Willow Valley Communities on Monday announced plans to develop a 20-story apartment building in downtown Lancaster, across the street from Southern Market Center.
The 244-foot-high building would be the tallest in Lancaster County, surpassing the 19-floor Lancaster Marriott at Penn Square a block away by 34 feet.
Named Willow Valley Mosaic, with an estimated cost exceeding $90 million, the upscale development would consist of 147 apartments as well as a host of resort-quality amenities for its residents, who would be ages 55 and up.
Mosaic also would include two restaurants and several small stores that would be open to the public.
Willow Valley Mosaic Amenities
Packer windmill decision looms Tuesday standardspeaker.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from standardspeaker.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
BETHLEHEM, Pa. â Bethlehem City Council adopted a 2021 general fund budget during Tuesday night s meeting and approved a property tax increase.Â
The $87.4 million spending plan includes a 5% tax increase on property owners. For Bethlehem residents in Northampton County, this computes to 8.61 mills on each dollar of assessed valuation. The rate for Lehigh County residents will be 2.72 mills, according to city documents. While we are raising taxes this year.we are doing a good job by those we serve here in the city of Bethlehem, said Councilman Michael Colón.
Council voted 6-1 for each of the two separate bills that respectively include the general fund budget and the tax increase. Councilman Bryan Callahan offered the dissenting vote on both measures.
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Greg Werstil, a Duncansville-area businessman, five years ago offered to help his neighbor, James Peters, who owns Best Way Pizza, repair a wall separating the two properties, but, what occurred next, Werstil says, is “insane … surreal … truly surreal.”
After the repairs were underway, a zoning officer for the borough took notice of the “fence being constructed or reconstructed,” and ruled that while fences are allowed in the borough, permits for them must be obtained under the borough’s Zoning and Floodplain ordinances.
Werstil was cited on May 25, 2015, for violations of the ordinances, sparking a long court battle that concluded Monday with a ruling by a three-judge panel from Pennsylvania’s Commonwealth Court that upheld a $100 fine and an award of $4,695 in legal fees paid by the borough to litigate the alleged violations.
DEP Suspends Review of Troubled Edgar Thomson Fracking Well foodandwaterwatch.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from foodandwaterwatch.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.