A recent site visit by Philadelphia YIMBY has noted that construction work is complete at a three-story single-family rowhouse at 1512 North 25th Street in Brewerytown, North Philadelphia. The project replaces a vacant lot on the west side of the block between Jefferson Street and West Oxford Street. Designed by Plato Studio (led by Plato Marinakos, Jr.), the structure will span 3,943 square feet and feature a basement, a roof deck, and full sprinkling. Permits list V2 Properties as both the owner and the contractor.
Permits list a total construction cost of $243,500, with $210,000 allocated toward general construction, $17,500 for plumbing work, $8,500 for electrical work, and $7,500 for mechanical work.
The building measures 18 feet wide and 45 feet deep, leaving space for a spacious, 43-foot-long yard in the rear. The yard takes up 48 percent of the lot, well above the 25-percent zoning minimum, while the 33-and-a-half-foot height to the main roof is also well below the 38-foot minimum (the total building height measures 43 feet to the top of the pilot house). We wonder if the owner of the underbuilt structure plans to sell unused development rights to be used at a nearby property.
The wood-framed structure rises from a reinforced concrete footing foundation.
The building boasts an unusually high base rising five and-a-half feet, which potentially allows for direct street-facing windows in the basement. Ceiling heights measure eight feet on all levels except the ground floor, where they rise nine feet.
The building rises just feet away from the Dairy Lofts, a four-story, 17-unit apartment building underway to the south at 1502-08 North 25th Street. The two buildings are a part of a dramatic transformation of a long-blighted block, which was lined with vacant land and abandoned rowhouses until recent years. By now, most of the blighted rowhouses at the block have been demolished or renovated (including one next door at 1514 North 25th Street), and at least one residential building has been completed in the meantime.
While vacant lots remain pervasive along the block, we anticipate further development at the block as well as throughout the remaining development-ready properties throughout Brewerytown and the adjacent Sharswood to the east (which, depending on definition, the project at 1512 North 25th Street may be considered a part of). We look forward to news of further development, which would help restore the long-distressed neighborhood to its prewar levels of vibrancy and density.
Subscribe to YIMBY’s daily e-mail
Follow YIMBYgram for real-time photo updates
Like YIMBY on Facebook
Follow YIMBY’s Twitter for the latest in YIMBYnews
Both Brewerytown and especially Sharswood need more people, so almost all development is good development. And this project is (good) development.
Dairy Lofts at 1502-08 N. 25th Street appears “paused”, with telltale graffiti on the windows and a for-sale up.
I hope part of the backyard could be sold off. That is way too much empty space for a city house. Glad to see this block being developed.
Hello! Purchaser here of 1512 N 25th, just wanted to let you know that if you take into consideration all of the repairs V2 needs to do to our property construction unfortunately is not finished! Within a month of owning the home I found that there are wobbling floors, nails sticking up through floorboards, the laundry closet had to be completely renovated and redone, the basement is not properly insulated, and the back yard is absolutely covered in broken glass and bricks, oh and the technology package that includes speakers on the roof, master bedroom, and living room, are all actually not operable which we weren’t told until closing day! They have refused to correct many of their errors instead offering quick fixes or just sending the same horrible subcontractors back to the home. This being said I would definitely say moving forward V2 is not a builder to get excited about. Thank you for the detailed article, wishing you a wonderful day!