4154 Roosevelt Street, LLC v. Zoning Hearing Board

93 A.3d 901, 2014 WL 1348137, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 203
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 7, 2014
StatusPublished

This text of 93 A.3d 901 (4154 Roosevelt Street, LLC v. Zoning Hearing Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
4154 Roosevelt Street, LLC v. Zoning Hearing Board, 93 A.3d 901, 2014 WL 1348137, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 203 (Pa. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge MeCULLOUGH.

4154 Roosevelt Street, LLC (Roosevelt) appeals from the July 11, 2013 order of the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County (trial court), which affirmed the decision of the Zoning Hearing Board of the Township of Whitehall (Board) denying Roosevelt’s application for: a special exception to change from the pre-existing nonconforming use as an industrial building to a nonconforming use as an apartment building; a special exception for off-site parking; recognition that the property is nonconforming with respect to certain distance and dimension requirements of the Township of Whitehall (Township) Zoning Ordinance (Ordinance); and numerous variances.1 We now reverse and remand.

The underlying facts of this case are not in dispute. Roosevelt is the owner of improved property located at 4154 and 4159 Roosevelt Street and two adjacent, vacant lots on Truman Street, Whitehall, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania (Property). The Property is located within two zoning districts, the R4 Medium Density Residential Zoning District and the R5A High Density Residential without Apartments Zoning District, and is surrounded by single-family residences.2 The Property includes a two-story structure comprised of 46,016 square feet that had been used by Majestic Sportswear (Majestic) as a clothing manufacturing facility, a nonconforming use, until 2007.3 In 2007, VF Corporation purchased Majestic and closed the facility. Since that time, the Property has remained vacant.

Roosevelt purchased the Property in September 2009. Roosevelt initially proposed to convert the Property into an apartment building containing fifty-four studio apartments, ranging from 445 to 1,000 square feet, as well as a laundry room, gym, and courtyard. Roosevelt sought special exceptions relating to the conversion from a nonconforming industrial use to a nonconforming use as an apartment building and for the use of off-site parking.4 Roosevelt also sought numerous [904]*904variances relating to apartment density, parking, screening, driveway location, rear and side yard setbacks, density, and impervious coverage. The Board denied Roosevelt’s application, concluding that it failed to meet the requirements for a special exception or for the requested variances, and the trial court affirmed the Board’s decision. Roosevelt appealed to this Court, and in an unpublished opinion authored by now-President Judge Dan Pellegrini, this Court affirmed.5

On November 9, 2011, Roosevelt filed the present application seeking the same special exceptions and variances it previously sought as well as recognition that the Property is nonconforming with respect to certain distance and dimension requirements of the Ordinance.6 However, in this application, instead of proposing fifty-four apartments, Roosevelt proposed forty-nine apartments with an average size of approximately 1,000 square feet. More specifically, Roosevelt proposed a mix of studio and one-bedroom apartments for lease to single professionals, young couples, and the elderly, with a restriction on the number of people per unit. Roosevelt proposed the [905]*905use of both on-site and off-site lots (Truman Street lots), for a total of ninety-nine parking spaces.7 The Board conducted several hearings with respect to this application.

At these hearings, Roosevelt presented the testimony of its principal, Nat Hyman, a successful retailer and real estate developer in the Allentown area. Hyman focuses his real estate development on the adaptive reuse of old commercial buildings, i.e., converting these buildings to residential uses. Hyman described the current proposal, noting that studio and one-bedroom apartments, each with two assigned parking spaces and limited to two occupants, will generate less traffic than two-bedroom or three-bedroom units. Hyman also asserted that his proposal would generate less traffic than the previous uses at the Property, which utilized the same parking lots. Hyman noted that the Township’s Comprehensive Plan discourages high density residential use, except with respect to the conversion of old mill buildings into apartments.8 Hyman estimated that the conversion would cost approximately $4 million.9 (R.R. at 332a-54a.)

Hyman stated that the Property is obsolete in terms of any future manufacturing/distribution purposes, noting that the garment industry is nearly obsolete in the United States, with most of the production taking place in China, that the Property is not ideally located next to a major highway, and that it lacks a clear span space, and instead is filled with columns every twenty-five feet. Hyman testified that the proposed use would be conducted entirely within the building and that his proposed use would be more consistent with the surrounding residential neighborhood than the previous uses at the site. Hyman specifically denied that the Property could be used for any of the permitted purposes in an R-4 or R-5A zoning district.10 Hy-man opined that the relief he sought was the minimum relief which will afford a reasonable use of the Property. (R.R. at 358a-80a.)

On cross-examination, Hyman testified that the Property had been marketed since the time of his purchase in 2009 as manufacturing, warehouse, distribution, storage, and office space, but Roosevelt received no responses to the advertisements. Hyman conceded that, theoretically, the Property could be used as a municipal building, church, school, day-care center, or indoor recreation facility. Hyman reiterated that the proposed use would generate less traffic than the prior uses at the site because the traffic would be intermittent with the [906]*906apartments, as opposed to the prior increased traffic that occurred at specific times because of people arriving and leaving around the same time for shift changes. Hyman also acknowledged that the Ordinance currently only permits a maximum of nineteen units at the Property. Finally, Hyman noted that he currently rents out approximately seventy-five units in various buildings throughout the Allentown area, all of which were previously old mills or other commercial buildings. (R.R. at 386a-404a.)

Roosevelt also presented the testimony of Nicole Capobianco, a principal shareholder and site manager for Majestic.11 Capobianco testified that Majestic generally ran two shifts, one from 6:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and another from 3:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m., and sometimes ran a third, overnight shift. Capobianco stated that Majestic had fifty employees on the first shift, accounting for roughly forty vehicles, and thirty-five employees on the second shift, accounting for roughly twenty vehicles. Capobianco also noted that the manufacturing at the site resulted in daily truck traffic, between two and six deliveries each day. Capobianco testified that when VF Corporation purchased Majestic, Majestic retained the building because VF Corporation viewed the facility as antiquated. Majestic thereafter listed the Property with two real estate marketing firms, but received only one inquiry. (R.R. at 306a-17a.)

On cross-examination, Capobianco conceded that she did not have an office at the Property and was not at the site daily. Capobianco stated that she was generally familiar with Majestic’s employees, their shifts, and whether they drove or rode with others to work.

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Bluebook (online)
93 A.3d 901, 2014 WL 1348137, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/4154-roosevelt-street-llc-v-zoning-hearing-board-pacommwct-2014.