IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Brian Jenkins, :
Appellant :
:
v. : No. 1470 C.D. 2014
: Argued: May 4, 2015
City of Philadelphia :
BEFORE: HONORABLE BERNARD L. McGINLEY, Judge
HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Judge
HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
OPINION NOT REPORTED
MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
JUDGE LEADBETTER FILED: August 3, 2015
Brian Jenkins, Pastor of Chosen 300 Ministry (Appellant), appeals the
order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County which affirmed the
decision of the Philadelphia Zoning Board of Adjustment (ZBA) granting the
application for variance for Greenway LLC (Greenway) for its proposed mixed-use
development at its property located at 1106-1114 Spring Garden Street and 516
North 11th Street in Philadelphia (the Property). After review, we reverse.
On September 20, 2013, Greenway filed an application with the
Philadelphia Department of Licenses and Inspections (L & I) for a zoning/use
registration permit for a proposed relocation of lot lines to create one lot from six
deeded lots at the Property and for the erection on the consolidated parcel of a five
story mixed commercial/residential building with accessory parking, bicycle
spaces and roof decks. The Property currently has an existing building that
formerly housed the Lawsonia Furniture Manufacturing and Refinishing Company
which is two stories fronting on Spring Garden Street and one story in the rear.
The proposed development would construct a three story addition over the current
two story portion of the building and a four story addition over the current one
story portion of the building. The resulting five story building would consist of
retail commercial use on the ground floor and forty residential units on floors two
through five, with the fifth floor units having privately accessed roof decks. The
Property would also contain 17 parking spaces and 12 bicycle spaces. Greenway’s
plan involved excavating the rear of the property to construct below grade parking
for 14 cars, with three more at surface level. Access to the property would be from
North 11th Street, through a descending driveway/ramp into the garage and would
include a new curb cutout approved by the Philadelphia Streets Department.
L & I denied Greenway’s application for a zoning/use registration
permit because the proposed development did not meet the requirements of the
Property’s I-2 Industrial zoning classification.1 Specifically, L & I determined
that: 1) dwelling units and 2) retail commercial uses are not permitted in an I-2
district;2 3) a minimum of 20 parking spaces are required whereas Greenway only
1
The Philadelphia Zoning Code divides the City into classes of districts designated as Base
Zoning Districts (Chapter 14-400) and Overlay Zoning Districts (Chapter 14-500). See § 14-106
of the Zoning Code. Under § 14-403, Industrial and Industrial Mixed-Use Districts, the I-2,
Medium Industrial District, “is primarily intended to accommodate light industrial uses,
moderate-impact uses, and employment activities such as manufacturing, distribution,
processing, industrial parks, and other activities that may generate noise, odor, vibration, after
hours activities, or traffic impacts well beyond the subject property lines.” § 14-403(1)(c)(.4).
2
Under §§ 14-403(2) and 14-602(5) of the Zoning Code, uses permitted as of right in
industrial districts are set forth in Table 14-602-3, and include: Caretaker quarters; passive
recreation; safety services; transit station; basic and major utilities and services; wireless service
facility; business and professional office; medical, dental, health group practitioner; government
(Footnote continued on next page…)
2
proposed 17;3 and 4) a minimum of 13 bicycle spaces are required whereas
Greenway only proposed 12.4
Greenway appealed to the ZBA for use and dimensional variances,
and a public hearing was held on November 13, 2013. After reviewing the
specifics of its proposal, Greenway’s attorney argued that the Property’s current I-
2 industrial zoning classification was no longer viable for the following reasons:
1) the building has been vacant for about ten years; 2) adjacent to the Property is a
mixed-use CMX-3 district;5 3) other residential projects in the neighborhood have
recently been approved by the ZBA; and 4) there are currently no existing
industrial uses in the neighborhood. ZBA Hearing, N.T. at 2-10. With respect to
the variance needed for the parking spaces, Greenway’s attorney explained that
_____________________________
(continued…)
office; building supplies and equipment; animal services; building services; business support;
financial services; maintenance and repair of consumer goods; marina; non-accessory parking;
radio, television, and recording services; commercial vehicle repair and maintenance;
commercial vehicle sales and rental; personal vehicle repair and maintenance; personal vehicle
sales and rental; gasoline station; vehicle paint finishing shop; equipment and materials storage
yards and buildings; moving and storage facilities; warehouse; wholesale sales and distribution;
artists’ studios and artisan industrial; limited industrial; general industrial; research and
development; trucking and transportation terminals; community gardens; market or community-
supported farm; animal husbandry; horticulture nurseries and greenhouses.
