight and possible demolition.

HHA’s board is expected to approve the preservation priority list at its February meeting.

Historic Harrisburg Association is located at 1230 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg. To view the entire presentation, visit https://www.facebook.com/HistoricHarrisburgAssociation. For more information on Historic Harrisburg Association, which celebrates its 50th anniversary this year, visit www.historicharrisburg.org.

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Cycle Sites: There’s plenty to stop and see while breezing around the Capital Area Greenbelt.

Fort Hunter Mansion and Park

Harrisburg’s best-kept secret may be a 20-mile trail first conjured up by City Beautiful planners in 1902 that finally became a reality over nine decades later.

Today, the Capital Area Greenbelt takes riders and walkers not only through nature, but also through cultural landmarks, past sports fields, near restaurants and coffee shops, and by a myriad of historical landmarks.

The Tour de Belt returns this year on June 5 to celebrate the trail while also raising funds to help maintain and improve the Greenbelt. While it’s exhilarating to join hundreds of riders (nearly 1,000 typically ride) on the loop around the city, the secrets of the trail can be discovered more easily on solo or small group rides.

The adventures can kick off from a number of trail locations, but a good starting point is the trailhead off of Derry Street near the City Line Diner. It’s just a few blocks down from The Tiger Eye Coffee Shop (3418 Derry St.), which welcomes Greenbelt traversers with a bike rack, outdoor seating and a variety of tasty drinks and treats.

Most of the trail is either paved trails or gravel roads, so bicyclists, joggers and hikers can largely avoid city streets. Beginning at Derry Street, riders encounter some hills, particularly on the ascent into Reservoir Park that starts out gently, but gradually becomes steeper and steeper until—gasp! The Civil War Museum and various statues and fountains welcome riders to the summit. From there, it’s literally downhill for a bit.

One of the more “secret” areas on and near the Greenbelt includes the East Harrisburg Cemetery off of Herr Street and Edgemont Road. The trail winds to the west of that, bringing riders out near the former Harrisburg State Hospital grounds, where they have a choice to take a short detour to Veterans Park in Susquehanna Township off of Elmerton Avenue. Along with a playground, sports fields, and tennis courts, the park also has monuments to World War II, Korean War and Vietnam War veterans.

Take some time to tour around the former hospital campus, which first opened in 1845 and is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It’s as pleasant as it is creepy with interesting architecture, climbing kudzu and flashbacks from the psychological thriller, “Girl, Interrupted,” which was filmed there in 1999, launching Angelina Jolie’s career.

Depending on when one is riding, it might be possible to take a brief stop to enjoy some cricket at the Lower Field park at 2301 N. Cameron St., where Pennsylvania United Cricket Association matches are played.

A pedestrian tunnel takes riders under Cameron Street, coming out in front of the Farm Show Complex, where the Greenbelt parallels the busy thoroughfare until turning onto Wildwood Park Drive, then through the HACC campus before following Industrial Road to Wildwood Park.

Not only does the trail become more scenic with the lake, cattails, croaking frogs and singing birds, but it also gets hillier and more challenging as it wraps around the lake with installations from the outdoor exhibit, “Art in the Wild.” The exhibit surprises trail users with splashes of color, unusual shapes and creative integrations with nature.

Soon after exiting Wildwood Park and cruising down Linglestown Road, riders have a choice to detour off the original loop onto a recently completed expansion that follows N. Front Street on a paved path along the river to historic Fort Hunter Park.

Bikers can stop for food at multiple mini-markets and fast food restaurants as well as bar food at The Boro and steaks at the Glass Lounge along this stretch. Getting back on track on Linglestown Road, bikers will take a right onto Kaby Street by the Donald B. Stabler Memorial Park and enjoy the quiet residential streets of Susquehanna Township before returning to the hubbub of Front Street along the river.

Views of wildfowl and bridges, art and sculptures, and historic buildings like the state Capitol—as well as the possibility of a side trip to City Island via the Walnut Street Bridge—are well worth the busyness of the path as trail users travel south through Harrisburg, eventually coming out by the PennDOT building.

Phoenix Park rises along the river past the building, including a construction site that will be the home for the future Tiny Homes Veterans Village. Gravel trails then loop riders near the Lochiel Hotel, a big, yellow curiosity with a checkered historic past. From there, the Greenbelt parallels Cameron Street until it crosses over just past 13th Street by the Dauphin County Recycling Center.

