Tag Archives: Strawberry Square

Marriages and Crumpet and a Leg Lamp: Harrisburg theater tees up an eclectic season on the stage.

Theatre Harrisburg, Sweeney Todd

Theatre Harrisburg, Sweeney Todd

Theater is getting bigger and better in the ‘Burg as evidenced by the coming 2014-15 season. There’s nothing quite like the live experience of watching a story unfold, characters coming to life, along with a surprise or two. Here’s just a taste of what’s in store.

Gamut Theatre Group

In what it hopes will be its final full season inside Strawberry Square before it moves into a renovated church on N. 4th Street, the players at Gamut Theatre Group will be offering an exciting mix of classic productions that will delight audiences…and challenge its actors.

“It’s going to be a season that’s going to rely heavily on the range of our actors,” says J. Clark Nicholson, Gamut’s artistic director and co-founder. “It’s a fun and exciting challenge.”

A good example is Gamut’s production of Oscar Wilde’s “An Ideal Husband,” first up for the mainstage season in November. Four actors will play 13 different roles—and one role will be played by those four different actors.

Another example of actors taking on multiple characters is “Women Playing Hamlet,” an original production that will be staged in March. Gamut was chosen as one of three theaters to produce this play by William Missouri Downs as part of the National New Plays Network’s “Rolling World Premiere.” Patrick Flick, executive director of the Shakespeare Theater Association, is slated to guest-direct four local female actors playing 20 different characters.

But you don’t need to wait until November to see a Gamut show. The Stage Door Series, an extended arm of Gamut, will present “The Girlhood of Shakespeare’s Heroines” by Don Nigro in September. Looking ahead, Gamut will mount “Troilus and Cressida” for its 22nd Annual Free Shakespeare in the Park next year. And, all year long, don’t forget about Popcorn Hat for the kids.

Log onto www.gamutplays.org or phone 717-238-4111 for details and reservation information.

Open Stage of Harrisburg

Familiar titles, tradition and family dreams are the mantras this season at Open Stage of Harrisburg. The iconic “Driving Miss Daisy,” which has succeeded both on screen and on stage, will springboard the theater’s 2014-15 season of shows in October. “Bill W. and Dr. Bob” will follow in November, a story of two men who pioneered Alcoholics Anonymous and their wives who founded Al Anon.

For the holiday season, Open Stage has heeded audiences’ demands as Stuart Landon, the theater’s marketing and sales operations manager, dons his knickers once again to portray Crumpet in David Sedaris’ “The Santaland Diaries.”

“After a one year hiatus, and many patrons asking if Crumpet was coming back, I think the time is right to bring back this hilarious show,” Landon says. “Get ready to laugh!”

Also for the holiday season, there will be a special, one-night-only reading on Dec. 7 of the Charles Dickens classic, “A Christmas Carol.”

Rounding out the Open Stage season will be Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin In The Sun,” a play about a family’s hopes for the future, which will be staged in February, followed by Lanford Wilson’s “Talley’s Folly” in April.

Log onto www.openstagehbg.com or phone 717-232-OPEN for details and reservation information.

Theatre Harrisburg

2014-15 marks Theatre Harrisburg’s 89th season, which will expand its repertoire from five to six shows: four presented Uptown at the Jay and Nancy Krevsky Production Center on Hurlock and two staged downtown at Whitaker Center’s Sunoco Performance Theater.

Intimacy is what the Production Center space affords both the actors and audience. Case in point will be the theater’s presentation of its September opener “The Philadelphia Story,” a play that later became a film classic. Another example is the two-person musical in January and February of “I Do! I Do!” about a 50-year marriage written by the same team who created “The Fantasticks.” Another play about another marriage is Edward Albee’s “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”—considered one of America’s finest plays and one given screen time starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton.

“Through the use of a flexible seating arrangement, the audience will feel as though they are actually in the room with George and Martha, which should make for a very intense, provocative evening of theater,” says Samuel Kuba, executive director.

Rounding out the Production Center’s shows in June is another two-person tour de force comedy, “Greater Tuna.”

Theatre Harrisburg moves to downtown’s Whitaker Center in November with the holiday favorite “A Christmas Story,” complete with Red Ryder BB gun and leg lamp, and, in May, with the creepy and kooky and spooky musical, “The Addams Family.”

Log onto www.theatreharrisburg.com or phone 717-232-5501 for details and reservation information.

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News Digest: July News in Review

 

Financial Agreement Near

The major parts of a deal to resolve Harrisburg’s financial crisis are nearly in place, receiver William Lynch announced last month.

