13 June 08: Thank you, Governor Rendell



Pennsylvania Commonwealth House Bill 1281 became law yesterday with Governor Ed Rendell's signature. The bill, written by State Representative Robert Freeman (D-Easton) protects the Appalachian Trail through Pennsylvania in perpetuity by requiring the communities along the trail without any protective zoning to enact it within one year, with state aid given where necessary.

While this bill may seem like common sense, considering the Trail is a designated National Scenic Trail that winds 2,175 miles from Georgia to Maine (with an undesignated 'International Appalachian Trail' picking up in Maine and going through to Canada, to the tip of the Gaspé Peninsula in Québec and across the St Lawrence Gulf all the way to the tip of Newfoundland), it's simply important that it happened at all, since it had not till now. Most AT states, especially those in New England, have already done this.

I've hiked parts of the AT in nine of the fourteen states it passes through, and I've come to learn that Pennsylvania has a reputation. There are very long, very rocky stretches which have prompted thru-hikers to joke that you need a dedicated pair of boots just for Pennsylvania. I did a fifteen miler just north of Reading a couple years ago that was an all-out assault on the knees, shins and feet. PA is also home to the halfway point of the trail, in Pine Grove Furnace State Park (15 miles or so from Shippensburg, so I know it well), where thru-hikers are encouraged to eat a half-gallon of Hershey's Ice Cream. It's a tradition I've never understood, because the last thing I'm thinking of doing after hiking 15 miles is putting a bowling ball's worth of dairy in my belly.

PA also has a darker AT reputation, one of . . . well, one which encourages hikers to use extra caution and awareness when hiking, especially near some of the small towns near the Trail. The Appalachian Trail Conservancy's official web site even says in its PA section:
Pennsylvania can be oppressively hot in summer, and water may be scarce. The Trail crosses many roads, and some shelters are near roads, where scattered crime problems make extra safety awareness a good idea.
While caution and awareness, again, just seem like common sense, it can be a little intimidating to be several miles into the woods and, for example, come across a couple of 20-something good ol' boys clearly defying posted signs of "foot traffic only" and riding ATVs onto the trail with rifles strapped on their back, only to emerge from the woods at a powerline crossing where they proceed to rev their engines, kick up dirt and dust and pop wheelies. Funny, sure, but who knows what goes through these jackasses' heads?

It's these sort of things that can happen near places with little enough an appreciation of a national jewel running literally through their back yard that they haven't even done anything to protect it that enable the parent state government to step up to bat. The State Senate approved the bill in May 48-2 (with the two voting against it coming from my home county of Blair . . . gee, thanks guys) and the State House ratified it 10 days ago 190-12. Governor Rendell signed it yesterday, making it official and protecting the Appalachian Trail from encroachment by local municipalities who couldn't care less about folks from the rest of the country just passin' through.

So: thanks, Governor Rendell.

* * *

I'm gonna go see if I can find some of that AT soil and shove it under my boots in North Jersey this weekend, so y'all have fun out there. If you're staying local, might I recommend a sip at the Plaza or a sup at Table 31. You're going to do it sooner or later anyway, why not do it now?



–B Love


12 June 08: The Civic Center is gone . . . for this



OKAY.

With regard to the Kimmel Center, I'm in the same boat as most people. I think the glass is amazing, the interior choices of wood (and their subsequent acoustics) are incredible, the roof garden is a nice space but needs something, the exteriors along Spruce and 15th Streets are horrible, and the black cube on the corner of Broad & Spruce . . . WHAT?

Whether or not architect Rafael Viñoly overcharged the board of the Kimmel Center for the design is between them (or was, rather, as that lawsuit was settled out of court), but he definitely overcharged the UPenn Health System for the design of the Perelman Center for Advanced Medicine. I mean . . . the Apple Store cube rising in the middle is nice, and the natural light it rains will certainly be appreciated by patients and their guests, but what are those wings? Is this 34th Street or Limekiln Pike?

