Philadelphia's Waterfront Showing Signs of Life

After decades of promises of improvements along the Delaware River In Philadelphia with little to show for it, recent "small but powerful" public improvements are remaking the city's waterfront into a "welcoming, fun place to hang out."

1 minute read

September 8, 2014, 9:00 AM PDT

By James Brasuell @CasualBrasuell


"The Nutter administration has just checked off two more items on its waterfront to-do list: FringeArts' seductive new culture hub at Race Street, which officially debuts its restaurant today, and the lush Washington Avenue Green, a reclaimed pier that opened as a park in late August," reports Inga Saffron. "Meanwhile, Spruce Street Harbor Park, a pop-up beer garden and boardwalk combo, proved so popular this summer that its rainbow-colored hammocks were worn to shreds and had to be replaced."

Saffron notes that the waterfront still has a long way to go to deliver larger projects, such as a proposed I-95 cap park between Downtown and Penn's Landing. Yet she writes, "give Nutter a hand for doing something no recent mayor has tried: sticking with the plan. Rather than concoct distracting side deals with developers, in the style of former Mayors Ed Rendell and John Street, Nutter has allowed planners and the Delaware River Waterfront Corp. to set the pace."

Friday, September 5, 2014 in Philadelphia Inquirer

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