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Pool season extended at two West Philly pools

August 24, 2015

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John B. Kelly pool in Fairmount Park (Facebook photo).

Most outdoor city pools closed for the season last week, but here’s good news: nine pools will remain open through Thursday, Aug. 27, probably because of a late Labor Day and Sept. 8 start of the school year at Philadelphia public schools. Two of the pools with the extended season are in West Philly – John B. Kelly Pool (Facebook page) is located in West Fairmount Park next to the Please Touch Museum and Christy pool is at 56th and Christian. For information on the other pools please visit Phillypublicpools.com.

Here are the weekday hours for the Kelly pool:

Lap swimming 11 a.m. – 6:45 p.m.; open swim 1-4 p.m.; adult swim Mon, Wed, Fri 5-6:45 p.m.; family swim Tue, Thu 5-6:45 p.m.

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Demolition begins on historic mansion at 40th and Pine (updated)

August 22, 2015

UPDATE (8/22/2015): Demolition of the mid-19th century mansion at 40th and Pine has begun.

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(8/18/2015): Demolition of the old mansion at 40th and Pine is expected to begin this week, according to the signs posted at the site:

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Historical Commission cleared the way for demolition of the building in December 2014, after years of the dispute between the University of Pennsylvania, which owns the building, and the Woodland Terrace Homeowners Association over the mansion’s future. Architect Samuel Sloan-designed Italianate mansion was built in 1850’s. Penn purchased the property in 2008 and claimed financial hardship, which allowed them to demolish the building to make room for student housing. However, in 2013, they presented a compromise plan to incorporate the original part of the building into the proposed apartment complex, “Azalea Gardens.” The Woodland Terrace Homeowners Association rejected the proposal.

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One Art Community Center is building an Earthship!

August 21, 2015

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Photo from One Art Community Center’s Facebook page.

A great community effort is underway on North 52nd Street. An Earthship, a 100 percent sustainable, “green” home, is being built on a vacant lot at 5128-5146 Warren St., from both natural and recycled materials.

The project is spearheaded by the One Art Community Center (formerly Wall Street International), which is planning to create an urban sustainability center and expand its artistic and educational programs for the community. One Art has already been running an educational farm in the area, which includes an orchard and organic learning garden.

This is the second Earthship being built in West Philadelphia. The first project, led by non-profit organization LoveLovingLove Inc., began last year at 675 N. 41st Street.

One Art’s plan is to build a two-story, four-room solar-powered building complete with bathrooms by the end of the year, if they get enough funding and materials, according to CBS Philly.

By the way, this Saturday, One Art is hosting a big community festival, titled A Midsummer Night’s Dream, at their location at 5128-46 Warren Street. The festival, which will feature 15+ musical acts, workshops, a fashion show, art installations, live painting and glassblowing, vending and much more, will be held from 1 p.m. Aug. 22 to 4 a.m. Aug. 23. For more information and tickets ($30), visit the event’s Facebook page.

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Free outdoor movies return to Clark Park Aug 21-Sept 18

August 19, 2015

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Free outdoor movies, from classics to more recent critically-acclaimed films, will be shown in Clark Park (43rd and Chester) every Friday from Aug. 21 to Sept. 18. The program is presented by the University City District, the City of Philadelphia and Friends of Clark Park.

This Friday, families are invited to watch the Pixar animated classic The Incredibles. There will also be prizes for kids dressed in super hero costumes, children’s activities, raffle, and food trucks. The programming starts at 7 p.m., and the movie starts at dusk.

Here’s what’s showing over the next four weeks:

Aug. 28 – Casablanca
Sept. 4 – Little Shop of Horrors
Sept. 11 – Selma
Sept. 18 – Best in Show

More details can be found here.

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Community meeting at USciences this Thursday

August 18, 2015

University of the Sciences officials have some plans they want to share with the community and they are holding a community meeting on Thursday, Aug. 20. University leadership will provide updates on the Campus Master Plan and reveal their plans regarding a celebration of the long history of the Alexander Wilson School.

The meeting will be at the McNeil Science and Technology Center at 45th and Woodland from 7 – 8 p.m.

As a reminder, Alexander Wilson Elementary School was permanently closed in 2013, and USciences purchased the 1.03-acre parcel at 46th and Woodland last fall with the plans to convert it into student housing and student-focused retail.

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Former Alexander Wilson School building at 46th and Woodland (Google Street View image).

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Black Lives Matter in context: Standing on My Sisters’ Shoulders showing at Clark Park Saturday

August 14, 2015

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From left: Fannie Lou Hamer, Victoria Jackson Gray and Annie Devine in Washington in 1965. Devine is featured in the documentary Standing on My Sisters’ Shoulders, which will be shown in Clark Park on Saturday evening at 8 p.m. (Photo from The New York Times)

Here’s a chance to see a film that will help put the Black Lives Matter movement, particularly the role of women, in some historical context. The International Action Center is hosting a free outdoor screening of the award-winning documentary “Standing on My Sisters’ Shoulders” on Saturday evening in Clark Park.

The film shows the Civil Rights Movement through the eyes and deeds of women from Mississippi, including a sharecropper who went on to become the state’s first black female mayor.  It also recounts the remarkable stories of Fannie Lou Hamer, Victoria Gray Adams and Annie Devine, who were the first black women to be seated on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives.

The film is a celebration of the role of strong women in the Civil Rights Movement, which in many ways has continued in Black Lives Matter.  Continue Reading

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