There's no question that a line should be drawn when dealing with historic preservation. The unexciting Rindelaub's buildings to make way for 10 Rittenhouse Square? That's fine, a fair trade. The unheralded PLICO buildings, Odd Fellows Temple and Race Street Firehouse to make way for the expansion of a Convention Center that already exists? Ehhh, I don't like it, but it could be justified in the long term. Tearing down a beautiful old art deco gem of an arena like Convention Hall for a hospital when there is plenty of land around it? . . . when it looks like this? Ugh. Philly is not averse to really bad decisions, is it?

As I said way back when demolition was coming, no one in his right mind would oppose the expansion of a renowned healthcare system, much less for a state of the art cancer center. To look at an overhead image of Penn's campus and the land available between what exists and the meandering Schuylkill River is to see the room they had -- room between Convention Hall and Pennsylvania Hall (itself also demolished), not to mention the enormous parking garage that could have been relocated -- to build a center and not demolish Convention Hall. Oh well.

There it is, the Perelman Center for Advanced Medicine, opening later this year.

Just down the tragically named Civic Center Boulevard (perhaps it too will be renamed for a university donor) is the continued construction of the Colket Translational Research Building.



The new CHOP research building is directly across the street from the main CHOP buildings, just as the Perelman Center is directly across the street from the main UPHS buildings. I get it, but losing Convention Hall, not to mention the Commercial Museum, is a shame.

Here's another look at the Colket from across the river, deep in the heart of G-Ho looking down Bainbridge Street past the recently finished phase of Naval Square.



It's gonna be a nice evening; pull up a seat at your favorite neighborhood outdoor pub!

–B Love


12 June 08: Que Cira Cira



On the southbound train going down . . . there they go on the Amtrak regional, making stops at Wilmington, Aberdeen, Baltimore Penn Station, BWI, New Carrollton, Washington Union Station, Alexandria, Fredericksburg, Richmond, Williamsburg and Newport News. Have your tickets out, please. On the way out, they're passing right under the demolition of the former Post Office Annex, being meticulously dissembled just a few feet from the most active railroad corridor in the country.

Following that demolition, Brandywine Realty will break ground on the next generation of Cira Centre, Cira South.

Following the highly successful original Cira Centre and the just-opened Comcast Center, the city is moving toward its third new office tower of the 21st century with a plan to land BlackRock, the investment management firm whose "assets under management total US$1.36 trillion across equity, fixed income, cash management, alternative investment and real estate strategies."

Fox29's Bruce Gordon had a thorough news segment Monday night on Brandywine's plans to land BlackRock as its anchor, namely that they want an extension of the already-existing KOZ tax break, which then has to be approved by the state. Before coming up to Johnny Brenda's, Commerce Director Andy Altman clarified that this is not meant for businesses moving from Center City across the river to University City, but rather for new jobs to Philly in the first place. Angela Couloumbis reported in yesterday's yesterday's Inquirer that Mayor Nutter was in Harrisburg to explain the same, in his push for approval of the KOZ extension.

You might notice the differences in the renderings above. Last summer's annoucement of Cira South came with the initial round of renderings prepared by Cesar Pelli and his associates, including a curving, taller tower along Walnut Street and a shorter, mini-Cira on Chestnut. The Fox29 segment was the first time a reversal of sorts has been aired. Brandywine's Steve Rush explains that "these are all preliminary," continuing, "there are always going to be redesigns between initial concept and actual construction." So here are two of them.

For more on Cira South, check out Penn Connects and this PDF prepared by Brandywine.



–B Love


12 June 08: On the wooder front



I haven't watched This Week In Baseball since Mel Allen died, but someone told me that a recent episode profiled Shane Victorino and the Northern Liberties condo that he and Kyle Kendrick share, so it made me wonder if RyHo talked them into joining him up high at Waterfront Square. (#1, Don't these guys make enough money to get their own place? #2, Of all the Phillies teammates I expected to share a bachelor pad, Vic and Kendrick would not be it.) Did any of you see this? Has anyone run into the Flyin' Hawaiian at the Druid's Keep???

Where was I . . .

