A betting man's wager on new mall
Posted Monday, February 11, 2008
|

|
OPINION
Harry F. Themal
|
The odds are growing against the 200,000-square-foot Shops at
Brandywine Valley and the traffic gridlock the proposed shopping center is
bound to create.
Under plans filed last year by developer Stoltz, the 44-acre
site at the southwest corner of Concord Pike and Beaver Valley Road would
include two large, two-story commercial buildings, one for grocer Whole Foods,
plus a number of other businesses.
Since the intersection is already near its breaking point,
some left-hand turns might have to be eliminated and traffic directed through
the shopping center.
The plans are unpalatable to New Castle County planners, the
Council of Civic Associations of Brandywine Hundred, many residents and civic
groups, probably the Delaware Department of Transportation, and perhaps even to
Woodlawn Trustees, owners of the land from which Stoltz has an option. The
sentiment on New Castle County Council, which would have to make the final
decision since a rezoning would be required, apparently also frowns on the
idea.
What's happening behind the scenes are discussions on how to
make the plans more in keeping with the Suburban Transition zoning that now
exists. That might include some commercial space, housing and
offices.
New Castle County Councilman Bob Weiner thinks it would be a perfect site for a
trauma center operated by Christiana Care, since no such full-service emergency
hospital now exists in the northernmost part of the state.
The 44 acres are bordered by the Concord Pike, Beaver Valley
Road, Ramsey or Thompson Bridge Road, and Rocky Run Parkway. Naamans Road
coming from the east becomes Beaver Run Road to the west.
Up and down the Concord Pike are other shopping centers losing
tenants. U.S. 202 has become more and more of a traffic headache. The affected
intersection and roads around it are all but impassable between Thanksgiving
and Christmas. Just what's needed: another 200,000 square feet of businesses in
the area.
An official of Woodlawn Trustees believes the opposition makes
it unlikely construction will proceed according to the original plans. Woodlawn
is only indirectly involved in changes that might occur. Woodlawn, founded more
than a century ago by William P. Bancroft, has preserved thousands of acres
much along the Brandywine, and maintains many Wilmington rental units at
affordable prices.
It has leased or sold some land for residential developments,
community groups and commercial uses. This includes the site across Beaver
Valley Road, which Woodlawn swapped for wooded land in Pennsylvania, and on
which two large
office
buildings now stand. The tenants in one of those buildings have reportedly
threatened to move back to Pennsylvania if the expected traffic crunch occurs.
It's no wonder that after a public hearing last October, the
Department of Land Use found the exploratory plan unacceptable. Among the
reasons it cited are that a zoning change is inappropriate at this time,
preliminary plans did not indicate uses of individual buildings, the layout is
unfriendly to pedestrians, the site is along scenic road corridors, that
wetlands and a floodplain are involved, and that a historic circa-1895
"Eight Square School" is on the site. Planners also had "serious
concerns about the wisdom of the [traffic] changes from the standpoints of
safety, convenience and efficiency." Stoltz has until September to submit
a revised preliminary plan.
Whatever is finally agreed to by the many public and private
groups involved, I'd be willing to wager that there will be no
200,000-square-foot shopping center on the site.
Better uses must and will be found, along with improvement for
the almost gridlocked intersection.
Harry Themal has been writing for The
News Journal since 1959.