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The Latest

#171 August 2023

Philadelphia has good walkability, but there’s plenty of room for improvement

For Cassidy Boulan, the pandemic was a time to walk. Stuck inside for so long, she stepped outside each day to find some fresh air and make her way through Philadelphia on foot. Her walks began near Washington Square, one of the five public squares designed as cornerstones of the city. She would then wend

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July 31, 2023
7 mins read
#170 July 2023/Urban Nature

Park groups take native plantings beyond the urban wilds

Building on Philadelphia’s history as the “Garden Capital of America,” conservancy groups, landscape designers, urban horticulturists and backyard growers in our region are taking part in a revolutionary shift in gardening. By incorporating native plants — the trees, shrubs and herbaceous plants that flourished here over 200 years ago — into local landscapes, these practitioners

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June 28, 2023
4 mins read
#170 July 2023/Urban Nature

The Natural Lands team of Philadelphia Parks & Recreation has restored landscapes across the city. Will the next administration keep up the effort?

At Houston Meadow it’s easy to forget the city. Grasses and wildflowers cover the hillside that slopes into the wooded ravine of the Wissahickon Creek below. Bees and butterflies dance across the flowers. Over at Three Springs Hollow in Pennypack Park hikers can walk beneath towering oak and tulip trees while wood thrushes serenade them.

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June 28, 2023
7 mins read
#170 July 2023/Urban Nature/Water

Swimmers are enjoying Devil’s Pool, whether or not it’s safe or sustainable

On a Sunday afternoon in early June, Jorge Oliveras and Jackie Colon packed up their beach chairs, filled a cooler with snacks and brought their children out to Devil’s Pool. They sat amid a loose constellation of rocks at the confluence of Wissahickon and Cresheim creeks, watching their kids swim and splash around, basking in

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June 28, 2023
4 mins read
#170 July 2023/Energy

A global climate debate heats up as a liquefied natural gas terminal looks for a home in Chester

The table was set, powerful people already gathered round and talking about the future, when Carol Kazeem walked in about 15 minutes late and popped the balloon. Kazeem, a first-term Pennsylvania state representative from Chester’s 159th district, has had a whirlwind of a year. When the former trauma outreach specialist and 31-year-old mother of three

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June 28, 2023
11 mins read
#170 July 2023/Art/Green Building

Philadelphia Art Commission is a force for sustainable building

What do you think the Philadelphia Art Commission does? You might correctly guess that it approves works of art purchased by the City or placed on public land, along with some street signs. But anyone who has tuned into a public meeting of the commission will have noticed that the nine-member body does more than

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June 28, 2023
3 mins read
#170 July 2023/Community/Food/gardening

Michael Wilcox prepares the Hunting Park Community Garden for a comeback

Across the street from one of the last remaining Catholic girls’ schools in the city, the Hunting Park Community Garden sits unattended behind a padlocked fence. Where nettle and knotweed grow in abundance and raised beds sit empty, the garden waits for the return of its loyal stewards. Michael Wilcox has been involved with the

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June 28, 2023
2 mins read
#170 July 2023/Urban Nature/Water

What if we had handed Cobbs Creek over to wild engineers?

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June 28, 2023
1 min read
#170 July 2023/Art/Community/education

Spiral Q advances change through creativity and cooperation

At Spiral Q’s West Philadelphia headquarters, puppet artists cut out cardboard, shape it into bulldozers and paint it to prepare for a protest march against the 76ers’ plans for a Chinatown arena. “There’s something childlike about them,” says Jacque (who did not provide a last name), while taking a break from painting cardboard miniatures of

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June 28, 2023
5 mins read
#170 July 2023/Urban Nature

Old baseball fields along Cobbs Creek are becoming a natural oasis

On a brisk and sunny March day, the dry grass of the south Whitby Meadow stood tall as a few dozen volunteers gathered with hand tools, potted shrubs waiting to be planted and bundles of live stakes — thin branches cut from black willow and silky dogwood trees intended to take root and sprout along

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June 28, 2023
3 mins read
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