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Development News

PHA's new Paschall Village townhomes promise hope for sustainability, community


For decades, Southwest Philadelphia's Paschall Apartments, located at 72nd and Woodland, was not a fun place to be. The public housing was riddled with poverty, drugs, and violence. However, today is a different tale, as Paschall Apartments has been replaced with Paschall Village, a contemporary, community-conscious, and sustainable public housing neighborhood. The Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA), city council president Anna Verna, and state representative Anthony Hardy Williams cut the ribbon on Paschall Village this past week.

PHA aims to prove that public housing should be fully integrated with its surrounding neighborhood, which Paschall Village exemplifies. Michael P. Kelly, the executive director of PHA, is not satisfied with merely enhanced housing. Instead, he wants to see "better and safer neighborhoods." At the ribbon cutting, this sense of community was about as palpable as the stiff breeze that blew through Paschall that day. In fact, Alphonso Evans Sr., the principal at the Southwest Leadership Academy charter school, spoke about how eager his school was to admit children from the new Paschall Village.

While the PHA prioritizes blending Paschall Village in with the surrounding community, they also hope to sprout a sense of community within. According to Kelly, the Authority made sure to include a 4,000-square foot community center, along with a computer lab. In all, Paschall Village is made up of 100 townhomes, which contain one, two, and three bedrooms and vary in size from 700 to 1,550 square feet. Twenty of the units are handicapped-accessible.

Just like the PHA's recently rebuilt Mantua Square, Paschall Village contains some striking sustainable features. Passersby immediately notice solar panels protruding from each townhouse. These panels help power the development's hot water and Energy Star appliances. Kelly says that the village also sports geothermal heating and cooling and rainwater recycling. PHA was able to include these green advancements through a state Department of Environmental Protection grant. 

Overall, Paschall Village cost $38 million to redevelop. Most of the money came from federal stimulus funds, while Kelly commends Wells Fargo for kicking in $15.5 million in private equity. PHA says construction of the village led to 102 full-time jobs.  It looks like a slew of people and families jumped at the chance to be a part of a community -- Paschall's waitlist has already closed.

Source: Michael Kelly, Philadelphia Housing Authority
Writer: Andy Sharpe
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