The city of Philadelphia is prepared to release a report detailing a months-long community engagement effort officials say will inform the fate of the Roundhouse, the unusual concrete building that served as police headquarters for more than six decades.
Many of the residents who participated in that process said they want to see the shuttered building at 7th and Race streets repurposed as a community hub that recognizes the site’s long history of police abuse.
— WHYY
Philadelphia has a long-frayed relationship between its police department and the community, including most notably the 1985 MOVE Bombing that claimed the lives of 11 activists while displacing another 250 people and destroying 61 homes. The Roundhouse has a central role in this fraught history, and now opinions are split over its proposed future redevelopment.
Robert Geddes, one of the building’s three designers has chimed in to say he feels it should be given a second life as a font for social justice activities and other types of community-based activism. The 125,000-square-foot Brutalist-style structure has also been floated as the potential site of affordable housing, though its layout remains difficult to convert by most estimates.
A final decision on its fate is expected sometime within the calendar year.
1 Comment
I vote for repurposing over demolition. Building are only a reflection of the people inside of them. Trying to erase the past is far more harmful, not to mention environmental waste. This is not a confederate monument erected by white supremacists that has only one function, it can be repurposed, even redeemed, and we can be a part of that redemption, or we can simply knock it down and pretend it never existed, and we were never complicit in the system that it once represented…
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