3
See Table 14-802-3, Required Parking in Industrial Districts.
4
At the hearing before the ZBA, Greenway submitted revised plans which added two more
bicycle spaces, bringing the total up to 14, one above the minimum required. As a result,
Greenway no longer needed a variance with regard to bicycle spaces. See City of Philadelphia,
Zoning Board of Adjustment, Public Hearing, November 13, 2013, Notes of Testimony (N.T.) at
4.
5
Pursuant to the Zoning Code, Commercial and Commercial Mixed-Use Districts “are
primarily intended to accommodate and promote neighborhood-, community- and region-serving
commercial uses, as well as mixed-use development consisting of commercial and residential
uses in the same building or on the same site.” § 14-402(1)(b). CMX-3 is the Community
Commercial Mixed-Use District that is “primarily intended to accommodate community- and
region-serving retail and service uses.” § 14-402(1)(c)(.4).
3
due to structural limitations, it could only accommodate fourteen parking spaces in
the garage with three more at street level. Testimony from Jeremy LeCompt of
Harman Deutsch Architecture, the project architect, was that a single curb cut
would be constructed on 11th street, and the rear yard would be excavated
approximately six and one-half feet to allow the driveway/ramp from the street into
the newly constructed garage at the rear of the building. Id. at 17, 22-23.6
Testifying in opposition to the proposal, Appellant stated that he is the
founder and Pastor of Chosen 300 Ministry located at 1116 Spring Garden Street,
adjacent to the Property, and that he ministers to the homeless, which includes not
only worship services, but meals, computer training, as well as expungement and
other necessary services.7 Appellant testified that his primary objection to
Greenway’s proposal is the residential aspect of the project, explaining that he had
purposely located his ministry in an industrial district because of frequent
“opposition in the City” to homeless facilities being near residential
neighborhoods. Id. at 11. Appellant testified that residential communities were
not very accepting of the homeless, expressing concern with his ability to continue
to minister to the homeless “with dignity and respect.” Id. at 12. Appellant also
objected on the ground that the proposal would create too much traffic entering and
exiting the property on 11th street; that providing only 17 parking spaces was a
problem in an already congested neighborhood; that the aluminum façade was not
6
Greenway also presented letters of support/non-opposition from two Registered
Community Organizations (RCOs), the Philadelphia Chinatown Development Corporation
(PCDC) and the Callowhill Neighborhood Association (CNA), as well as a letter of non-
opposition from City Councilman Mark Squilla. The Philadelphia Planning Commission advised
the Board that it had no objection to Greenway’s proposal.
7
Appellant testified that he purchased this property in 2003 and obtained a variance to use
the property as a place of worship. ZBA Hearing, N.T. at 23-24.
4
aesthetically pleasing; and that the excavation and construction at the Property
would cause damage to his property.
The ZBA concluded that Greenway had met its burden of establishing
entitlement to a variance to proceed with its proposed mixed-use development of
the Property. Specifically, the ZBA found that the Property had been vacant and
unused for ten years, that it was located in an industrial zoning district which was
no longer compatible with industrial development, and that these factors were
sufficient to establish the hardship necessary to support the grant of a variance.
