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The Latest

#157 June 2022/Climate-Change/Community/Water

Philadelphia is rolling the dice building turf fields on a floodplain, warns former City floodplain manager

Flooding is the reason for the FDR Park master plan. It also could be its undoing. No one denies that FDR Park has been growing soggier over the years. Paths that once led walkers around the “lakes” now run through marshy ground at the edge of the water. Stormwater flows off of I-95 and the

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May 31, 2022
4 mins read
#157 June 2022/Climate-Change/Community/Environment/Environmental Justice/Public Health/Urban Nature

The FDR Park Master Plan needs reconsidering

Grid has been hearing a lot lately about FDR Park. After our series of articles on the development of the Cobbs Creek golf courses, Philadelphians concerned about the fate of the South Philly Meadows got in touch to defend the park’s former fairways against a plan to develop the beloved greenspace into a complex of

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May 31, 2022
5 mins read
#157 June 2022/Column/Culture/Feminism

Dear Lois, How do you find your domestic flow

Rebranding is the first step. Instead of having a “cleaning day,” which sounds a bit like a list of chores, I have what I call a “home day” — a day where I set aside time to take care of the house’s needs. There is no prescription for what order to do things in, or

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May 31, 2022
2 mins read
#157 June 2022/Climate-Change/Environment/Environmental Justice/Water

The proposed airport expansion threatens to make flooding worse in Eastwick

Ted pickett counts himself lucky. He and his wife were home when the flooding started. As Hurricane Isaias dumped rain over the Delaware Valley and Darby Creek crested its banks on August 4, 2020, he and his wife got to work. “We were able to mitigate a real nasty thing,” Pickett says. For five hours

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May 31, 2022
5 mins read
#157 June 2022/Feminism

POC and gender-diverse artists bring sustainable creations and progressive messages to feminist market

Words on purses made by Kristianna Brown, 30, of Kensington, owner of SilentlyLoudShop, all but smolder in her booth at the April 24 Sustainable Marketplace at the Cherry Street Pier. “Art Hoe,” sewn on one of the colorful bags, is among the milder messages. “I’m an introvert,” says Brown. “I let my art speak for

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May 31, 2022
4 mins read
#157 June 2022

Immigrant communities express concern about the proposed turf fields, and wonder if they will eventually lose access to the space

Debates roil South Philadelphia about the synthetic soccer fields proposed for historic FDR Park, at the end of the Broad Street subway line. In 2019, the Fairmount Park Conservancy and Philadelphia Parks & Recreation unveiled a master plan that calls for 12 synthetic multipurpose fields at FDR. “The opinion you hear [about the fields] depends

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May 31, 2022
6 mins read
#157 June 2022/Urban Nature

A legendary fruit was born on the land the City wishes to bury

In one of the world’s most polluted urban watersheds, in the shadow of shuttered refineries, stands FDR Park, a miraculous sliver of natural topography. The City intends to use it as something of a retaining wall supporting vast elevated terraces topped with artificial turf fields. When development projects are proposed on City-owned land, the City

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May 31, 2022
7 mins read
#157 June 2022/Green Building/Jobs

City program jumpstarts careers for Philadelphians interested in infrastructure

In 2019 then 23-year-old Cashmir Woodward was dissatisfied with the home healthcare sector job she started just out of high school and was certain it would not be her long-term career. So when a friend asked her to join PowerCorpsPHL, she decided to make a move. “I was kind of wanting a different scene,” she

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May 31, 2022
3 mins read
Environment/Environmental Justice

“It’s like a mafia”—Riding club relocation takes disc golfers by surprise

On October 11, 2021, Indigenous Peoples’ Day, a worker in an excavator arrived at the Sedgley Woods disc golf course and began clearing a road along the boundary with the Strawberry Green driving range next door.  “On the first day of the destruction I happened to be on my lunch break in my car at

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May 27, 2022
6 mins read
All Topics/Urban Nature

Comment on Lower Poquessing Creek Trail proposal

The Far Northeast of Philadelphia isn’t the friendliest cycling landscape the city has to offer, with intimidating arterial roads like Roosevelt Boulevard and lots of residential streets that don’t connect. The proposed Lower Poquessing Creek Trail aims to change that, at least along the creek that serves as the city’s boundary with Bucks County. The

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May 27, 2022
1 min read
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