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City of Pittsburgh – Department of City Planning The Pittsburgh and Philadelphia Stories John Carpenter REDEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY of the CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.

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Presentation on theme: "City of Pittsburgh – Department of City Planning The Pittsburgh and Philadelphia Stories John Carpenter REDEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY of the CITY OF PHILADELPHIA."— Presentation transcript:

1 City of Pittsburgh – Department of City Planning The Pittsburgh and Philadelphia Stories John Carpenter REDEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY of the CITY OF PHILADELPHIA Kim Graziani OFFICE OF THE MAYOR of the CITY OF PITTSBURGH

2 PittsburghPhiladelphia Total Miles55.42 sq mi 135.09 sq mi Total Neighborhoods90 neighborhoods155 neighborhoods Total Population 333,5271,540,351 Population Loss over 50 Years343,278 or 50 %452,703 or 23% * Median Sales Prices for Single Family Homes $66,562$130,400 Percent of Homeownership52%59.3% Approx. Total Taxable Parcels126,732570,000 Amount of Tax Delinquency (total parcels ≥ 2 Years Tax Delinquent ) 17,780 or 14 %100,000 or 18% Abandonment (total parcels ≥ 5 Years Tax Delinquent ) 8,690 or 6.8% ? Foreclosures 20081,199 (0.7%)≈ 5,500 (1%) 7430 (2009) Vacancy (lots and structures) 14,000 vacant lots (9,826 parcels publicly-owned) 6,000 or12% vacant buildings 40-60,000 vacant properties (10,000 publicly-owned)

3  It’s Everywhere 40-60,000 Vacant Properties (estimates vary)  It’s Expensive  Jumbled Ownership Hard to Assemble Parcels  Private vs. Public Ownership Philadelphia Vacant Land Story DEFINITION OF THE PROBLEM

4 City-Wide Vacancies Philadelphia Vacancy Density

5  IT’S EXPENSIVE $69.4 Million (to date) $11.3 Million (L&I FY2008) Blighted properties reduce the value of nearby properties by up to 20% Lost revenue from failed real estate tax collection Maintenance of vacant properties by City Diminished value resulting from vacant properties Philadelphia: Definition of the Problem

6 Jumbled Ownership

7 Philadelphia: Definition of the Problem  Private Ownership  Tax-Delinquent  Public Ownership  Fragmented  Private Ownership vs. Public Ownership 1 out of 5: Publicly Owned Public 4 out of 5: Privately owned Private

8  Private Ownership = 4 out of 5 1 year = $1.4 Million 2 -10 years = $6.2 Million 11 + years = $61.8 Million Most of the older delinquencies are considered uncollectable. Total Private Ownership = 4 out of 5 Vacant Properties Over half are tax delinquent, a total of $69.4 million Private Philadelphia: Definition of the Problem

9 Fragmented Public Ownership Total Public Ownership = 1 out of 5 Vacant Properties 50% 27% 15% 8% Public Philadelphia: Definition of the Problem

10 Philadelphia: Goal Unified system of:  Tax foreclosure  Property maintenance  Effective marketing for reuse

11 Websites with property lists Broker Sale Pilot Coordinated RFPs Simplified Documents More Predictability Recent Progress

12 City-Wide Vacant Land Work Group Convened by the Mayor How We’re Fixing the Problem

13 Lessons Learned  Key Linkage Between: Tax Collection Policy Land Re-use Opportunity  Everyone is a Stakeholder: Homeowners Landlords Non-profits Government  Differing Interests

14 1986-1990 Pittsburgh: Definition of the Problem

15 1991-1995 Pittsburgh: Definition of the Problem

16 1996-2000 Pittsburgh: Definition of the Problem

17 2001-2005 Pittsburgh: Definition of the Problem

18 City of Pittsburgh – Department of City Planning 2006-2010 Pittsburgh: Definition of the Problem

19 Pittsburgh: Definition of Problem

20 City of Pittsburgh – Department of City Planning Pittsburgh: Definition of the Problem  Scale and effect of decline in certain neighborhoods  Cost to acquire, maintain and responsibly reuse  Local community capacity

21 Current Resources to Address the Problem  Pittsburgh Land Reserve  Mayor’s Green Up Pittsburgh Program  Comprehensive and Local Plans  Increased demolitions

22 Goal Create a more comprehensive system to recycle tax delinquent and abandoned parcels by:  improving the current system that works if there is an end user/market;  creating a system to deal with properties with no market; and  develop a sustainable funding mechanism

23 Larimer 45% of neighborhood is tax delinquent (1,977 out of 4,348 taxable parcels)

24 Larimer Green Zone Total Costs 2004-2007200820092010Total Public Acquisitions$123,379$148,232$19,250$290,861 Private Acquisitions$196,108$110,837$306,945 Holding Costs$500$532$2,578$272$3,882 Demolition$133,067$2,945$136,012 Community Support Greening$27,175$30,000 $87,175 Organizational/Programmatic ELCCC/Kingsley$67,825$15,000$82,825 Hosanna Industries Homeface Program$100,000 Total$123,879$243,764$496,003$144,054$1,007,700  Total Cost: $1Million Total Acreage Under Public Control: 7.85 (13.5 acre zone)

25 Larimer 45% of neighborhood is tax delinquent (1,977 out of 4,348 taxable parcels) Before After

26 Process to Achieve Our Goal  Mayor Ravenstahl is leading the charge via the Land Recycling Task Force  Members of the Task Force include:  City Representatives  County Representatives  State Representatives  School Representatives  Local Authorities  Community Development Professionals  Real Estate Attorneys  Advocates  Task Force meets quarterly  Pilot projects

27 Lessons Learned  Focus on tax policy  Costs of blight  Benefits of stabilizing communities  Involve community  Support creative reuse strategies

28 Comments/Questions? Cindy Daley: cindy@housingalliancepa.org Dan Kildee: dkildee@communityprogress.net dkildee@communityprogress.net John Carpenter: john.carpenter@rda.phila.gov john.carpenter@rda.phila.gov Kim Graziani: kim.graziani@city.pittsburgh.pa.us kim.graziani@city.pittsburgh.pa.us GO STEELERS! Thank you.


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