Ah, Waterfront Square, the gated community putting Square into the Waterfront. The enormous pier development may someday have five total towers of differing heights, each with handsome large concrete HVAC boxes on the roof and elegant phone numbers painted onto them. Towers 1 and 2 -- the Peninsula, 25 stories and the Regatta, 29 stories -- and the spa have been open since 2006, and now the third tower -- the Reef, the shortest of the five at 21 stories -- is about halfway built. That's the eleventh floor peaking up in the photo above, just about to block out my view of the Hyatt at Penn's Landing. So long Hyatt, it's been a good run.

The view from City Hall tower has a better scope of things, seen below. The Waterfront Square web site indicates that the Reef will be available for occupancy next summer, but makes no mention of the timeline for the 4th tower (Horizon, the tallest at 37 stories) or 5th tower (Tides, 33 stories).

It's easy to bust on their plain, boxy appearance and criticize them for gating off their entire development, but you have to give Waterfront Square credit for two things: 1. Its developers invested their money and time well before the fate of the riverfront (and/or keeping its access public) became a platform issue and, it's worth noting, even before the casino debate began. 2. They're still building. Trump Tower, Bridgeman's View Tower, Penn Treaty Tower, Marina View Tower and a handful of others are all planned right in its immediate vicinity, yet on 12 June 2008, Waterfront Square is the only game in town.

It's even got itself a hometown brewery on its front doorstep (well, it will once Yards finishes renovations at 901 N Delaware and opens) and a concert venue right down the street (Festival Pier) that, for as crappy as it is physically, gets itself a decent lineup that ought to otherwise be playing at the Mann. Wilco, Ween and the Flaming Lips have all played there, and this summer, Devo, Snoop Dogg and My Morning Jacket will all join the ranks.

Waterfront Square, still building anew on the forlorn Delaware Riverfront.



UPDATE: The good Doctor Gingivitis correctly pointed out to me that MMJ has, in fact, already played Festival Pier, when they opened for Wilco in 2005. Still, I look forward to their show this summer (the new album is amazing), and I still think Festival Pier sucks and that bands playing there should either play Great Plaza (which lives up to its name) or the Mann Center.

–B Love


12 June 08: Antemeridian Fishtown



Top o' the mornin', love. This is Fishtown around 8 o'clock. Comcast is done now and the Ritz is not too far behind . . . compare with the first Philly Skyline Fishtown Rooftop Skyline taken just over a year ago HERE. (Huzzah, it's been a year up here in the Fish . . . )

The rising concrete mass that has been the Residences at the Ritz-Carlton just got its first significant steel addition with the irregular, pointy crown on the eastern side of the tower. There are about seven floors left to go for glass installation before that building's exterior is more or less finished. (I mentioned a few weeks ago that the center part of the south side still has a metal sheath that will be installed on the outside of the elevator walls.

As time allows, we'll cover a lot of ground today, tracking the progress on other construction sites across the city. Sound good?

* * *

It turns out lightning strikes even more than twice, and perhaps the same bolt of lightning strikes several times all at once. In response to Matt's lightning skyline photo yesterday, I got a note from John in Pennsauken saying that he was doing the same thing just a couple miles above where Matt was watching. Check out his photo HERE.

Then whilst making the daily rounds through the top level Philly sites, I noticed that my favorite Inquirer photographer Tom Gralish gave a nod to his colleague Michael Perez in his (Tom's) blog, Scene on the Road. Perez was at his desk at the Inquirer Building when the lightning rolled in and quickly headed out to the parking garage to steady his camera and let the lightning rip. Check out the results HERE.

–B Love


11 June 08: Lightning does strike twice



Checking in from the comfort of his 10th floor balcony, Matt Johnson writes:
I've been shooting lightning for so many hours on my balcony over the last couple years, usually with no results. Click, wait, nothing. Click, wait, nothing.

