Developer to Delco residents: We want to preserve archdiocese land, but we need your support
"Our preferred plan is to preserve ... 166 acres and redevelop" 47 acres, Miller said during a question-and-answer session about the future of the
Raising the microphone to his lips, a resident pressed Miller. "So no matter what," the resident asked, "you're going to develop the property?"
"We're going to develop the property," Miller confirmed.
To many of the residents gathered inside the
But during a 2 1/2 -hour informational session, the developers made clear that these circumstances were different. Unlike
Shovels will be in the ground. And although
"We could have taken the easy way out and just done the by-right plan," Miller told the crowd, referring to a denser plan with homes and industrial space, which the zoning allows. "We're trying to do right."
"Our sincere plan," Miller said in an interview afterward, "is to preserve ... open space."
That differs from Goodman's plan just a few years ago. Goodman, who had the land under sale agreement in 2014 for
In contrast, Sproul Road Developers' plan, Miller told residents, is to build a commercial complex on 47.1 acres, plus develop 5.1 more acres as recreational fields. The remaining 161 acres would be preserved as forest. (Miller has referred to the open space as being 166 acres. That is a combination of the fields and the forested land.)
According to Miller, he is working with
The plan to preserve 161 acres was hatched last year after Miller met with Save Marple Greenspace, a grassroots group that vehemently opposed Goodman. At the time, the organization told Miller it would support redevelopment of the
Since those meetings last year -- and since Miller and the archdiocese agreed on an undisclosed purchase price -- Miller's development has grown slightly. Meanwhile, Save Marple Greenspace's support has dissipated.
"We agreed not to oppose the 38-acre [plan], but even that is too big now," Hemphill said this week. "We have reconsidered that ... and rethought our position about traffic."
"During our first meeting with
The reversal by Save Marple Greenspace could present a problem for Sproul Road Developers, whose plans hinge on zoning approval from the township. The site is zoned as industrial along Sproul Road, and behind that, residential. To build their nearly 380,000-square-foot complex -- which could include a
It's also possible that Save Marple Greenspace's resistance could be detrimental to their cause. If zoning is denied, Sproul Road Developers plans to proceed with a "by-right" plan to build a nearly 500,000-square-foot institutional project, such as a hospital. In addition, the developer said he would prepare the land so that nearly 209 homes could be built -- eliminating most of the open space that Miller plans to save.
"If you shrink the development at the front too much, you have less money [from property taxes] ... to help the county buy" the open space, Miller said.
Sproul Road Developers is expected to formally present its plans
"I'm concerned that we would lose probably the last open space in the community if this is turned into a by-right [plan]," one woman told the crowd. "We don't have choices for open space ... this is really the last frontier for us."
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