These include sale of the city’s incinerator, lease of the parking assets, negotiations with creditors and final agreements with the city’s trade unions.

Lynch expects most of the remaining issues to be resolved this month, including the sale of the debt-laden incinerator to the Lancaster County Solid Waste Management Authority.

“All the stakeholders involved in the sale of the incinerator are in agreement,” said Lynch, who added that the city’s creditors also finally understand that they must negotiate in earnest and might have to accept less than they’re owed.

In addition, the city must finalize an agreement with the firefighter’s union. The city’s police union finalized a new contract in June.

The goal, Lynch said, was to pay off about $600 million in debt, including $350 million related to the incinerator, while allowing the city to regain fiscal solvency over the long-term.

“This plan will create important new revenue streams to help the city reduce its structural deficit and spur economic growth,” said Lynch. “The parking agreement may very well become a national model.”

Many aspects of a final plan must be OK’d by City Council and then approved by the Commonwealth Court, actions that should begin to take place this month.

 

HUD Funds Distributed

The Harrisburg City Council last month dispersed nearly $1.8 million in federal funds designed to assist housing and community development.

In the annual distribution of Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds, 13 social service organizations received a total of nearly $500,000. Another $550,000 went to various city housing programs.

Community-based organizations that received funds were:

  • The Fair Housing Council of the Capital Region: $45,000
  • Community Action Commission: $25,000
  • Harrisburg Police Athletic League: $25,000
  • Latino Hispanic American Community Center: $25,000
  • Christian Recovery Aftercare Ministries: $20,000
  • Christian Love Ministries: $10,000
  • Camp Curtin YMCA: $100,000
  • YWCA of Greater Harrisburg: $25,000
  • Broad Street Market Corp.: $47,739
  • Rebuilding Together of Greater Harrisburg: $25,000
  • Habitat for Humanity of Greater Harrisburg: $75,000
  • African-American Chamber of Commerce: $10,000
  • Harrisburg Housing Authority: $65,000

 City programs that received funding were:

  • Homeownership Opportunities Program: $100,000
  • Home Emergency and Lead Repair Program: $100,000
  • Home Improvement Program: $200,000
  • Emergency Demolition: $150,000

Lastly, a large part of the funds were used for administrative/debt obligations. Debt service ate up $367,567 of the CDBG grant, while $353,826 was allotted for administration and “indirect” costs.

 

Auction Proceeds Tallied

Harrisburg recouped about half of what was spent on museum artifacts following a weeklong auction last month on City Island.

Auction sales totaled about $3.1 million for the 8,000 or so items, according to New York-based auctioneer Guernsey’s. Minus the auction fee, the city kept about $2.57 million, money that will pay off a loan taken out in 2006 that used the artifacts as collateral.

Harrisburg had received $1.6 million during two previous sales of another 2,000 items, bringing the proceeds from museum artifacts to $4.17 million. A follow-on auction of historic documents in September should increase that total some more.

Former Mayor Stephen Reed spent at least $8.3 million in public funds on these artifacts in his dream to turn Harrisburg into a museum mecca. Most of the artifacts auctioned were for an “Old West” museum he wanted to build, while some were for a proposed African American history museum.

 

Zoning Board Rejects 3 Projects

The Harrisburg Zoning Hearing Board last month turned down several proposals, all of which had generated neighborhood opposition.

Bethel AME Church had wanted to re-establish a surface parking lot at its site at the corner of N. 6th and Herr streets.

The historic church, located on the 1700-block of N. 5th St., long occupied the 6th Street site, but its building burned down in 1995. It then ran a commercial parking operation there until 2010, when its special exception, under challenge by the community, was not renewed.

The church’s new pastor, the Rev. Micah Sims, pleaded with the board to allow it to resume renting out parking until it could execute a redevelopment plan. The board, however, sided with members of Fox Ridge Neighbors who argued in opposition, stating the church would have no incentive to sell or develop the property.

In other action, the zoning board:

  • Rejected a variance/special exception request by developer Gary Wilson, who wanted to construct two two-family houses on vacant land at 1308 Green St. Neighbors testified in opposition, saying that four rental units were not in the best interest of the community.
  • Rejected a variance request from developer Paul Peffley to locate a convenience store/deli on the ground floor of an historic building he’s redeveloping at the corner of N. 3rd and Hamilton streets. That application met with opposition from residents of Engleton, who feared a negative impact on their neighborhood.
  • Approved a variance to turn the ground floor of the former Barto Building, at N. 3rd and State streets, into restaurant and retail space. Brickbox Enterprises would like a restaurant to locate in the former Barto Building, which the company is transforming into the LUX condominium building
  • Approved a variance to allow a church, Iglesia Pentecostal Jesucristo La Roca, to locate at 913 N. 2nd St., which once housed La Kasbah restaurant.

