L&I cleans up Germantown spite-blight property for the 11th time
![The source of ongoing neighborhood friction, the city just spruced 5357 Knox St. up for what it hopes is the last time. (Neema Roshania/WHYY) The source of ongoing neighborhood friction, the city just spruced 5357 Knox St. up for what it hopes is the last time. (Neema Roshania/WHYY)](/wp-content/uploads/planphilly/assets_7/the-source-of-ongoing-neighborhood-friction-the-city-just-spruced-5357-knox-st-up-for-what-it-hopes-is-the-last-time-neema-roshania-whyy.original.png)
For the neighbors in Germantown — and in the spirit of the season — this is the ongoing story of the “Nightmare on Knox Street.”
Earlier this month, a crew from the Department of Licenses & Inspections cleaned and sealed up the late-19th century house at 5357 Knox St.
It was the 11th time the city performed such work on the house.
Never-ending battle
There have been more than 20 court hearings since 2008 involving the property and its owner, according to the next-door neighbor.
In the most recent legal proceeding, a municipal court judge last summer fined the owner more than $36,000 for building-code violations.
The recent case brought by the city against the homeowner, Anthony Byrne, began with inspections in 2009, when he was cited for a wide variety of property maintenance violations, said Rebecca Corcoran Swanson, communications and policy officer for L&I.
In 2011, the property was designated unsafe because of structural issues.
Because the house was added to the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places in 1966 — it was built in 1871 and owned by Francis and Thomas Cope, members of the prominent merchant family — alteration of the exterior of the house must be approved by the Philadelphia Historical Commission.
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