The ZBA also found that Greenway’s plan provided for the maximum number of
parking spaces given the constraints of constructing a garage within the original
structure; that the project met all other dimensional requirements applicable to the
district; that it was compatible with the surrounding neighborhood; and that the
requested variance was the minimum necessary to afford relief. Finally, the ZBA
concluded that the record established that “the proposed uses would not have a
detrimental impact on the public health, safety or welfare” and that “the project
would return a long vacant property to productive use, establish a new use that is
compatible with the surrounding neighborhood and preserve the existing building’s
façade.” Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law of the ZBA (November 13,
2013) at 6.
Appellant appealed, and the trial court, having taken no additional
testimony, affirmed. Appellant has now appealed to this court.8
8
Where the trial court takes no additional evidence, our review is limited to determining
whether the ZBA committed an error of law or abused its discretion. Valley View Civic Assoc. v.
Zoning Bd. of Adjust., 462 A.2d 637, 639 (Pa. 1983); see also 2 Pa. C.S. § 754(b). An abuse of
discretion may be found if the Board’s findings of fact are not supported by substantial evidence.
Larsen v. Zoning Bd. of Adjust. of the City of Pittsburgh, 672 A.2d 286, 289 (Pa. 1996).
5
Appellant contends that the ZBA abused its discretion or committed
an error of law in granting the variance to Greenway because there was no
evidence in the record to support its decision and specifically, there was no
evidence in the record that any unnecessary hardship would result if the variance
were denied. Arguing that establishing an unnecessary hardship is “the most
fundamental prerequisite for obtaining a variance,” Appellant avers that Greenway
did not submit any evidence establishing a unique hardship of the Property, such as
evidence that the Property could not be used for any of the uses permitted in an I-2
district or that there were attempts to sell the property over the years. Appellant’s
Brief at 11. Finally, Appellant argues that “[m]ere vacancy alone” is insufficient to
demonstrate an unnecessary hardship. Id. at 12. We agree.
Section 14-303(8)(e) of the Zoning Code sets forth the specific criteria
that must be met before the ZBA may grant a variance, which essentially boils
down to three key requirements: 1) that there is a unique hardship to the property;
2) that there is no adverse effect on the public health, safety or welfare; and 3) that
it is the minimum variance that will afford relief at the least modification possible.
Marshall v. City of Phila., 97 A.3d 323, 329 (Pa. 2014) (citation omitted). The
reasons for granting a variance must be substantial, serious and compelling, and
the party seeking the variance bears the burden of proving that an unnecessary
hardship will result if the variance is denied and that the proposed use will not be
contrary to the public interest. Valley View Civic Assoc. v. Zoning Bd. of Adjust.,
462 A.2d 637, 639 (Pa. 1983). The hardship must be unique or peculiar to the
property at issue, and not one that arises from the impact of the zoning regulations
on the entire district. Id. When evaluating whether a hardship exists, the use of
adjacent and surrounding land is unquestionably relevant. Id. In Hertzberg v.
6
Zoning Board of Adjustment of the City of Pittsburgh, 721 A.2d 43, 47 (Pa. 1998),
our Supreme Court held that an unnecessary hardship is established by evidence
that: 1) the physical features of the property are such that it cannot be used for a
permitted purpose; or 2) the property can be conformed for a permitted use only at
a prohibitive expense; or 3) the property has no value for any purpose permitted by
the zoning ordinance. However, as our Supreme Court explained in Marshall,
“[s]howing that the property at issue is valueless unless the requested variance is
granted ‘is but one way to reach to a finding of unnecessary hardship; it is not the
only factor nor the conclusive factor . . . [r]ather, ‘multiple factors are to be taken
into account’ when assessing whether unnecessary hardship has been established.”
97 A.3d at 330 (citing Hertzberg, 721 A.2d at 48).
With these standards in mind, and after a review of the record, we
must conclude that the ZBA’s findings that Greenway established unnecessary
hardship entitling it to a variance are not supported by substantial evidence, and
that it erred in granting the variances requested. Here, the sole testimony came
from Greenway’s architect, LeCompt, and was directed mainly to an explanation
of how the support structures of the original building would prevent the excavation
of the below grade garage to include only 14 parking spaces with three more above
ground rather than the twenty parking spaces required by the Zoning Code.
