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Rally for clean air at City Hall scheduled for March 20

Spring has finally sprung, but it’s not all sunshine and clean air for Philadelphians. In 2015, the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America ranked the city as the number three asthma capital in the United States, beaten only by Richmond and Memphis.According to the Natural Resource Defense Council, “Philly clinched the third spot due to

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March 19, 2018
1 min read
#106 March 2018/All Topics

Sustainable Landscape Directory

A guide to the best sustainable landscapers in the Philadelphia area.

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March 19, 2018
1 min read
#106 March 2018/All Topics

Landscape Activation: How the team at Refugia invites nature back into your yard

The life cycle of standard yard maintenance may sound familiar: In March, the winter annuals are ripped out; next up is a huge round of mulching; then the summer annuals are planted; more mulching; constant weeding, fertilizing, trimming and watering; and then as fall and winter approach it all starts to die, and the yard

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March 16, 2018
2 mins read
#106 March 2018/All Topics

Sustainable Landscape Design: DIY projects to try

These five sustainable landscaping design methods can be done without a contractor.

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March 16, 2018
1 min read
#106 March 2018/All Topics

Sustainable Landscape Design: Five questions to ask before going wild in your yard

Before embarking on any home renovation or landscaping projects, there are some key questions to ask, both of yourself and of the contractors or companies you may consider hiring. Of course there are the issues of budget and timing, keeping in mind that often projects go over budget and over schedule. But beyond those first

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March 16, 2018
1 min read
#106 March 2018/All Topics

Turning green lawns into green spaces

It’s a strange kind of irony: The green spaces that surround our homes often aren’t so “green” at all. While many city dwellers might not have a lawn of plush, green grass, homes on the city’s outskirts do. Rooted in ideas of class and respectability that stretch back hundreds of years, perfectly manicured, weed-free and

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March 15, 2018
1 min read
#106 March 2018/All Topics

Looking back on a childhood without TV  

I grew up without a TV. (Insert raised eyebrows here.)My parents decided that, for religious reasons, there would be no television, or even a radio, in our home. They thought the TV would undermine what they were trying to teach us as children. So there was no “Three’s Company,” “MacGyver,” “Jeffersons” or even Saturday morning

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March 15, 2018
2 mins read
#106 March 2018/All Topics

Nicetown neighbors make a case against SEPTA’s new natural gas plant

When retired teacher Lynn Robinson learned a natural gas plant was coming to her neighborhood in Germantown, she felt a resounding “No!” jolt through her body.“No, that’s wrong, that can’t be, that’s unacceptable,” she recalled in January in a phone interview with Grid. “You don’t put a power plant in a residential neighborhood, especially not

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March 15, 2018
3 mins read
#106 March 2018/All Topics

Delaware Riverkeeper’s new book advocates for a constitutional amendment protecting the environment

Take a closer look at any small portion of the earth and you’ll find detailed ecosystems at work, growing and evolving all on their own, frenzied cycles overlapping each other and building more and more complex systems. Delicate, but balanced. Fragile, but resilient. As humanity develops and expands, it’s all too common to find that

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March 15, 2018
4 mins read
#106 March 2018/All Topics/Environment/Urban Nature

From savior to nuisance to species in decline, the house sparrow’s is an American tale

Walk out of your rowhouse and there they are, incessantly cheeping from the eaves. Outside your office they’ll peck crumbs off the sidewalk or catch a quick bath in a street puddle before the next tire rolls through. Eat lunch on a park bench, and they will watch with their little heads cocked to the

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March 15, 2018
3 mins read
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