Violette Levy (MSHP '18) won the Anthony Nicholas Brady Garvan Award for an Outstanding Thesis.
Abstract: Widespread vacancy and long-term disinvestment in neighborhoods across the City of Philadelphia have left historic preservation efforts and opportunities at a crossroads. The properties currently listed on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places represent only a small fraction of the city’s built fabric that is eligible for such recognition. Therefore, it is crucial for the City of Philadelphia to look towards the future, and develop a strategy that will encourage more opportunities for historic preservation to take place. This thesis asserts that Philadelphia would benefit from enacting an Adaptive Reuse Ordinance, which would both allow for and encourage expanded opportunities for historic preservation across the city. This assertion is based on case study analyses of all current ordinances utilized to incentivize adaptive reuse on the city-level in the United States, as well as extant survey data related to Philadelphia’s historic building stock and individual neighborhood characteristics. Through evidence linking adaptive reuse to elevated levels of preservation, sustainability, and neighborhood reinvestment, this thesis contends that an Adaptive Reuse Ordinance would create more opportunities and heightened engagement with historic preservation throughout the City of Philadelphia.