Well, finally caught the one I was waiting for!
No kidding. Just like Alex's rainbow over the skyline photo two weeks ago, I've always wanted to get a nice shot of lightning somewhere over the skyline. With rainbows, you just have to luck out and catch one from the right place at the right time . . . at least they'll stay there for a few minutes, posing for you. With lightning, it's all luck. Click, wait, nothing. Well, until nothing is something, as Matt finally made happen during last night's lightning-fast thunderstorm.

With metal equipment, I'm a little hesitant to go out in the city or up on my roof to get that lightning shot. In fact, the only photo of lightning I've ever been able to capture was from the window of my apartment in Shippensburg, summer of '98, looking out across a tall grass field.

So with this double lightning strike (the larger one striking the Lewis Tower), Matt has added another notch to his signature view's résumé. Explore it at SkyscraperSunset.com.

–B Love


10 June 08: Who loves the sun?



HOT ENOUGH FOR YA?

Douse the rules, baby. Stupid, authoritarian nanny laws out of fear of liability don't matter when the mercury tops a hundred. Get in that fountain. DO IT. Feels good, doesn't it?

* * *

Hey: a big thanks to everyone who came out to Johnny Brenda's last night for the second edition of For The Curious with Deputy Mayor Andy Altman and the guys from Onion Flats. All told, I think everyone had a good time, the charismatic Altman held the room when answering questions ranging from transit oriented development to economic incentives to the Delaware River, while Pat McDonald, Johnny McDonald and Howard Steinberg related their experiences (as builder, realtor and architect, respectively) developing their projects in Old City, Northern Liberties and Fishtown and how it's been dealing with the city's agencies and neighborhood groups, particularly when they have really been pioneers in sustainable building in Philadelphia.

Plan Philly has video from the event, so if you weren't able to attend, now you are! That video is HERE.

Fans of For The Curious might also enjoy:

  • IGNITE PHILLY: On the same stage upstairs at JB's tomorrow night, P'unk Avenue will present 19 innovative people will reel through 20 slides rotating every 15 seconds for a five minute presentation on the interesting things they're up to. Among them are the guys from iSepta and Brittany Bonette from Bike Share Philadelphia. Like For The Curious, it is FREE. 6 o'clock upstairs at Johnny Brenda's tomorrow night -- check the nice story the PBJ ran on Friday.

  • GREENING PHILADELPHIA'S INFRASTRUCTURE: Speaking of public green talks, here's your chance to meet the city's new Director of Sustainability, Mark Alan Hughes. The Delaware Valley Green Building Council is hosting the free event next Thursday (6/19) at the Academy of Natural Sciences. RSVP is requested, details are HERE.

    That's what's up. Beat the heat: grape wooder ice from Pop's, a dip in Swann Fountain, a cold Philly Pale Ale in your favorite air conditioned bar . . . any will do.

    –B Love



  • 9 June 08: Comcast Center on Philly Skyline,
    from the beginning to The End

    On Saturday, 25th November 2000, this 24 year old kid had finally accepted that his dream job in New York had fallen through, and that there were no dream jobs in Pittsburgh. In need of a job and some income and a reason to move out of my parents' house in Tyrone, Pennsylvania, I took my friend Bekka up on her offer of a job here. "Philadelphia will do."

    I'd never even lived in the suburbs, let alone in a big city. But I loved cities, and in the year and a half before moving to Philly, I traveled all over the biggest ones the US and Canada offered -- by bus, by train, by whichever nice young lady was willing to pick up a hitcher -- and decided I would live nowhere else but a city. The pictures from those travels are about one-third the people I met, one-third scenery, and one-third skylines: St Louis from an Amtrak train crossing the Mississippi, LA from Griffith Park, Vancouver from the aptly named B&B Mary Jane's Hideaway, New York from the World Trade Center.

    Anywhere you go, a city is immediately defined by its skyline. A city's skyline is used in ads by companies that do business in that city. A city's skyline is used as the backdrop in newscasts from Tampa to Tulsa, Portland to Portland. The skyline is the first impression you get on your way into a city, the lasting impression you take on your way out. I'll never forget seeing the Pittsburgh skyline coming around the curve on 376 just past the Squirrel Hill Tunnel on the way to my first Pirates game as an 8 year old kid, PPG's glistening glass castle and US Steel's big black fortress a dueling good-vs-evil Oz on the horizon.

