ECMC and UBRI to guide Kensington Heights community visioning process

Advisory committee of neighborhood stakeholders to inform future development of 17-acre site adjoining ECMC on Buffalo's East Side

Image courtesy of ECMC.

The former Kensington Heights property sits on the western border of the medical center’s existing 65-acre health campus. Its future development by ECMCC will be planned in collaboration with community stakeholders, a process guided by the UB Regional Institute. 

Published June 26, 2019 This content is archived.

Print

Erie County Medical Center Corporation (ECMCC) and the School of Architecture and Planning have launched “Building Together,” a partnership to engage community input in the medical center’s redevelopment of the long vacant 17-acre Kensington Heights property.

In 2018, ECMCC purchased the former Kensington Heights property, which sits on the western border of the medical center’s existing 65-acre health campus, and has stated any future reuse would be informed by the community.

Building Together’s 16-member Community Advisory Committee of neighborhood and community stakeholders, which began convening in March, will shape a redevelopment process that both supports the healthcare mission of ECMCC and meets the needs and aspirations of the local community.

ECMCC President and CEO Thomas J. Quatroche Jr., PhD, said, “Building Together is a truly unique and exciting opportunity to develop a community-led process for the planning and redevelopment of the Kensington Heights property, which will turn this long-vacant land back into productive reuse for years to come.”

ECMCC has engaged the School of Architecture and Planning and its UB Regional Institute to support the community engagement process over the next several months and provide supporting research.

Outreach to residents and businesses in the surrounding area has already commenced. Community members can complete an online survey to share their comments on the site or schedule a special session with the Building Together project team, which will be tabling and engaging with the neighborhood throughout the summer. 

Robert Shibley, architect, urban planner and dean of the School of Architecture and Planning, who will play a lead role in the process, said, “The Kensington Heights site has transformative potential for both ECMCC and the surrounding East Side community. We commend ECMCC for having the vision and foresight to inform the redevelopment process with the knowledge, insight and perspective of the community."

Committee Members

Teresa Bianchi
Executive Director, Habitat for Humanity

Mark Blue
President, NAACP Buffalo Chapter

Sheila L. Brown
Owner, Vision Multi Media Group/Power 96.5 FM

Reverend Jeff Elgin Carter Jr.
Ephesus Ministries

Beverly Crowell
President, Northland Beltline Taxpayers Association

Becky Del Prince, RN, BSN, BC
Vice President of Systems & Integrated Care, ECMCC

Minister Dwayne R. Gillison Sr.
Mount Olive Baptist Church

Reverend Dr. William Gillison
Mount Olive Baptist Church

Candace Moppins
Executive Director, Delavan-Grider Community Center

Pastor Kinzer M. Pointer Jr.
Agape Fellowship Baptist Church/Chair, Board of Managers, Millennium Collaborative Care

Rita Hubbard-Robinson
Patient Activation Measure Director/Consultant, Millennium Collaborative Care

Eugenio Russi
Executive Director, Hispanos Unidos de Buffalo

John Somers
President, Harmac Medical Products, Inc.

Stephen Tucker
President and CEO, Northland Workforce Training Center

Dave Zapfel 
President/CEO, Gerard Place

Karen Ziemianski, RN, MS
Senior Vice President of Nursing, ECMCC

 

ECMC Logo.
School of architecture and planning.
UB Regional Institute.