This area of the trail that follows Spring Creek between 19th and 28th streets offers wild solitude in the middle of urban chaos. The trail here (and also off Derry Street) includes StoryWalk cards sponsored by the Dauphin County Library System, offering children playful interaction. It also provides the only access to the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial, an 11-foot jet-black obelisk in a memorial garden.

Sculptures, flowers and native plants sprout up in the Five Senses Garden off N. Harrisburg Street. Not far after drinking in the garden’s splendor, the trail challenges bikers to safely cross over Paxton Street and wraps along City Park Drive and Derry Street before depositing them back onto the safety of a dedicated trail at the Paxtang Parkway.

That riders can escape to nature hidden along the river, through parks and within the city proper, is a treasured legacy from the early 20th century planners. This emerald necklace is a true urban gem.

For more information on the Capital Area Greenbelt, visit www.caga.org. The Tour de Belt takes place June 5, beginning from the HACC campus at 9 a.m.

 

Bike It, See It

Numerous sites and stops dot the 20-mile Capital Area Greenbelt loop. Long-time CAGA and Bike Harrisburg member Dick Norford, who offers tours around the Greenbelt, drew up a list of 39 interesting things to see along the way.

    • Paxtang Park
    • Reservoir Park
    • National Civil War Museum
    • Harrisburg East Cemetery
    • Harrisburg State Hospital
    • Farm Show Complex
    • HACC
    • Wildwood Park
    • Fort Hunter
    • McCormick Island
    • Jewish Community Center
    • Italian Lake
    • Scottish Rite Cathedral
    • Harrisburg Obelisk
    • Governor’s Mansion
    • Pennsylvania National Fire Museum
    • Broad Street Market
    • Riverfront Park
    • Peace Garden
    • Myra Lloyd Dock House
    • Little Roundtop Rock
    • Sunken Gardens
    • YMCA
    • Civic Club of Harrisburg
    • Kunkel Plaza
    • City Island
    • Market Street Bridge
    • Pennsylvania State Capitol
    • Old Governor’s Mansion
    • Dauphin County Courthouse
    • Harris Cameron Mansion
    • John Harris Gravesite
    • UPMC (Harrisburg Hospital)
    • Dock Street Dam
    • Lochiel Hotel
    • Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial
    • Five Senses Garden
    • Spring House
    • The Rutherford House

Dick Norford offers private bike tours of the Capital Area Greenbelt. You can reach him at RNorford@comcast.net.

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Historic Harrisburg announces 2022 “Preservation Priorities,” focused on threatened, blighted properties

Balsley House in downtown Harrisburg

For a second straight year, Balsley House tops the list of threatened historic properties in Harrisburg, according to the city’s principal preservation organization.

On Monday, Historic Harrisburg Association released its proposed “2022 Preservation Priorities.”

Balsley House, a pre-Civil War double building, is on the list as it’s in danger of “demolition by neglect,” according to HHA.

The 2,590-square-foot building, located downtown at 220 N. 2nd St., also was HHA’s top preservation priority last year. Despite the designation, little seems to have been done to stabilize or restore the deteriorating structure.

David Morrison, HHA’s executive director, expressed encouragement on Monday, saying that, since last year, he has been in contact with the building’s owner, Dusan Bratic of Mechanicsburg.

“Since it went on the list last year, we’ve had a couple of conversations with the owner,” Morrison said. “I think we might be able to take this in a positive direction.”

Balsley House has housed many different businesses over its long lifetime, but has sat empty and increasingly blighted for many years.

The other priorities on HHA’s 2022 list are:

  • Beidleman House at 1225 Market St.
  • The former William Penn High School at Italian Lake
  • The former Harrisburg State Hospital
  • Prospect Hill Cemetery Gatehouse near the city line

Balsley House has actually been on the list since 2018. Beidleman House has been on since 2011, William Penn since 2017, and the former state hospital since 2014. The Prospect Hill Cemetery Gatehouse went on the list last year after a car hit the structure, severely damaging it.

William Penn has been on the sales market for many years. However, the owner, the Harrisburg School District, recently indicated that it may decide to retain and renovate the building.

HHA also listed two “preservation successes” of the past year: Grace United Methodist Church, a downtown church that has revived its congregation, and Derry Street United Methodist, an Allison Hill church that was sold and now houses the Anglican Church of the Pentecost.

HHA listed no “preservation losses” since last year’s report.