    I first paid attention to the Philly Skyline in spring of '98 when my buddy Steve and I missed the Broad Street turn off of 76 on our way to an Eric Clapton show (which was terrible) at the Corestates Center and somehow ended up near the airport. I took a Kodak T-Max photo of the sprawling skyline on the way back across the Girard Point Bridge that I used for an art project final at Shippensburg. . . . but I didn't think I'd ever live in Philadelphia until summer 2000, when a week long visit that included a hike in the Wissahickon, a demo of Meet Yr Acres and an all out Center City immersion with Mark convinced this western PA boy that this southeastern PA city was actually OK.

    Summer 2000 was also the time that Willard Rouse was organizing his Liberty Property Trust team led by John Gattuso in purchasing the parking lot at 17th & JFK on the former site of the Penn Sheraton Hotel, and prior to that, the Chinese Wall. Rouse had also enlisted Robert A.M. Stern to do massing studies for a skyscraper -- One Pennsylvania Plaza -- there, the results of which you can see in Robert A. M. Stern: Buildings and Projects 1999-2003.

    The seeds of what would become Comcast Center had just been planted as I watched the Philly Skyline grow larger as my Amtrak train pulled closer to my new home in November 2000. When I first read about this a couple months later in the Inquirer, I was immediately intrigued. Neither Tyrone nor Shippensburg sprouted any skyscrapers, so watching human power build something so massive was an entirely new concept for me. The entire process was fascinating to me: the recruitment of tenants, the redesigns and the redesigns of the redesigns, the political wrangling, the rumors and the controversy, the demolition and the construction.

    Of course in the time between reading I'd watch my first skyscraper rise and its groundbreaking four years later, I watched two other skyscrapers rise. As well, in the time it took to build The St James and Cira Centre, the 746' kasota stone clad One Pennsylvania Plaza had transformed into the 975' glass Comcast Center that would eclipse the spire atop Rouse's own One Liberty Place by 30', its roof by nearly 100'. If you stacked Cira Centre on top of The St James, you'd still be two rowhomes short of matching this new tower's height.

    Liberty announced in January 2005 that Comcast had signed on as the lead tenant, and Governor Ed Rendell announced that a state grant would help commence construction (ground solidly in the concept of public place, which the public may now see, in the forms of the extended Suburban Station concourse, the destination plaza, and the stunning HDTV show). It was no small coincidence that phillyskyline.com stopped being an irregular image gallery and javascript playground, and came together as the site you see now in February 2005. One of the first items of business was building the Cira Centre construction progress section, which ultimately served as a template for all the sections that exist here today (Murano, Residences at the Ritz-Carlton, 10 Rittenhouse and The St James, which was retrofit to this format), but especially Comcast Center.

    Since February 2005, when it was first introduced with a simple shot of D'Angelo Bros' digging equipment, the Comcast Center section of this site has grown as Comcast Center itself has grown. The tally is well over 4,000 photos when you factor in construction photos, Philly Skyline Philly Skyline wallpapers, four hard hat tours of the construction site, photos of the model, progress diagrams, the topping off ceremony, the soft opening, Table 31's opening, and now the opening ceremony.

    * * *

    Friday, 6th June 2008 marked the opening ceremony of Comcast Center, officially capping three and a half years of construction and eight years of process. Friday, 6th June 2008 also marked the closing ceremony of Comcast Center on Philly Skyline, officially capping three and a half years of construction and eight years of process.

    With the final update of the Comcast Center section, I've -- as nearly as I can tell -- tied up all loose ends: the mouseover thingy in the Philly Skyline header graphic has now completed construction. (Hi Stephen.) The construction diagram is also now complete. (I'm working on archiving past diagrams and making a time lapse of it, since I didn't do one with photos.) And there are 47 new photos taken between June 1st and June 6th to close out the construction progress. (There will probably be one more update after the underground marketplace officially opens next Monday.)

