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Zora plays and we all get a lesson on West Philly playgrounds

Posted on 04 April 2012 by Mike Lyons

playground

West Philly resident Michael Froehlich and his 2-year-old daughter Zora love playgrounds. No wait, they really love playgrounds.

What began as the occasional bicycle excursion from their home on 48th Street to nearby playgrounds like Malcolm X. Park has turned into a full-on quest to document a bunch of playgrounds in this part of the city – 31 playgrounds in all.

“We went a little overboard,” said Froehlich, a legal aid attorney.

The result, the website zoraplays, is an invaluable guide to playgrounds that includes photos of equipment, sketches of the playground’s layout and a map showing the location. Each playground was within a mile of their home.

Froehlich said he and Zora’s goal is to help convince people that there is fun beyond the usual spots like Clark Park and Cedar Park.

“I hope that this project will show people that there are a lot of great playgrounds in our community so they should get on their bicycles and ride out and explore them,” he said.

The big question, of course, is which is Zora’s fav?

“I’d like to say that Zora has developed a discerning eye for quality playgrounds,” said Froehlich. “But the truth is that she loves all playgrounds. Tall slides, wide slides, single slides, double slides: she digs them all with the same gusto.”

As for Froehlich himself? “Malcolm X. Park,” he said. “There’s so much there.”

playground
A map of the Christy Recreation Center playground at 56th and Christian from zoraplays.com. (click to enlarge)

 
– Emma Eisenberg contributed to this story

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Beautiful pocket park gone bad could get new life

Posted on 24 June 2011 by Mike Lyons

park
The locked gate of Squirrel Hill Falls park at 48th and Chester.

 

For years people in West Philly have walked past Squirrel Hill Falls Park on the northwest corner of 48th and Chester and wondered what had happened.

The former vacant lot, which was transformed into a neighborhood gem complete with a mural, solar-powered waterfall, seating, lighting and sound system 15 years ago, is now just a dressed-up, locked-down vacant lot again. But the park’s controversial history will take a turn for the better this week when a group of volunteers will meet there on Sunday from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. to clean the lot up and try to make it a park again.

The park was the brainchild of West Philly artist Danielle Rousseau Hunter, whose name is still emblazoned in large letters on the park’s grand metal entrance gate. Hunter raised hundreds of thousands of dollars from a fairly astonishing list of donors (see the full story here and here) to design and build the park, which includes a three-story waterfall mural on the side of an apartment building.

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A portion of the waterfall mural now shrouded in overgrown trees. Weeds are starting to overtake the metal benches (in the foreground).

The park opened with a black tie ceremony in September 1996. Since then many residents say Hunter has treated it like her fiefdom, locking it and only allowing visitors to enter under her supervision. But for many years the park has not been used and is now littered with trash and debris and overgrown with weeds. A bicycle cable lock still keeps the front gate closed.

But contrary to popular belief, Hunter does not own the land, the Friends Rehabilitation Program Inc., an affordable housing provider located at 247 S. 48th St., does. One or two people there have taken a renewed interest in the park and have been able to get insurance to again allow limited access. There are no plans for an official “opening” of the park, although if there is community interest more access could be possible in the future.

The first step is Sunday’s clean-up. Volunteers and some equipment, particularly garbage bags and garden disposal bag (the big paper ones) are still needed. There is no need to RSVP or anything. Just show up. They could use the help.

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Clark Park opening ceremony taking shape

Posted on 07 June 2011 by Mike Lyons

More details are rolling in about the opening of Clark Park’s “A” section. The June 16 opening ceremony is scheduled to begin at 4 p.m., just after the weekly Thursday farmer’s market kicks off.

The opening will incorporate the market with “A Taste of the Market,” a sampling of products from market vendors.

Deputy Mayor Michael DiBerardinis, state officials and multiple community partners will also be on hand.

It seems like space (or maybe food) is limited for this thing and those interested in attending are asked to RSVP to Barbara McCabe of Philadelphia Parks & Recreation at barbara.mccabe [at] phila.gov or (215) 683-3679.

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Saturday is “Love Your Park Day”

Posted on 14 April 2011 by Mike Lyons

parksSaturday is “Love Your Park Day” in Philadelphia. For most of us, I suspect that every day is love your park day, but this one is official. That means that volunteers are needed.

Volunteers are needed at Clark Park from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Projects include cleaning the peripheral areas of the park to get them ready for spring and putting mulch around tree bases, beginning with the trees near the shuffleboard court at 45th and Chester. If weather permits, park benches will get a coat of sealant.

Help is also needed at Malcolm X. Park for a general clean-up from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and at Barkan Park (50th & Spruce) from 10 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

Volunteers are also needed at Cedar Park from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. to help with the park gardens. Bring clippers and cutting shears if you have them. Other tools will be provided.

 

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City releases plan to green-up blighted land, a few West Philly parcels

Posted on 08 December 2010 by Mike Lyons

City and private planning officials last night unveiled an “action plan” to turn 500 acres of vacant lots, desolate schoolyards and derelict parks into revitalized green space.

Green2015: An Action Plan for the First 500 Acres is the result of cooperation between the city and PennPraxis, the hands-on branch of the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Design. It’s ambitious and expensive, although the city maintains that the costs will be kept low thanks to private and community partnerships and the fact that many of the sites under consideration will be relatively easy to green-up.

The idea is to create green space where there isn’t much, particularly for the 200,000 or so Philadelphians who live further than a 10-minute walk from a public park. A caveat: These spaces won’t necessarily be turned into “parks.” Some will be spruced up school playgrounds, for example. Many are an acre or less.

The city is inviting citizen feedback here.

Here are some “opportunity sites” in West Philly that the plan mentions:

Walnut Hill Community Park and Farm (pictured left). This project on a quarter-acre lot near 46th and Market is actually already underway and will include a pocket park and an urban garden (p. 79).
• Like the Walnut Hill location, Penn Park, a 24-acre site near 30th and Walnut, is part of the “first 100 acres” where work has already begun.
Garden Court – the tennis courts and the community garden. (p. 81)
48th and Woodland playground, near the Kingsessing Rec Center (p. 81)
4716 Baltimore Ave (p. 84)
5302 Lindbergh Blvd. (a 17-acre city-owned plot).
• The schoolyard at University City High School/Drew Elementary (p. 88)
4601 Market – The Provident Mutual site (p. 95)
If you’re up for it, here’s the plan in full:

Green 2015

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