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welcome to Spring Garden

The historically designated Church of the Assumption, located at 1123-33 Spring Garden Street, is under agreement, according to the website for realtors Colliers International.

Gorgeous

Colliers director Michael Barmash told Naked Philly it was a sensitive issue and too early to release any further information, but according to the Inquirer, the new owner is John Wei, of JI Investments LLC. The site has played host to a vortex of local controversy, and was once slated and approved by the Historical Commission to be demolished before members of the Callowhill Neighborhood Association appealed to L&I to reverse the decision, a request that was granted last year. This winter, an L&I analysis of the process declared SILOAM owners did not try hard enough to sell the property before asking the Historical Commission for a demolition permit, according to PlanPhilly.

Closer look

The church itself had been on the market for the past three years, but in the past six months owners SILOAM added the rectory located at 1135 Spring Garden St., the convent located at 1122-32 Brandywine St., and the 4K-plus sq. ft. lot located at 535 N. 12th St. to the sale. The entire complex is going for $1.75M, according to Barmash, who said the number of potential buyers increased with the additional parcels.

When members of SILOAM, an HIV/AIDS wellness center, purchased the vacant complex in 2006, they envisioned expanding their services into the church. But when a SILOAM hired consultant upped the estimate of church restorations to $5.2M (up from a $4M Community Design Collaborative projection) they realized their resources wouldn’t enable them to undertake restorative actions. That led to the aforementioned fracas about the demolition, which SILOAM executive director Cathy Maguire said, through the cost of proceedings (legal and otherwise) and stress, overstretched the group’s assets and capabilities, physically and emotionally.

Side of the building

“It is heartbreaking for us,” said Maguire, who said when they realized the cost of restorations the plans converted to razing the church to make room for an outdoor labyrinth with a reflective garden and room for parking. “But we’ve gotten to a point where [selling the entire complex] is the only option.”

“We can’t even do a capital campaign right now for our mission,” she said, stressing that carrying on the group’s mission is its top priority.

Maguire explained how interested buyers seemed to her to misrepresent the degree of their interest. She said each time SILOAM members approached a Historical Commission hearing, a new potential buyer surfaced and voiced dissent against the church’s being demolished. The closest candidate to a real interest they experienced was Clay Studios, a Northern Liberties nonprofit whose owners’ interest disappeared shortly after L&I’s decision to preserve the church. Maguire described Clay Studios’ owners’ interest as “bogus.”

“There has not been one viable candidate,” she said.

Shot of the interior in the past. Photo credit: Philly Church Project.

Looking forward, if the church, the last remaining standing structure designed by architect Patrick Charles Keely, who designed countless 19th-century Catholic cathedrals in New England, built in 1848-1849, remains standing what could it become?

Across the world there have been interesting reuses of former churches. In Buenos Aires, they’ve turned an old church into a bookstore of divine proportions. In Pittsburgh, they’ve turned one into a brewery (Do y’think a brewery might do all right across the street from Union Transfer?). Yo Philly! What can you imagine would work here?

–Lou Mancinelli

17
COMMENTS
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Posted in Spring Garden | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 17 Comments
  • veggie

    i cannot repeat myself enough (i basically make this comment every time a post about this church comes up): church brew works east.  

  • veggie

     it would do great business here. right in between fairmount, center city and northern liberties. easy access to subway, bus and bike routes. union transfer. make a deal with the car wash to use their lot as parking at night.

  • Eldondre

    agreed, church brew works east

  • ATR3

    Good (or God) reuse … from a church to a club to a marketplace … The Limelight in NYC. http://www.shoplimelightmarketplace.com/mainmenu.html

  • phillyboy

    Perhaps Iron HIll Brewery could be recruited to go there.

  • Anonymous

    This is potentially great news…. Depending on what this church is converted to.  The whole section of Spring Garden street from 5th – 11th needs to be “revitalized.”

  • http://twitter.com/F1rstCitizen First Citizen

    This would explain the previously mysterious new construction houses listed at 1141-43 Brandywine.  3 other houses at 1145-49 are now listed, and all 5 properties would be located on the 535 N. 12th parcel.

  • http://twitter.com/brianbrews Brian Marsh

    +2.  My thoughts exactly.  Anybody have any friends at Church Brew Works?

  • anon

    It was the Daily News

  • CW Mote

    The building occupied by the Ateneo bookstore in Buenos Aires was formerly a THEATER, not a church. That would be a more relevant model for the Boyd, not Assumption.

  • http://twitter.com/brianbrews Brian Marsh

     That may be the case, but there is a notable example in Holland (how cool would this be here?):
    http://bit.ly/ODcvcf

  • http://thisoldcity.com This Old City

    In Amsterdam, the Netherlands churches have been converted into live music venues (Paradiso on the Leidseplein) and city-owned exhibition and education centers (Zuiderkerk). It should be a no-brainer that these architectural legacies remain standing. We’ve already lost treasures like the French Gothic gem of St. Boniface and stand to lose more in virtually every quadrant of the city outside of Center.

    The city and the development community need to look outside of their mental walls for not only ideas but financing through historic preservation funding. The more of these unique buildings we tear down, the more Philadelphia becomes like any other boring homogenous new city the US already has a glut of.

  • http://nakedphilly.com/spring-garden/brandywine-place-will-bring-six-homes-to-former-school-site/ Brandywine Place Will Bring Six Homes to Former School Site | NakedPhilly

    [...] we can see is that these homes are pretty much in the backyard of the recently-put-under-contract Church of the Assumption building. If any kind of large-scale construction (or demolition) takes place here in the near future, it [...]

  • BrennonCleary

    Its not the last standing building designed by Keely, look at St Joseph’s in Albany, NY.  

  • http://nakedphilly.com/spring-garden/huge-building-and-lot-for-sale-at-13th-and-mount-vernon/ Huge Building and Lot for Sale at 13th and Mount Vernon | NakedPhilly

    [...] the corner, the Church of Assumption at 12th and Spring Garden sold for about $1.75M in July. While plans are still forthcoming, perhaps that sale is an indication large-scale developers [...]

  • http://nakedphilly.com/spring-garden/breaking-church-of-the-assumption-will-be-demolished/ This Sucks: Church of the Assumption Will Be Demolished | NakedPhilly

    [...] broke the news that the Church of the Assumption, the classic structure built over 150 years ago, was under contract with developer John Wei. The church is architect Patrick Charles Keely‘s oldest remaining [...]

  • http://nakedphilly.com/university-city/services-still-ongoing-at-a-compromised-church-in-west-philly/ Services Still Ongoing at a Compromised Church in West Philly | NakedPhilly

    [...] was the fate of St. Boniface in Norris Square. And soon will (probably?) be that of the Church of the Assumption on Spring Garden. Yea, many churches have gone on to meet the [...]

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