    As corny as it sounds, I really did feel a connection to this building . . . watching the entire process coincide almost exactly with my experience in Philadelphia, watching construction technique, watching it rise as the tallest green building in the entire country, a significant, forward thinking feat when you consider the green movement has really only grown legs in the past few years. This connection peaked on Veterans Day last year: after shooting photos across the city all day long, I went up to one of my favorite places in the world, the Belmont Plateau to check on the fall foliage of the giant maple tree on the hill. As a photographer, I couldn't have asked for a better situation: the leaves were peak orange and red with thousands of them blanketing the ground below it, and the skyline glowed in the late day sun. But with the Water Departmen's Ed Grusheski, who was also there enjoying the view, as my witness, it was Comcast Center that made the whole vista shine.



    I have seen the sun glint off of buildings before and actually seek it out in the right photography conditions . . . but I had never seen an entire building reflect the sun until 11/11/07 at the Plateau. If I was ever asked to pick out the best photo I've ever taken from the hundreds of thousands I've taken in my life, it would probably be this one. (It's on the cover of the Philly Skyline, The Calendar: 2008 and is for sale right now at 20" x 30" at Photolounge, more details of which will appear on this site later this week.)

    Whether or not you like its architecture, it's hard to not appreciate the endless variations Comcast Center produces in different light, different weather, different angles. I have, anyway.

    And that's it. With the grand opening on Friday, Comcast Center has begun, so its spotlight on Philly Skyline has ended. Liberty's John Gattuso MC'd the ceremony that included comments from his boss Bill Hankowsky, Councilman Darrell Clarke (neither Mayor Michael Nutter nor Governor Ed Rendell was in attendance, which I found to be extremely weak), architect Bob Stern, Comcast founder Ralph Roberts, and finally his son Brian, who introduced the Comcast Experience, the name for the much touted 80' x 20' HDTV show in the lobby. To his credit, he introduced it as a "once in a lifetime chance to say thank you to Philadelphia," and concluded, "we are proud to call this city home."

    It was a fitting comment to wrap things up . . . and, I guess I'll do the same. Though it sometimes falls into question, I too am proud to call this city home.

    Even if you're an anti-TV luddite or anti-corporate-America rabble rouser, make it a point to go check out the Comcast Experience display. It is simply an incredible feat of visual technology, and according to Brian Roberts, will be shown 18 hours a day, 7 days a week. Though there's never a doubt that one of the world's most powerful corporations is privately tucked behind multiple layers of security upstairs, the ground level public spaces of Comcast Center are very public and are meant to be used -- and enjoyed.

    Regardless of your thoughts on politics, business, television, internet or architecture, you have to admit that pulling off the Comcast Center project, through eight years of planning and collaboration from Liberty Property and Robert A.M. Stern Architects and Comcast and LF Driscoll and Olin Partnership and Motioneering and Thornton Tomasetti and Quentin Thomas and Daroff Design and Kendall Heaton and CommerzLeasing and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the City of Philadelphia and many many more . . . well, it's pretty amazing.

    From all of us at Philly Skyline, but especially me, thanks for the memories, Comcast Center.



    –B Love






    7 June 08: Out on the weekend



  • ROOTS CREW REPRESENT! And represent they will today.

    Philadelphia's largest and loudest hip hop heros host their first annual picnic at Penn's Landing. There's no doubt it's their show, but they've brought some friends including Gnarls Barkley, Santogold, and both Diplo and ?uestlove will be spinning in the DJ tent. (I hope it's better air conditioned than the ice cream festival they hold in that tent on the 4th, cos it's gonna be HOOOOOT out there. Bring your highest SPF sunblock, yo.

    Then hey, whattaya know, the after party is at Ahmir's Fluid stomping grounds and features Ali Shaheed Muhammad (from A Tribe Called Quest), each spinning Prince to celebrate the purple one's 50th birthday. That's at 10 at Fluid (4th & South).

    [The Roots Picnic.]

