Artists, neighbors battle to redeem East Kensington’s ‘megalots’
| By Samantha Melamed, The Philadelphia Inquirer | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
Today, neighbors know the site as "the megalots" -- a vast expanse of blight razed by fires and neglect that attracts short-dumping, drug use, vagrancy, and prostitution.
Now, artist Maria Möller is attempting to reconcile those jarringly different views with Hexamer Redux, a project funded by the
The first set of surveys, focused on the megalots, will be on display Friday as part of "Manufacturing Fire," an exhibition about
When Möller arrived at the megalots in the fall, she found there wasn't much left to survey but high weeds -- and, barely concealed by them, addicts and prostitutes. So she recruited volunteers and artists to count stems of mugwort and goldenrod -- and used the plants to dye fabric and yarn in a nod to the site's history. Later, she created the updated surveys that will be on view -- unscientific collages of archival documents and images of her findings.
Like Möller, neighbors see the lots as an eyesore -- but also as a place of immense potential.
"That whole zone could be a complete game changer for life in the neighborhood," said
A neighborhood plan created by the association and formally adopted by the
In the meantime, the megalots have languished as a barren reminder of old trauma. The Providence Dye Works was razed only after six fires tore through the property, including a four-alarm blaze in 2000. The two blocks of blight expanded to four with fires in 2010 and 2012: the Cavco window factory fire and the Thomas Buck Hosiery mill fire that claimed the lives of two firefighters two years ago next week.
The blocks also are a microcosm of Philly's vacant-land woes: Several of the fallow parcels are city-owned, others are believed to belong to speculators, and still others are owned by tax deadbeats.
Together, they've logged dozens of complaints and citations in recent years.
"That's probably in the top 10 questions of the neighborhood," Carpineta said. "Who are these people, and what are their intentions?"
One is
The lot where the Buck fire broke out, at
In the meantime, maintaining the lots takes a village. The neighborhood association cleans them several times a year, and the
Then there are individuals, such as neighbor
Today,
The same goes for
"Sometimes the city cleans up, when there are a lot of complaints. But mostly the city doesn't care."
Hinson is philosophical -- even about the vandals who smashed his car windshield and taillights. "If we didn't have children, I don't mind," he said. But he does. He's looking to move this year.
Yet, bookending the megalots are signs of hope: A trio of newly renovated rowhouses facing the lots along
On the opposite edge on the old Cavco lot, Catholic Health Care Services is set to break ground on
"I'm hoping this project will have a stabilizing effect on the neighborhood, or a catalytic effect," project manager
District City Councilwoman Maria Quiñones Sánchez said her office gets constant complaints about the lots. She hopes establishing a land bank, which would provide an agency dedicated to processing vacant property, could be a cure, in combination with community sweat equity.
Still, compared to what tends to precede them -- fires and building collapses -- vacant lots are not an enforcement priority. A Licenses and Inspections spokesperson said for that reason the city rarely takes lot owners to court.
The next two phases of Möller's Hexamer Redux project will remap nearby factories -- which, by luck, did not suffer the same fate as the Providence Dye Works.
In May, she'll focus on
"It's looked at as the next vulnerable building, and the one that could go up in flames," Möller said. (Owner
What will come of Möller's surveys isn't yet clear.
Unspooling a heap of golden yarn dyed at the lots, Möller said that, at the least, they offered a temporary relief from the blight. "It was really pretty," she said, "in a place that's not."
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@samanthamelamed
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