Moreover, HHA put about 30 structures in and around Harrisburg on its “watch list,” meaning that they’re historic properties of concern. These range widely, but include such landmark buildings as the Broad Street Market, the former Coca-Cola bottling works on Allison Hill, the Riverside firehouse and even HHA’s own Historic Harrisburg Resource Center.

“We want to keep these on our radar screen,” Morrison said. “This way, people can help us keep track of them.”

Morrison noted one pending success. The commonwealth-owned Dixon University Center in Uptown Harrisburg is on HHA’s 2022 “watch list.” The Jewish Federation of Greater Harrisburg recently put the site under contract for purchase, with plans eventually to move its operations to the sprawling property.

“That will be to us the great success of the decade, if not the millennium,” Morrison said.

HHA’s board is expected to approve the Preservation Priority list at its February meeting.

On Monday, Jan. 24, HHA’s Preservation Committee will hold a virtual presentation of its 2022 Preservation Priorities at 6 p.m. Tune in here. For more information about the Preservation Priorities, visit HHA’s website.

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Five buildings deemed “preservation priorities” by Historic Harrisburg

Balsley House in downtown Harrisburg

One of Harrisburg’s oldest structures is a top preservation priority for 2021, the city’s principal historic preservation organization has announced.

At a virtual presentation on Monday, Historic Harrisburg Association unveiled its top five proposed preservation priorities for the year.

The list includes Balsley House, a dilapidated, double building located downtown at 220 N. 2nd St. Dating back almost two centuries, Balsley House is one of the few remaining federal-period buildings in Harrisburg.

“It’s one of the oldest structures still standing in Harrisburg,” said Sara Sweeney, chair of HHA’s preservation committee. “It’s deteriorating. It’s in very bad shape, especially if you go around to the back.”

The 2,590-square-foot building, owned since 2006 by Dusan Bratic of Mechanicsburg, has housed many different businesses over its lifetime, but has sat empty and increasingly blighted for a number of years.

“We’re hoping to really raise awareness of this property over the next year,” Sweeney said. “With the revitalization that Harrisburg is really primed for, hopefully, we can make some strides to bringing this building back to life before we lose it.”

The other properties on the 2021 list are:

  • William Penn High School, Uptown Harrisburg
  • Camp Curtin Memorial Mitchell UMC, Uptown Harrisburg
  • Harrisburg State Hospital campus, Harrisburg/Susquehanna Township
  • Prospect Hill Cemetery Gate House, Allison Hill/city line

William Penn, Camp Curtin UMC and the Harrisburg State Hospital campus are all on the market for sale. Prospect Hill Cemetery Gate House was severely damaged last year when it was struck by a car.

Balsley House, William Penn, Camp Curtin UMC and Harrisburg State Hospital all appeared on the 2019 list, as well.

This year, the committee changed its ranking structure, reducing its preservation priorities to just five “key” properties then adding more buildings on a “watch list.” The proposed watch list properties are:

  • Dixon University Center
  • Donald Cameron Mansion
  • Riverside Firehouse
  • Cumberland Valley Railroad Bridge
  • Milestone Inn
  • Coca-Cola Bottling Works
  • Brinser Mansion
  • Grace United Methodist Church
  • Derry Street United Methodist Church
  • Christ Lutheran Church
  • Paul’s Methodist Church
  • Zembo Shrine Center
  • Paxton Firehouse
  • Beidleman House
  • Walnut Street Bridge
  • Historic Peace Church (Hampden Township)
  • Elks Theater (Middletown)
  • Bishop Bridge (near Bowmansdale)

The HHA board now must approve the list at an upcoming meeting.

Sweeney also offered updates for several properties that have been on HHA’s preservation priority list in the past:

  • Gerber’s Department Store, Midtown Harrisburg—proposed for conversion to an apartment building.
  • Sheepford Road Bridge, Lower Allen Township—transfer of ownership proposed
  • Brotherhood Relief & Compensation Fund Building, Uptown Harrisburg—new owner, proposed conversion to a mixed-use building
  • First United Methodist Church, Midtown Harrisburg—new owner, proposed conversion to an apartment building
  • Lemoyne Middle School—currently being converted to an apartment building
  • Bishop McDevitt High School—proposed redevelopment as an eco-village called The Bridge
  • Jackson Hotel, Midtown Harrisburg—recently collapsed and razed, now with plans to rebuild the structure
  • Ridge Avenue Methodist Church Parsonage (Swallow Mansion), Midtown Harrisburg—conversion to an apartment building nearly complete
  • Broad Street Market, Midtown Harrisburg—upgrades and restoration continue
  • Historic Harrisburg Resource Center—restoration continues
  • Harrisburg History Project—ongoing rehabilitation to historical markers around Harrisburg

Sweeney also noted several Harrisburg buildings that have been restored in recent years, calling them “wins.” These include the former Mary K mansions on Front Street, the former Fox Hotel in Shipoke, Locust Street Houses downtown and the former Moose Lodge in Midtown.