 

Mayor, Treasurer Clash over Fund Transfers

Harrisburg Mayor Linda Thompson last month asked for a significant increase in the amount of money her administration can reallocate without approval by City Council, a request that drew strong opposition from city Treasurer John Campbell.

Thompson asked for permission to transfer as much as $50,000 within the approved budget without the consent of council, up from the current level of $20,000.

The request prompted Campbell to write a strongly worded memo, urging council to deny the request.

“While this legislation may seem like an opportunity to allow for great flexibility in spending by the administration, it is my opinion that this legislation will only reduce the proper controls that are presently in place and exercised by City Council,” Campbell wrote. “If this legislation were to be approved, budget transfers would begin to become more frequent and thus negate the importance of passing a proper and reasonable budget annually.”

Every year, the council approves numerous reallocations, as some departments spend more or less than budgeted during the year. Campbell fears that increasing the reallocation threshold to $50,000 would give the administration too much leeway to transfer large sums of money outside of the regular budget process and without proper oversight.

The administration’s proposed ordinance was sent to the council’s Budget and Finance Committee for further review and possible action.

 

$5 Million for Fire Protection, $0 for Revitalization

Harrisburg received a split decision from the state last month, as the legislature approved a record $5 million in fire protection funds, but excluded the city from a new revitalization program.

City officials were pleasantly surprised—even shocked—by the $5 million allocation in the 2013-14 budget, meant to offset the city’s costs of protecting the Capitol complex from fire. That figure is double the amount allotted last year and far more than the $496,000 that House Republicans had approved in their budget plan.

Harrisburg’s state legislators were pushing for $4 million, but late lobbying by receiver William Lynch upped that amount by another $1 million, said state Sen. Rob Teplitz.

The money technically goes to secure the state’s 40 buildings from fire, accounting for the bulk of the Harrisburg Fire Bureau’s $8.4 million budget. However, it actually flows to the city’s general fund, which frees up money for other uses by the highly indebted, insolvent city.

As the state was giving, it also was taking away, as it purposely excluded Harrisburg from participating in a just-launched revitalization program.

The new state budget funded a City Revitalization and Improvement Zone program, which will funnel money to small cities each year to assist in the redevelopment of distressed areas. However, language in the law prohibits any city under state receivership from participating, a designation that applies only to Harrisburg.

 

Kiosks, Online Payments Come to Harrisburg

Harrisburg bill-payers have several new options available to them, as two computerized payment kiosks, as well as an online payment system, came on line last month.

The two kiosks are located in City Hall outside the city treasurer’s office and at the Giant Food Store in Kline Village, said Treasurer John Campbell, who added that a third kiosk would be located in a yet-to-be-determined location Uptown.

Denver-based EZ Pay Corp. is providing the kiosks at no cost to the city, said Campbell.

In addition, bill-payers now can pay online at www.harrisburgpayments.com or by calling 888-243-3456. Campbell said he expected the online bill-paying portal to be integrated with the city’s website soon.

Through these mechanisms, residents can pay most common bills, including for utilities, property taxes and traffic fines. A convenience fee will be added to each payment based upon the amount of the transaction, averaging $3 for most utility bills and $1 for most parking tickets, said Campbell.

Campbell expects the city, the Harrisburg Authority and the school district to save “at least” $80,000 a year by not having to pay the credit card transaction fee.

 

City to Receive State Loans

Harrisburg last month was awarded state funding for two major infrastructure projects, including for utility repair at the Uptown sinkhole site.

Harrisburg received a $900,000 low-interest loan through PENNVEST for repairing water and sewer infrastructure damaged by the sinkhole on the 2100-block of N. 4th Street, said state Sen. Rob Teplitz.

In addition, the Harrisburg Authority received a $26 million low-interest loan, administered by PENNVEST, for upgrading the city’s wastewater treatment facility, said Teplitz.

The improvements will bring the plant’s ammonia and nutrient reduction requirements into compliance with U.S. Department of Environmental Protection regulations. This $53 million project also will receive $26.7 million in outside financing and a $973,000 H20 PA grant, Teplitz said.

 

MLK Street Renaming on Hold

Harrisburg’s financial crisis seems to have doomed another proposal: the effort to supplement the name of N. 2nd St. downtown by adding “Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.”

Last March, the administration made the proposal, which the City Council then sent on to the council’s Public Works Committee.

