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May 10, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (1)

West Philadelphia Storefronts

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June 13, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Alleys of Philadelphia

    Center City has a surprising wealth of alleys- but not the type you find behind office buildings full of dumpsters and telephone wires. Row houses front the street, and in the wealthier parts, like Rittenhouse Square and Washington Square West shown below, homeowners go all-out perfecting their tiny facades and planters. Far too skinny for automobile passage and too cobblestoned for bicycles, these little streets form completley pedestrianized pockets in an otherwise congested metropolis.

    It often seems that Philadelphia longs for a time when it was a more significant city. So much of it's identity is tied up in colonial history and Ben Franklin. But it's physical idiosyncrasies are treasures too often overlooked. These tiny car-free alleys are, in my opinion, one of Philly's greatest assets.

May 29, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Greetings from Philadelphia

    Philadelphia is the quintessential American city.  Forget New York.  It's too educated, too rich, too diverse, too pompous.  In New York, people of all colors and tax brackets take public transit into a vastly wealthy inner city.  There's nothing American about that.

    In Philly, the city is poor and black and the outskirts and suburbs are white and rich.  SEPTA, the city's transit agency, is constantly fighting bankruptcy.  Junk food dominates the local cuisine, city government is notoriously corrupt and shiftless, and, occasionally, people actually look you in the eye and smile.

April 23, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Mapped: Reading Viaduct, Philadelphia

Tour the ruins of an abandoned elevated freight railroad in central Philadelphia.

Reading_map_4

    The company itself may be evil but, cartographically speaking, Google is revolutionary.  Allowing users to customize their own maps has brought a lot of personality to an otherwise dorky endeavor.  Of course people mapped the obvious stuff: traffic congestion, earthquakes.  Esoteric maps emerged as well, like rising sea levels, proposed but never built highways, and, my personal favorite, field recordings from forests and cities all around the world.

Rea_left_thumb_2     Rea_right_thumb_2

    "Urban explorers," who examine otherwise forbidden parts of civilization, find the damndest things.  Many have photographed various asylums and jails in the many uninhabited islands around New York.  The rust belt, Detroit in particular, is a haven for urban explorers breaking into everything from factories to office towers.  In 1994 a group of explorers claimed to have found the Spetzmetro, a secret subway system under Moscow connecting the government centers to a far flung rural town, presumably so officials could escape in the event of a rebellion.  They don't restrict themselves to abandoned sites either: you're just as likely to find them scaling the cables of a suspension bridge or kayaking down storm sewers.

    Despite my fascination, I've actually taken up such an adventure only a handful of times.  The most successful was during a trip to Philadelphia in 2005 when Kayt and I found an entrance to the Reading Viaduct, a long abandoned freight railroad beautifully overgrown.  This is a unique find because, unlike a forested factory in the middle of nowhere, the viaduct is located in a very central location.  And yet few seem aware of its existence.

    New York's very similar High Line, in Chelsea, is set to be the next big public park and adjacent real estate has already responded.  If you walk down 10th Av you're likely to see construction crews removing vegetation and installing benches.  In Philadelphia, on the other hand, the Reading Viaduct is sitting tight.

December 12, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (1)

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