David Morrison, HHA’s executive director, said that he believes that the annual list has raised awareness of the need for historic preservation and has been essential in the rehabilitation of numerous structures in Harrisburg.

“As a result of this exercise each year, I can say that quite a few properties that were listed as priorities in the past have become ‘alumni’ of the list,” Morrison said. “In other words, they’ve been restored.”

For more information on Historic Harrisburg Association, visit their website.

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Residents voice concerns over parking, contracting, environment as developer explains proposed Uptown office project

Jonathan Hudson of Hudson Companies (left) speaks to Harrisburg residents at a community meeting at Camp Curtin YMCA.

Parking, traffic and local contracting were among the concerns of Harrisburg residents on Monday night, as the builder of a proposed state office building presented an overview of the project.

About 50 people attended the community meeting at the Camp Curtin YMCA, where Jonathan Hudson of Hermitage, Pa.-based Hudson Companies offered an overview of the three-story office building planned for the 2500-block of N. 7th Street.

Several residents asked pointedly about opportunities for disadvantaged business enterprise (DBE) contractors, including Harrisburg-based companies.

“I want to know about accountability as far as dealing with jobs,” said one resident. “A lot of developments have come here, and there’s no accountability to the local contractors.”

Hudson said that his company, which is the general contractor, planned to reach out and try to connect with local subcontractors and vendors, including at a March 18 meeting specifically for this purpose.

“The entirety of that is working and connecting with local vendors, minority-owned businesses, women-owned business enterprises and other distressed business entities,” he said. “That’s a very special, important task for us. We’re taking it very seriously.”

Hudson Companies plans to construct a 130,000-square-foot office building on the former headquarters site of D&H Distributing, which last year moved to a new location in Lower Paxton Township.

The company will build and own the building, Hudson said, for a single tenant—the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, which plans to locate about 850 Department of Human Services and Office of Administration workers there. Most employees will move from offices at the former Harrisburg State Hospital grounds, which the commonwealth is trying to sell.

Hudson plans to demolish the existing, low-slung building and construct a modern-style, mostly brick-and-glass building in its place. The company then plans to retain ownership, leasing it to the state for 20 years, with potential lease extensions.

A slide shows artist’s renderings of the proposed building.

Demolition, he said, would take place in late March. The project would wind its way through the city approval process in April and May, with groundbreaking expected in June. Construction should be complete in the third quarter of 2021.

Many other questions from neighbors in the largely residential Uptown neighborhood concerned parking and traffic.

“Do you plan to widen the road?” asked one resident. “Will you have street parking?”

Hudson said there were no plans to widen 7th Street, but that enough parking would be built on site to accommodate more than 1,000 cars. He further said that he expected no more traffic than was generated by D&H, which had about 750 workers at the location.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse, who attended the meeting, said that the city would like to make road improvements to the N. 7th and Division Street area.

He also said that the city hopes, at some point, to be able to build a bridge to connect Division Street with the Farm Show complex area, which might alleviate some of the traffic concerns. The city has been trying to obtain state funding for this project.

Other residents had questions about environmental issues.

“Will you be incorporating green infrastructure in your building, like a permeable parking lot, taking care for the solar array and a green rooftop garden, for instance?” asked Garvey Presley, secretary of the board for Capital Region Water.

Hudson said that the plan doesn’t include a rooftop garden or a permeable parking surface, but that the company plans to reduce the current percentage of impermeable surface on the 10.5-acre site from the current 99 percent to about 75 percent.

The site also houses a vast solar array farm put in place by D&H. Hudson said that the project would not utilize those panels, but Papenfuse said that the city hopes to repurpose the panels, potentially raising them in places such as the city’s Public Works property and on City Island.

Hudson said that the building would meet Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) green building standards.

“It will perform to LEED standards,” he said. “We’re just not pushing for buying the LEED symbol. We’ll perform just like a LEED building, only without certification.”

The building, he added, would be set back on the site, not near the street like the current D&H building. That would make the property more aesthetically appealing, he said.

