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Home > Success Stories > Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust Preserve 37 Acres Through Public And Private Partnerships

Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust Preserve 37 Acres Through Public And Private Partnerships

The Pennypack Preserve encompasses 771 acres and is the second-largest privately-owned natural area open to the public in Montgomery County.  The Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust (PERT), which manages the preserve, recently acquired an additional 37 acres in a deal that involved private, state, county, borough, and township resources.  This complex acquisition was made possible by Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources’ (DCNR) Community Conservation Partnership Program (C2P2), funded in part through the state’s Growing Greener II fund.  C2P2 funds helped leverage the support of Montgomery County’s Green Fields/Green Towns open space program. Three municipalities partnered with the Trust to complete the project by dedicating portions of their Green Fields/Green Towns allocations to the project: the Borough of Bryn Athyn, the Township of Lower Moreland, and the Township of Upper Moreland.

In total, three properties were protected.  The properties, on the grounds of the Lord’s New Church in Bryn Athyn Borough and Upper Moreland Township, encompass the headwaters of a tributary to Pennypack Creek as well as upland forests, mature evergreen plantations, and acres of old-field habitat.  The Trust protected two of the parcels (10.07 and 14.01 acres) with conservation easements, and purchased the third (12.75 acres) outright.  This acquisition illustrates the important role that organizations such as PERT play in maximizing available funding by bringing different stakeholders together to preserve land and resources that are mutually beneficial

Although the acquisition of these properties was complex, it wasn’t unusual.  Almost all of the projects that PERT has completed in the past 10 years have involved multiple funders and partners.  Dr. David Robertson, PERT’s executive director, credits the organization’s longstanding and carefully cultivated relationship with local municipalities for streamlining the process.  He points to the beginning of Montgomery County’s open space program in 1993 and the State’s creation of C2P2 in 1993 as the impetus for these types of projects: “These collaborative efforts could not have happened without state and county funding.  These granting agencies have had a significant impact on the amount of land that we have been able to preserve.”

There are several benefits to preservation efforts such as this one, not the least of which is the economic benefit to local communities.  Research has shown that greenbelts and trails through urban and suburban areas increase adjacent property values by thousands of dollars per acre.  In addition, businesses often measure local assets such as recreational opportunities to help them determine where to relocate or expand their operations.  Because of this, conserved land can directly translate to development and expansion of business investment in a community.  Ecologically, preserved natural lands sustain high levels of rainfall infiltration, reduce erosion and flooding in streams, help to maintain groundwater quantity and quality, and filter pollutants out of the air in addition to providing many other benefits.

The recently preserved properties in the Pennypack Preserve are part of the larger Pennypack Greenway, an initiative coordinated and lead by the Pennypack Greenway Partnership.  This group of nonprofit organizations and governmental agencies works together to preserve, expand, and restore natural areas along Pennypack Creek. The Partnership is committed to linking the Greenway's neighborhoods and communities, improving water resources, enhancing recreational opportunities, and safeguarding the Greenway's natural and cultural heritage.  This important natural and recreational corridor connects the Delaware River in Philadelphia to surrounding communities in suburban Montgomery County.  When completed, the greenway will encompass over 2,500 acres and extend 21 miles along the Pennypack Creek.

The C2P2 grant program administered by DCNR provides grants to local governments, county governments and non-profit organizations.  The funding is meant to address community recreational and conservation needs and to support economically beneficial recreational tourism initiatives.  Eligible grant components include rails-to-trails conversions, river conservation projects, and community recreation enhancements.  Project types can focus on planning, acquisition or development.  Generally, C2P2 grants require a 50% match of cash or in-kind contributions.