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Mercy Family Center

Categories:
  • Adaptive Reuse
  • Brownfield Redevelopment
  • Commericial
  • Construction Waste Management
  • LEED Certified
  • Local Materials
  • Low Emitting Materials
  • Neighborhood/Community
  • New Construction
  • Private Developer
  • Public Transportation
  • Recycled Materials
  • Recycling
  • Renovation
  • Silver
  • Social Justice Focus
  • Urban
Description:

Mercy Neighborhood Ministries of Philadelphia, Inc. (MNM) is a 501 (C) (3) not for profit organization that has served the Tioga neighborhood of North Philadelphia for over 25 years. It is the only social service provider in one of the most neglected sections of Philadelphia. The Ministries’ programs were developed in partnership with Tioga’s residents in order to address their needs. The Ministries operates a triad of programs including licensed Before & After School Age Childcare, licensed Adult Day Services and Adult Education/Human Development Programs, but brings a special focus to providing childcare to the working poor.

MNM is a fundamental building block in the effort to preserve and sustain the Tioga community. In January, 2009 MNM opened the Mercy Family Center at 1939 West Venango Street, in the heart of the Tioga. The 32,000 square foot facility was designed using LEED protocols and has achieved LEED Certification Silver Rating.
The Mercy Family Center was constructed in order to provide a new, state of the art facility that would consolidate, for the first time, all of the Ministries’ programmatic and administrative activities under one roof. The bold move to turn five interconnected, underutilized warehouse structures into a high-quality, energy efficient community asset reflects MNM’s commitment to serve the people of Tioga and to do it in an environmentally sensitive and sustainable manner.
The facility is handicapped accessible and has separate entrances for the adult and child care programs. Spaces include: classrooms, a computer lab, a playground in a light-filled courtyard (that was carved out of the voluminous warehouse space), adult meeting and activity rooms and an auditorium that can serve as a community gathering place. All these spaces are reached by generous interior “streets” that are naturally lit by a series of light monitors that are located at skylight locations that had been previously roofed over.
The Mercy Family Center is the physical embodiment of Mercy Neighborhood Ministries’ commitment to sustaining and enhancing the Tioga neighborhood. The Ministries’ audacious decision to complete what is believed to be the first LEED certified building in North Philadelphia is a striking demonstration of how social programs and architecture can come together to promote and build sustainable communities.
Mercy Neighborhood Ministries and the Mercy Family Center represent a rare case in which both the social programs being run by an organization and the facility in which they are housed represent the best aspects of sustainability. The programs run by the Ministries, as previously stated, represent a continuing, long-term commitment to provide a variety of social services, educational programs, and community enrichment opportunities that would otherwise be unavailable to the residents of Tioga.
It is the core mission of Mercy Neighborhood Ministries to help insure that this neighborhood remains a viable, sustainable place for people to live. In this regard, Mercy Neighborhood Ministries represents the best aspects of urban sustainability. In this regard alone, the Mercy Neighborhood Ministries would be deserving of a Philadelphia Sustainability Award, but their construction of the Mercy Family Center as a LEED Certified project takes the organization’s commitment to sustainability to another level.

Some of the sustainable strategies employed in the design of the facility include the following:

• With the reuse of an existing, underutilized building complex, the reclamation of an old industrial Brownfield site and the removal of onsite environmental hazards this project takes advantage not only of these structures but also of the existing urban fabric that exists outside its doors.
• The generous use of natural light throughout the facility by opening up roofed over skylights to create new light monitors and also by opening up bricked in window openings and installing new, energy efficient insulated windows.
• The creation of a new exterior play space by removing a portion of the warehouse roof to provide a protected exterior environment for play and to allow natural light to reach more of the interior areas of the building.
• The installation of a new, energy efficient mechanical system and the installation of operable windows.
• The use of low-flow and low-flush fixtures that allow for a 40% reduction in water use. This results in an anticipated savings of 46,000 gallons of potable water/year over baseline buildings.
• The installation of new white (cool) roof and wall insulation.
• The replacement of a paved parking lot along Venango Street with a native plant garden and the creation of a courtyard play area provided approximately 4,500 square feet of pervious area on a site that was previously 100% impervious.
• The creation of the native plant garden reduces the heat island effect and is planted with drought resistant native and adapted plant species. The garden requires no artificial irrigation that results in additional savings of potable water.
• The use of non-polluting building finishes throughout the interior that contributes to a healthy indoor environment.
• The use of construction materials that are regionally manufactured and processed and contain recycled content resulting in the reduction of the use of energy required to manufacture and transport these materials to the site.
• The employment of construction methods to reduce and recycle construction waste. This project directed 95% of its construction debris from landfills to be recycled for other uses.
• The implementation of conducting educational tours with signage that features the sustainable features of the project.
• The publication of a monthly newsletter “Keeping It Green” that highlights the sustainability strategies used on this project and educates the community about sustainability.
• The inclusion of a computer center in the building to educate the neighborhood’s student and adult population, thereby making Tioga more sustainable by lessening the technological divide that so often exists between the residents and other, more affluent areas.
This list demonstrates how MNM has enhanced and expanded their core mission not only by building a sustainable Center but also by integrating sustainable strategies and promoting a consistent message in their educational and outreach programs that sustainable living matters and will enhance and strengthen the community. By making service to community their highest priority and by insisting that their new headquarters be a green building, Mercy Neighborhood Ministries and the Mercy Family Center stands as a symbol of hope and transformation to the Tioga community as well as other urban communities both within the city of Philadelphia and the United States.
Mercy Neighborhood Ministries demonstrates commitment to sustainability, beyond completing what is the first LEED Silver certified building in North Philadelphia. MNM firmly believes that education is a key to success, and recognizes the need for “green” education among our staff and community.

 

Location:
1939 W Venango St., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19140
Square Footage:
32000ft.
Primary Contact:
Ann Provost, RSM Executive Director
Start Date:
07/07/2005
Completion Date:
01/01/2009
Attached Photos:

Members:
Scott Kelly

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