The other main area of discussion involved the economy and taxes. Because the building will be privately owned, Hudson Companies will pay property taxes on the site, Hudson said.

Papenfuse added that the 850 workers would pay a total of about $125,000 a year in local services taxes to Harrisburg. That revenue would be new as most of those employees currently work in Susquehanna Township, not the city. Hudson and Papenfuse both mentioned that they believed that businesses in the area would benefit, including at the struggling Uptown Plaza.

“We know this is a big project in the city, a big project in the neighborhood,” Hudson said. “We want to make sure we’re good stewards of our development.”

For more information about Hudson Companies, visit www.hudsoncompanies.net.

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And Now We Wait: HBG Area Application in for Amazon’s HQ2.

An artist’s rendering of Amazon.com buildings on the grounds of Harrisburg State Hospital.

Harrisburg is officially in the running to be the next site of Amazon.com’s new corporate headquarters.

The Harrisburg Regional Chamber of Commerce and CREDC held a press conference tonight to announce the details of the 140-page application they sent to Amazon executives earlier this week.

The application proposes a major renovation to the State Hospital Grounds in Susquehanna Township and extolls the quality of life, workforce and business climate of the south-central Pennsylvania area. The proposal focuses on Harrisburg but includes nine counties as part of the greater metro area, said chamber President David Black.

Black thinks that Harrisburg will stand out among the competition because it can offer a single property as the site of the headquarter campus. The application proposes constructing office towers up to 12-stories high at the State Hospital grounds.

Last month, Amazon issued a request for proposals for its second corporate headquarters site, known as HQ2, which it says will bring upwards of 50,000 high-paying jobs and billions of dollars in investment to the city of its choice.

In its request, Amazon also asked cities to identify incentives to offset building and long-term operating costs.

Black declined to comment on the details of Harrisburg’s incentives package, but insisted that it would be “competitive” with what other municipalities are offering. He said it is too soon in the application process to offer specific incentives, such as tax breaks or credits.

“The goal is to get them here and then go into detail with individual townships,” Black said.

Developing tax incentives across a wide swath of land in Pennsylvania requires the approval of many different taxing bodies, including county commissioners, city councils and school boards. Black said that the chamber did not hold any public meetings with taxpayers or taxing agencies while developing the proposal.

A second rendering.

Black added that the chamber does not plan on making the proposal public, since Harrisburg is in competition with other cities. He did say that it was shared with members of the state Department of Community and Economic Development.

Black spoke to some of the criteria that Amazon listed in its request for proposals, including its requirement that the new headquarters be near leading research universities and an international airport.

The application lists Penn State University as a regional asset, according to Black. He also expressed confidence that Harrisburg International Airport would add direct flights to the West Coast if Amazon expressed interest in the region.

In all, regional leaders think that Harrisburg is a strong contender for the coveted project.

“We have everything people want right here,” said Jackie Parker, director of Harrisburg’s Department of Community and Economic Development.

Amazon says it will review proposals this year and choose a city in 2018.

“In a few months, I hope we’re all back here for a ribbon cutting,” said Dauphin County Commission Chairman Jeff Haste.

A rendering of the overall campus site.

Related: Burg Blog: You Might Also Like Harrisburg.

 

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Dog Gone? City aims to toughen leash enforcement following complaints

Illustration by Rich Hauck

Citations for off-leash dogs are on the rise in Harrisburg, but some residents want the city to do more to enforce leash laws.

Animal control officers working for the Harrisburg Police Bureau have cited 22 dog owners so far in 2017 for letting their animals run off-leash. That figure is up from 14 in 2016, 15 in 2015, and zero in 2014, according to data from the Harrisburg Police Bureau.

But many dog owners say that off-leash dogs remain a problem in certain neighborhoods of the city, particularly Italian Lake and the former William Penn High School. Dogs must be restrained on a leash in all public places, including parks, according to Harrisburg City Ordinance 33.

The issue surfaced at an Oct. 10 City Council meeting. One resident said her service dog was attacked by unrestrained dogs at the State Hospital Grounds in Susquehanna Township, where she started going to avoid off-leash dogs in Harrisburg.

“I don’t think this problem is being taken seriously,” she said, adding that an attack like the one her service dog suffered could ruin its training.

Randall Gooding, a Wormleysburg resident who walks his dog on City Island and in Riverfront Park, said that he encounters many more off-leash dogs in Harrisburg than in his home borough. He wants stricter leash enforcement to keep people and animals safe.