Although Greenway’s attorney, Glenn Hing, also appeared and argued on its
behalf, he offered only the following with respect to the issue of hardship unique to
the Property.9 Regarding the length of the Property’s vacancy, Mr. Hing stated
9
It is unclear from the notes of testimony before the ZBA exactly who was sworn in and
testified as a witness, because while the notes begin with the following statement, “[w]hereupon,
all testifiers, having been duly sworn, according to law, were examined and testified as follows:”
immediately thereafter was a brief greeting by the chairperson, followed by Mr. Hing’s opening
(Footnote continued on next page…)
7
that, “[t]he entire building has been vacant for about ten years.” ZBA Hearing,
N.T. at 6. With respect to the Property’s location in an I-2 Industrial District,
which does not allow the residential and retail uses Greenway is proposing, he
made the following statement:
[w]e feel, basically, the use of this project is consistent
with the neighborhood as it currently stands and as it’s
being developed. Even though it is an industrial zoned
area, there have not been, at least as I can recall, any
industrial uses that have moved into this area or so
existing there.
Id. at 9 (emphasis added). Mr. Hing also pointed out that the ZBA had recently
approved a “very similar” development nearby and that the Property is adjacent to
a CMX-3 district, which would allow the type of mixed-use development
Greenway is proposing. Id. at 10. However, photographs submitted at the hearing
show a number of uses across the street from the Property also in an I-2 Industrial
District, including a gas station, an auto repair shop, a combination car wash/lube
and oil change business, and a large church edifice. See ZBA Hearing, Exhibit B,
Photographs (Exterior), Certified Record Item 9.
_____________________________
(continued…)
statement. The Zoning Code sets forth the parameters of public hearings before the ZBA,
including who may testify. Section 14-303(14) of the Zoning Code, Public Hearings of the ZBA,
provides that:
(f) Except as provided in § 14-303(14)(g) below, any person may
appear in person or by an attorney, and may be accompanied by a family
member or translator. Statements by a person’s attorney on his behalf
shall not be considered as testimony, except where agreed upon by the
parties.
(g) Any corporation, including an incorporated non-profit, that is the
applicant in the matter before the Zoning Board shall be represented by
an attorney at the public hearing on that matter before the Zoning Board.
8
In Philadelphia Zoning Board of Adjustment v. Earl Scheib Realty
Corp., 301 A.2d 423, 425-427 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1973), a case with a similar dearth of
evidence, which included a mere eight pages of testimony and some photographs
of the general area surrounding the property, this court concluded that, while the
[then] Code permitted an attorney’s statements to be considered as testimony, its
review of the “assurances of [the applicant’s] attorney,” offered as they were in
support of establishing a hardship unique to the property at issue, “hardly can be
considered a meeting of the burden placed upon the [applicant/appellee].” The fact
that neither the neighborhood nor the civic associations protested the granting of a
variance “did not relieve the applicant of its burden of proof.” Id. at 426. Indeed,
even where the property is vacant or the building at issue is vacant, as is the case
herein, we have required more than just vacancy itself to supply the necessary
finding of hardship. See e.g., South of South St. Neighborhood Assoc. v. Phila.
Zoning Bd. of Adjust., 54 A.3d 115, 122 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012) (ZBA reasonably
concluded that applicant’s sustained but unsuccessful attempt to sell the property
for five years for an industrial use and on which stood a vacant building
established an unnecessary hardship); Wagner v. City of Erie Zoning Hearing Bd.,
675 A.2d 791, 794 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1996) (vacancy of the building and the difficulty
with which it sold evidenced an unnecessary hardship); Davis v. Zoning Bd. of
Adjust., 468 A.2d 1183, 1185 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1983) (vacant pre-existing structure
could not be employed for permitted use without demolition and extensive
reconstruction established an unnecessary hardship); Scott v. Zoning Bd. of Adjust.,
No. 2363, 2015 Phila. Ct. Com. Pl. LEXIS 121 (C.P. Phila. May 18, 2015)
(testimony and evidence established that the property had been vacant for some
time, that applicants unsuccessfully attempted to market the property for one year
9
for zoning compliant purposes, and testimony as to the prohibitive cost to remove
the structure and remediate the soil all held sufficient to establish hardship).
