Exploring the past, future of Philly neighborhoods during annual Jane’s Walk
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Peter Cramer of Wexford Science and Technologies goes over a map of current and proposed development in and around University City at the beginning of a Jane's Walk through the neighborhood Friday. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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The last remaining houses in 'Black Bottom,' a colloquial term for a section of University City is seen from a the office of Wexford Science and Technologies that, along with Drexel University, is planning to develop the 14-acre lot across the street. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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A 14-acre parcel on 36th Street in University City is being developed by Drexel University and Wexford Science and Technologies into mixed use residential and commercial space. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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Participants in the Jane's Walk pass by Drexel University's URBN Center for Arts and Design which was opened in 2013. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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Drexel University Architect Nancy Rogo Trainer speaks to Jane's Walk participants about The Summit, a high rise student apartment building with ground floor retail space, near the terminus of Lancaster Avenue in University City. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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The Summit is a high rise student apartment building on 36th Street and Lancaster Avenue in University City. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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Buildings old and new are seen looking north on 36th Street and Lancaster Avenue in University City. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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The Community Education Center on Lancaster Avenue, constructed in 1901, is seen with newer construction in the background. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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Terri Shockley speaks to Jane's Walk participants about some of the history and workings of the Community Education Center and meeting house on Lancaster Avenue near Powelton Avenue. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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Local historian Scott Maits provided facts about Lancaster Avenue's significance in the city's history including it's role in both the Lincoln Highway and the Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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Textures of buildings new and old are seen along Lancaster Avenue in University City. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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The group of 2017 Jane's Walk participants head down Lancaster Avenue through University City. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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James Wright gives a history lesson on the Lancaster Mews building that was saved from demolition and is slated for renovation. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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The Lancaster Mews front facade facing Lancaster Avenue. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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The 14-acre site which was previously home to University City High School awaits redevelopment by Drexel University and Wexford Science and Technology. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
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A shuttered United Bank near 38th and Lancaster Avenue is in the process in being converted into a community space. A poster for a meeting on the use of the lot and building is plastered to the wall. (Brad Larrison for WHYY)
In the spirit of Pennsylvania-born author and urbanist Jane Jacobs, Philadelphians took to the streets of University City Friday to survey the changing landscape of the neighborhood.
As the skyline on the west bank of the Schuylkill River continues to expand vertically, the “Jane’s Walk” sought to highlight the neighborhood’s past while viewing recent and future development. With the growing student bodies and campuses of Drexel University and the University of Pennsylvania, the walk dealt with the often thorny subject of gentrification in the neighborhoods surrounding Drexel.
From the 12th-floor office of Wexford Science & Technologies near 36th and Filbert Street, Peter Cramer, Wexford’s director of development, and Drexel University architect Nancy Rogo Trainer went over maps and plans detailing the development of a nearby 14-acre parcel that was once home to University City High School. The lot and a strip of row homes, known colloquially in the neighborhood as “Black Bottom,” still stood as a sliver of the past facing toward the vacant patch of land. The proposal for the space, like much of the area’s development, is high-rise residential housing with commercial space on the ground floor and community garden at the corner of 36th and Filbert Streets.
As 15 or so walkers took to the street, they stopped to view Drexel’s URBN Center for Arts and Design, which opened in 2013, and The Summit, a high-rise mixed use student apartment building with retail on the ground floor. The Summit and Lancaster Walk, a grassy park area on Drexel’s campus, meet at the Terminus of Lancaster Avenue, the launch point for the rest of the tour.
The group viewed buildings, new and old, on the Lancaster Avenue Thoroughfare. At one point they stopped at the Community Education Center meetinghouse that was built in 1901. They listened to local historian Scott Maits point out former garages and gas stations left over from Lancaster Avenues role in the Lincoln Highway System. These buildings have been converted over time into apartments and pizza shops. Group leader James Wright describe the effort to persevere Lancaster Mews, a building slotted for demolition that was able to achieve historic status and the effort to convert a shuttered bank into a yet to be determined community space.
The “Jane’s Walks” in Philadelphia is part of a global event taking place this weekend. You can learn more about them and the Philadelphia connection at JanesWalk.org.
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