“I get so frustrated when unattended, off-leash dogs come running up to me and my dog while the owner [says] that the dog is friendly,” Gooding said. “I can’t protect their dog while handling my own.”

Unsupervised dogs appear to be a problem in residential areas as well as parks. Naomi Reyes used to walk from her home on 3rd street to her workplace on 7th street, until too many neighbors started letting their dogs outside unsupervised.

“I had to stop doing my walks because of loose dogs that didn’t look friendly,” Reyes said.

City Councilman Cornelius Johnson, chair of the Public Safety Committee, said he spoke about the issue with animal enforcement officers this week. The city currently employs two animal enforcement officers.

Johnson said that one possible solution is increased cooperation between animal enforcement officers and the city park rangers, who are responsible for patrolling Harrisburg’s 26 parks.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse said on Friday that the city hopes to budget for another park ranger in 2018, bringing the total rank to three.

Park rangers cannot write tickets, but they make ticket referrals to the police or report stray dogs, Papenfuse said. Animal enforcement officers are also responsible for collecting stray animals, and have picked up 78 this year.

Above all, Johnson said, communication is key. He asks residents to report off-leash dog violations when they see them.

“The best thing a resident can do when they come across an issue is call it in,” Johnson said on Thursday. “When we get calls, there’s accountability.”

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Harrisburg Region to Make Joint Bid for New Amazon Headquarters

Harrisburg and surrounding counties will try to convince Amazon.com to locate its new headquarters on the grounds of the former State Hospital.

Harrisburg officials confirmed late Tuesday that the city is participating in a joint, regional application for the Amazon.com headquarters project, which promises to bring as many as 50,000 jobs to a city in North America.

Jackie Parker, Harrisburg’s director of Community and Economic Development, said that the city’s partners in the bid are Dauphin, York, Lancaster, Cumberland and Lebanon counties. She also confirmed that the application will pitch the former Harrisburg State Hospital grounds off of Cameron Street as the future site of the Amazon campus.

The 295-acre property currently is owned by the state Department of General Services, but consultants hired earlier this year recommended its sale, and most state workers already have been relocated off the sprawling site.

In what has been described as the “Olympics of the Business World,” online retail giant Amazon.com announced earlier this month that it would open a public bidding process for a new, $4 billion second headquarters. The announcement sent mayors and business leaders across the country scrambling to market their cities.

“This type of project is a game changer for any region with huge employment opportunities for executives, managers, software engineers, attorneys, accountants and technical/administrative jobs,” said a statement by the Harrisburg Regional Chamber and CREDC, which Parker said would lead the application effort.

One of the major components of the application is presenting a package of benefits and tax incentives. In Pennsylvania, those benefits are codified at the municipal level – one factor that complicates a regional application.

Eight acres of the State Hospital property are in Harrisburg city limits, but the vast majority is in Susquehanna Township.

Susquehanna Township Manager David Kratzer said that the township currently has no tax breaks or incentives in place. He added that he and members of the application team have considered options such as a LERTA tax abatement district or Tax Increment Financing district (TIF).

The township will have to clear any incentive proposals with its local taxing bodies, including the board of commissioners and school district. Kratzer couldn’t say when those public discussions would take place. According to the Harrisburg Regional Chamber and CREDC, regional partners are still pulling workforce data and evaluating site selection criteria.

Harrisburg’s portion of the property would be covered by its LERTA tax abatement program. Mayor Eric Papenfuse said that he is in favor of the city offering incentives, since he believes the long-term benefits of such a major project would pay the region back over time.

He said that Harrisburg’s strengths include its location on the East Coast and its proximity to the Route 81 corridor, as well as the availability of the State Hospital grounds for immediate redevelopment.

He conceded that the region’s population could count against it. Amazon specified that it’s seeking a metro area with at least 1 million people, but the regional partners do come close to that collectively, Papenfuse said. He also said that the lack of a leading research university in the area could be perceived as a weakness.

Despite these potential limitations, Papenfuse said that Harrisburg is committed to submitting an application by the Oct. 19 deadline.

“I can’t really envision a scenario in which the city wouldn’t be interested in moving forward,” he said. “This is a great opportunity to advertise central Pennsylvania and Harrisburg.”

He also said that the application’s sponsors do not often work together on projects of this magnitude, and he hopes the cooperation could promote regional unity.

“Anything we can do to promote regional cooperation is a good thing,” Papenfuse said. “We have too many artificial divides, and the process of planning for an application like this can bring us closer together.”

 

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