    SATURDAY: 2pm, Festival Pier at Penn's Landing

  • CELEBRATE THE WAR ON DRUGS: When not making hidden cameos on Philly Skyline and playing fifth Capitol Year, Adam Granduciel has been off writing his own kickass songs as The War On Drugs and assembling bandmates to perform them. And those shows are loud -- not ear piercing shred loud, but layered sonic wall loud. After signing with Secretly Canadian Records last year, they released his Barrel of Batteries EP, including as a free download.

    Now with a larger studio budget, The War On Drugs' first full length album, Wagonwheel Blues, officially comes out on the 19th of this month, but you can sneak a peak (and probably buy an advance copy) tonight at Johnny Brenda's. For fans of Brian Eno, Spiritualized and Blood on the Tracks era Dylan.

    [The War On Drugs.]

    SATURDAY: 8pm, Johnny Brenda's, Girard & Frankford in Fishtown



  • BEAT THE HEAT, CLIMB THE MANAYUNK WALL TEN TIMES: If it's a million degrees outside, then it must be time for the Pro Cycling Tour's annual Philadelphia International Championship. This year's bike race is gonna be a scorcher, boy, and there are 156 miles to be raced at full-speed, including ten climbs of the Manayunk Wall. The Daily News has an excellent interactive graphic on its web site HERE all about the bike race, including optimum viewing areas (such as the Logan Square warmup lap, the Art Museum stairs and the recently cleared Lemon Hill view shed).

    [Philadelphia International Championship.]

    SUNDAY: race starts on the Parkway at 9am and will run into the afternoon.

  • KNOWLEDGE REIGNS SUPREME OVER NEARLY EVERYBODY AT ODUNDE: Let us begin . . . what, where, why or when. What: Odunde. Where: G-Ho! Why: the west African New Year festival been going 32 years strong and continues to grow stronger. When: second Sunday in June every year.

    My first Odunde was in June 2001 in the middle of Sixers fever, when I lived two blocks away on Fitzwater Street. I caught one more from that address before moving to 24th & South, even closer to Odunde Central, for four more Odundes. Watching the procession to the South Street Bridge for the offering of fruits and flowers to Oshun -- the goddess of the river -- from my window before heading into the festival for oxtail, lemonade and lots and lots of drums was one of my favorite annual traditions on South Street.

    If things really progress this year like the Streets Department expects them to, this will be the last Odunde procession to the current South Street Bridge. You might say . . . the bridge is over, the bridge is over. Biddy bye bye! KRS-One would say that, and he just might say that on the main stage at 23rd & South, as the blastmaster is the headlining performer at Odunde.

    FRESH. For oh-eight, you SUCKAS.

    [ODUNDE.]

    SUNDAY: all day, centered around the 23rd, South and Grays Ferry triangle (where the main stage is and where KRS-One will perform)

  • FOR THE CURIOUS, VOLUME II: The second edition of Johnny Brenda's salon series is going green, baby.

    Philly native and international planning superstar Andy Altman has returned home, after a career tour that has taken him to LA, DC, Jerusalem and most recently New York, to be Mike Nutter's Deputy Mayor and Commerce Director. For good measure, one of his roles is as chairman of the Planning Commission.

    After moving back to Philly with much acclaim, he mentioned wanting to check out Northern Liberties and Fishtown, to see the progress each has made since he left town 20 years ago. One firm that has had a firsthand view of that progress is Onion Flats, the city's real pioneers in sustainable building, dating back 11 years, which is about 10 years before sustainability became a household word.

    Onion Flats' Pat McDonald, Johnny McDonald and Howard Steinberg will be joining Andy Altman on the stage at JB's Monday night for the loose, but structured, panel discussion that is For The Curious. And . . . what the . . . it's moderated by R. Bradley Maule?!? How about that!

    For The Curious is good fun -- a little background on the people involved, a little analysis of their current events, and a good natured discussion with the audience. Best of all? It's FREE. Come join us Monday night!

    [For The Curious.]

    MONDAY: 8pm, Johnny Brenda's, Girard & Frankford in Fishtown

    * * *

    Well now, that's a Saturday morning warmup before it really warms up.