Committee Chairwoman Sandra Reid said she was in favor of the change, which would give the historic street both names from Chestnut to Forster streets. However, the $6,000 to $8,000 cost of replacing 63 street signs could not be justified, she said.

“We have an ongoing concern that our parks and waterways are not being maintained,” she said.

Last year, park maintenance was transferred from the city’s Parks and Recreation Department to the Public Works Department, which since has been criticized for lax maintenance, particularly in Riverfront Park.

 

Miller: Still In Mayor’s Race

City Controller Dan Miller last month took a step towards running for Harrisburg mayor as a Republican, filing an affidavit affirming his eligibility for the office.

Miller lost in May in the Democratic primary to businessman Eric Papenfuse. However, he won the Republican nomination by gaining 196 write-in votes.

As of press time, Miller hadn’t yet paid the $25 filing fee, which must be received by the Dauphin County Office of Elections and Voter Registration by Aug. 12.

If he decides to run, Miller will face independent candidates Nevin Mindlin and Nate Curtis, in addition to Papenfuse. The general election is slated for Nov. 5.

 

Leak Won’t Close Jackson-Lick Pool

An Uptown pool will be open for the remainder of the summer after a major leak was quickly repaired.

City officials feared the Jackson-Lick pool, located at 1201 N. 6th St., would have to close after it lost about 450,000 gallons of water in a week.

“The city considered closing the pool,” said COO Robert Philbin. “However, we were able to keep the pool open while resolving the problem. City Engineer Paul Francis was able to locate and stop the pool water leakage with the assistance of a diver from the Harrisburg River Rescue.”

The city’s other public pool at Hall Manor on Allison Hill has been shut since last year after persistent leaks led to the finding that its foundation must be rebuilt.

The city’s Engineering Bureau is preparing a maintenance and repair plan to bring both pools back to full operation next season, said Philbin.

 

Farmers Co-op Debuts

Harvest, a new farmers cooperative, opened last month in the brick building of the Broad Street Market, bringing fresh produce and other goods to Harrisburg from more than a dozen area farms.

The co-op is the brainchild of developer Josh Kesler and chef Matthew Hickey, who is managing the business on a day-to-day basis.

“Our commitment is to build a relationship between the farmers and local consumers, providing healthy, sustainable local food, as well as helping to revitalize the Broad Street Market, which we believe will regain its position as the breadbasket of our region,” said Kesler.

The stand itself is unique for the Market, built from reclaimed lumber from the Stokes Millworks building across the street. Kesler recently bought that building and has begun renovating it for a farm-to-plate restaurant, which should open late next year.

 

New School in Strawberry Square

This month, the nonprofit Aegis Education Endeavor (AEE) will open in Strawberry Square, offering a new cyber charter school that “combines art, athletics and industry.”

The 2,800-square-foot facility will take space at 306 Market St. in downtown Harrisburg.  Aegis is partnering with Achievement House Cyber Charter School, a public online school chartered by the state to serve students in grades 7 to 12.

In addition to an education program, Aegis will offer activities to cyber school students and to students learning at home, public or private schools, said founder Denni Boger.

“Strawberry Square is the perfect site for AEE because it is centrally located to be available to students from surrounding school districts who may wish to use public transportation to access the facility,” said Boger.

Aegis will hold an open house and orientation at its new facility on Aug. 7, 1 to 7 p.m.

 

Changing Hands

Adrian St., 2256: Burner Properties LLC to B. Britton, $57,000

Bellevue Rd., 1921: A. & S. Jawhar to CNC Realty Group LLC, $63,500

Cumberland St., 114: B. Cohen to L. Larrieu, $132,000

Green St., 1925: F. Shannon to W. Gonzalez, $215,000

Mulberry St., 1158: E. Grill to S. Elazouni, $59,900

N. 3rd St., 1702: Fannie Mae to M. Mayhew, $75,000

N. 5th St., 1732: Freddie Mac to B. Harris, $100,000

N. 6th St., 2559 & 2561: Deutsche Bank Trustee & Company Americas Trustee to V. Acosta, $31,500

N. 20th St., 32: U.S. Bank Trustee & Pa. Housing Finance Agency to G. Carter & V. Diaz, $52,400

N. Front St., 1705: Rolleston Corp. to WCI Partners LP, $400,000

N. Front St., 2515: Centric Bank to 324 Mishika LLC, $175,000

Penn St., 1716: B. Andreozzi to D. Rhodes, $131,000

Reily St., 311: R. Heath to S. McLearn, $85,500

Rudy Rd., 2465: P. Lemmo to R. Harper, $75,000

Sayford St., 235: R. DeLong to JLS Rentals LLC, $35,000

Showers St., 612: D. & S. Hickethier to M. Murphy & V. Halchak, $166,000

S. Front St., 317: M. & J. Hankins to M. Homa, $115,000

Swatara St., 1321: D. & J. Boyle to J. Rodriguez & J. Vasquez, $33,900

Sycamore St., 1520: L. Miller Jr. to M. Brunner, $97,500

Wallace St., 1529 & 1531; 1513, 1515 & 1517 N. 6th St., $144,100: Buonarroti Trust to U.S. General Services Administration, $144,100