Here, Greenway wishes to develop the Property for uses that are not
permitted in an I-2 Industrial District, on the ground that the entire neighborhood is
changing, presumably away from its industrial character and toward a more mixed-
use character, which is amenable to the type of project it proposes. While South of
South Street is cited for the proposition that “the course of time may effect changes
to [a] property and the surrounding area, which may result in the creation of an
unnecessary hardship that did not previously exist,” this is not such a case, at least
not from an evidentiary standpoint.
First, although counsel stated that the property had been vacant for
about ten years, this is not sufficient, standing alone, to establish hardship. In South
of South Street, hardship was found based on evidence of five years’ unsuccessful
attempts to market the property for a permitted use, with no offers. Here, there
simply was no evidence of whether or not there was an attempt to market the
property. Further, Greenway made no attempt to prove that there was no market for
the other permitted uses, such as business and professional offices (see n.2 above)
other than counsel’s conclusory statement that the current zoning classification was
no longer viable. Nor was there any evidence that it would be more costly to
develop the property for such uses than for the one proposed.
Indeed, the neighborhood may be changing, and the proposed
development may well be an asset to the community. Nonetheless, any hardship
that arises when outdated zoning prohibits the most productive use of property
affects the entire neighborhood and is not unique to the property for which a
variance is sought. As has been noted:
10
Most of the rules which limit variances are designed to
keep the variance power from growing to a general
legislative power. This is the central problem in variance
law. It is reflected in the concept that the hardship which
justifies a variance must not be merely that hardship
which results of necessity from a valid zoning regulation
[§ 6.2.5]; in the requirement that a property be
“uniquely” affected in order to justify a variance
[§ 6.2.7].
Robert S. Ryan, Pennsylvania Zoning Law and Practice § 6.1.3 (2001). As our
Supreme Court long ago stated:
If a Zoning Board were to be allowed to grant variances
to individual properties because of changes in the district
which might perhaps call for a complete reclassification,
it would, by such a piece-meal process, be virtually
enacting zoning legislation . . . .
Michener Appeal, 115 A.2d 367, 371 (Pa. 1955). Therefore, the more appropriate
avenue for relief on these facts would be for Greenway to seek a change to the
zoning, in which the specific criteria attendant to such a proposal could more
properly be addressed. See Sposato v. Radnor Twp. Bd. of Adjust., 270 A.2d 616,
618 (Pa. 1970); O’Neill v. Zoning Bd. of Adjust. of Phila., 254 A.2d 12, 16 (Pa.
1969); see also Kamin v. Zoning Bd. of Adjust. of the City of Pittsburgh, Pa.
Cmwlth., No. 485 C.D. 2009, filed January 7, 2010, Pa. Commw. Unpub. LEXIS
152.10
10
We do not believe that our Supreme Court’s decision in Marshall compels a different
result, as that case involved the question of whether the applicant was entitled to a variance to
convert a legally non-conforming use [a school building], located in a [then] R-10 residential
district, into an apartment residence for low-income senior citizens. Indeed, in agreeing with the
ZBA’s grant of a variance, Justice McCaffery found that the hardship lay in the uniqueness of
the building itself as a legally non-conforming use and that the cost to convert the building to a
permitted use was prohibitive, factors simply not shown here.
11
Accordingly, based on the evidence of record, we reverse the trial
court’s order affirming the decision of the ZBA to grant a variance to Greenway.
_____________________________________
BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER,
Judge
12
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Brian Jenkins, :
Appellant :
:
v. : No. 1470 C.D. 2014
:
City of Philadelphia :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 3rd day of August, 2015, the order of the Court of
Common Pleas of Philadelphia County in the above-captioned matter is hereby
REVERSED.
_____________________________________
BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER,
Judge