Allentown doesn't have much of a political memory. The Morning Call changes out its reporters about every 6 months, and most political activists eventually have lobotomies out of frustration. Never the less, some of you may remember Heydt's hole. After he torn down Hess's, the hole sat there for 18 months while a group of investors failed to find financing for a amateur hockey arena. (The one built later in Bethlehem folded and now is for sale) Now, eight years later, Pawlowski has a hole. Announced with great fanfare, a local developer would build the Cosmopolitan on the site of Sal's Spaghetti House. It makes me nervous when they name a restaurant before they built it. Anyway, Pawlowski bought Sal's, and the city paid for the demolition.(Through one of its Authorities) Then the city gave the Cosmopolitan a $50,000 restaurant grant. Yes, we gave a brick-less name $50,000. I think some of the city puff bloggers were even making reservations for dinner. Back to the hole; as a sidewalk supervisor I was surprised to see the excavators dig under the adjoining Sovereign Building and pour pylons under its footers. Perhaps they were mining, mining for grants. Those pylons have enabled the developer to remove his equipment. and let that hole sit there now for over two months, with no danger to the adjoining building. I'd say about $50,000 worth of work has been done. Last month the city applied for a low cost Liquor License for the Cosmopolitan. Last week, after the Pawlowski Administration had an embarrassing "no comment" in regard to Johnny Manana's, a backhoe was moved back to outside the Cosmopolitan site. Is that backhoe a Pawlowski Prop? Does the developer sense the time is ripe for renewed grants? Does Pawlowski need a new ribbon to cut? *
* There could be legitimate reasons why construction has halted on the Cosmopolitan. However, last month the developer's attorney declined to comment on an explanation.
reprinted from August of 2008
UPDATE March 7, 2017 The developer(s) would go on to build the high end restaurant with their own capital. It was built pre-NIZ, and represented more faith in Allentown than many others shared at that time, including this blogger.
ADDENDUM OCTOBER 24, 2019: This will be my final post of a three part series about the former short lived Cosmopolitan Restaurant. In 2008 and 2017 this post was titled Pawlowski's Hole. I have changed the title to address a downside of the NIZ...modern buildings, such as the PPL Plaza and the Cosmopolitan, cannot compete against the tax subsidized NIZ and are vacant. Of course the real problem is that the NIZ is not just tax subsidized, but rather paid for completely with our state taxes. So, while the NIZ has created a real estate empire for one man, despite a $billion dollars of new buildings, Allentown residents still had a 27% tax increase.... That is one bad joke on the taxpayers.
photo/molovinsky
We all wrote and spoke against it, but as usual sanity and common sense were unwelcomed in Allentown. The failure of the NIZ was not difficult to predict. Even if it had succeeded in bringing economic revitalization to the downtown, the cost of that success, the historic center of the city, would have been too high a price to pay. Now we are left with cold, anonymous buildings, many empty storefronts, generic apartment buildings that e are told are full but rarely a person to be seen. All very odd. Add this to the long list of self inflicted wounds the city has experienced in the past two decades, decades of corruption, extraordinarily bad leadership and the resulting loss of talent from city hall, the school district, and from the city itself.
ReplyDeleteYears ago when I lived on S 10th within one block of Hamilton, this was the time of year cars with shoppers would gridlock out front. I couldn't find a parking space for blocks till someone pulled out. That was then. Nothing like it inow or ever will be again.
ReplyDeleteYes I understand the many reasons for this BUT...as long as NIZ buildings are leased to businesses and tenants none will have a vested interest in Allentown like those who once OWNED their properties. Those who did own had their properties legally stolen and replaced by rentals mostly controlled by a single entity.
Pa. taxpayers were bamboozled being told NIZ would bring in new state revenue by businesses coming in from out-of-state. Most of us saw through this before the beginning. It may not be legal fraud, but it's fraud none-the-less.
Meanwhile Emmaus, Bethlehem, Easton and a few others are moving forward through small private ownership. I have a lot more to say. Suffice to say my response is too long already.