Source: Dauphin County, for sales exceeding $30,000. Data is assumed to be accurate.

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Downtown Evolves: New residents change face, pace of center city.

Over the last few months, downtown’s Strawberry Square has seen an uptick in new tenants occupying space inside the complex and along picturesque 3rd Street, between Market and Walnut streets.

To Harristown Development Corp., the real estate firm that owns the large retail/office complex, the increase indicates a change in demographics that is positioning the city for another renaissance, but driven more by new residents than commuters.

In August, the crepe-making Au Bon Lieu opened in one of the 3rd Street shops; next door, a new salon, Hair at the Square, has replaced another one, and a few doors down, Sadiddy, women’s fashions and shoe store, opened in November.

Inside, on the fourth floor where Harrisburg University’s administrative offices were once located, PPL Services Corp., the utility’s government relations arm, has opened an office with 2,000 square feet of space.

In the empty shop at Strawberry Square’s Market Street entrance, Market on Market, a grocery convenience store, will open in March, as will Tropical Smoothie Cafe, a franchise to replace the food court’s Bill’s Big Burgers, which closed in November.

An improving economy is one factor behind the increase in retail tenants, but Neal West, senior vice president at Harristown Enterprises Inc., the corporation’s business arm, believes there’s more to it.

“I think one of the things that this is being driven by is more residences and students,” West said. “The student influence and the young folks living downtown are having a positive impact on retailers.”

Careim Williams, owner of Sadiddy, which sells the latest fashions in women’s clothing and shoes, located her shop next to Strawberry Square’s 3rd Street entrance to meet demand and capture the high-foot traffic.

“The market I’m targeting is young professionals,” she said.

Williams, a Philadelphia native who has been working in fashion retail for more than seven years, said she wanted to be in the city to expand its diversity in retail fashions. “I just wanted to bring something that’s trendy,” she said.

Harristown, a nonprofit with a mission to revitalize the city’s business and cultural core, is a good barometer of economic change. For more than 38 years it has built and developed most of the major projects in the downtown area.

With the conversion of the former Governor’s Hotel and the former Kunkel Building, at 4th and Market and 3rd and Market respectively, into market-rate apartments now used by Harrisburg University, there are 180 students living downtown.

Then there’s last month’s opening of COBA, the apartment house on 3rd Street in Midtown, as well as the work now underway to convert the Barto Building at 3rd and State into condominiums, and the Glass Factory at 3rd and Muench into market-rate apartments.

“We’re feeling pretty optimistic that good things are happening in the city, despite the (city’s) financial cloud,” said Brad Jones, Harristown’s vice president.

The 10-year-old International House, a Harristown property that now has 150 beds for its visitors to the city, further builds the critical mass retailers need to thrive downtown and elsewhere in the city, Jones said.

In a reverse of decades of urban dwellers moving to the suburbs, cities nationwide have seen a steady increase in aging baby boomers, young people and students moving in to be close to culture and services. Harrisburg appears to be part of that trend.

Another indication, West said, is that for 50 percent of the market seeking to reside in the city, good public schools is not a factor, at least at the moment.

Harrisburg, like most cities its size, has long struggled to get retailers downtown, but that struggle may become less difficult as more buildings are converted or restored for residential living to meet the demand.

“We think that’s the trend,” Jones said. “We can balance out the city’s top-heavy office space with more residences.”

Developer Dan Deitchman of Brickbox Enterprises leads development of new residential units in the city with COBA, Kunkel and Barto, to name a few. He has done so, he said, because of this trend. It’s the same reason Skynet Property Management is converting the old Glass Factory into apartments.

From Midtown to Uptown, pockets of neighborhoods are undergoing transformations that are bringing new residences and businesses. Harristown sees it now occurring downtown.

“Downtown is working its way back,” West said, and noted the Rite Aid Pharmacy on Market Street across from Strawberry Square, which for years closed at 5 p.m., is now staying open until 7 p.m., six days a week.

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