    Finally, JESUS GOD BEE LOVE, WHY DID YOU SHAVE YOUR BEARD YOU FAT BASTARD??? Holy moly, I mean, I know I could use a few (thousand) situps, but man, I thought the camera only added 10 pounds, not 50 pounds. Agh, how unfattering . . . er, unflattering.

    Anyway, check out Philly Skyline's resident fat boy talking Philly Skyline with CBS3's super cool Stephanie Abrams HERE.

    Stay cool and stay hydrated out there, y'all.

    –B Love





  • 6 June 08: Signs, signs, everywhere signs



    TOTALLY RIDICULOUS. Terrible.

    These were the words I used in April (scroll down to the 8 April 08 umpdate) to describe Unisys' plans to install 60' x 16' signs (57'-3 7/16" x 16'-7 ¼" if you'd like to get specific) with their logo two-thirds up the sides of the east and west façades of Two Liberty Place. (While on the subject, a disclaimer about that particular post: the graphic I put together for that post was prior to seeing the official elevation, and my estimate was larger than the planned result.)

    Still. There is a terrible precedent here. To allow Unisys this abomination just opens the door for more like it. The ZBA hearing that had originally been planned for April was pushed back, as an extension was asked for to allow for more facts and differing points of view.

    I will admit up front that talking about corporate signage presents an opportunity for hypocrisy. It's hard to disparage Unisys for wanting their corporate brand in a noticeable place while lauding the Philadelphia Saving Fund Society's circa-1932 corporate brand. (Philly Skyline uses its 'PS' as an icon found in your browser's address bar right now this second.)

    But, there is a clear cut difference between an original design element and a tacked-on addition two decades after a building has opened. Just like there is a clear cut difference between placing that brand on top of the building, capping your visual experience, and placing it two-thirds up the side of the building. Though it looks like it, the location at the 38th and 39th floors of Two Liberty Place is not, in fact, arbitrary.

    Dennis O'Hara, the Unisys sign project manager for the Moorestown-based NW Sign Industries, explains: "these signs are strategically placed there because the 38th & 39th are mechanical floors. They won't block anyone's views, either residents or office workers."

    That's a good point, and it is considerate of Unisys, but it still looks terrible -- even if they are a Philly company.

    The Philly Skyline has had its share of corporate branding: PSFS, PNB*, Blue Cross and Aramark immediately come to mind, and they're all Philly companies. The Pittsburgh-based PNC Bank has an older version of its logo mounted to the top of its black glass tower at 1600 Market, but you wouldn't know it since it's obscured by both Liberty Places and Centre Square. Glaxo Smith Kline and Sheraton (and formerly Wyndham) have their brands on their towers on Vine Street.

    Before Broad Street Station and old Market Street were demolished, the Fidelity Storage & Warehouse immediately drew your eyes from the street to its old-timey painting, the likes of which you can still see around town (Walnut Bridge parking garage and Mercato restaurant at Spruce & Camac come to mind). When the Schuylkill Expressway opened, its drivers were welcomed into the city by a colorful Schmidt's Beer sign on top of 2200 Arch Street, what was then the Daily News building. The tops of 1601, 1700 and 2000 Market have each been adorned with corporate logos at one point in time.

    * The PNB sign atop One South Broad Street is by itself a slippery topic. John T Windrim's vision for the Lincoln-Liberty Building included a special belfry at the crown for the Founders Memorial Bell, which is on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places (while the building itself is not), with no insignias of any kind. But, when Philadelphia National Bank assumed control of the building in the 1950s, it installed a sign with its likeness on top, just like PSFS had done two decades before. Personally, I think that PNB has become as much a part of the skyline as PSFS. PSFS has more of a Helvetica look while PNB is somewhere between Impact and a college football uniform. Very 1950s, apropos in a town with a ton of underappreciated modernism.

    The life of that PNB sign is very much in jeopardy, as Wachovia has plans to have it dismantled and replaced with their own wavy logo, to be lit at night in their signature blue and green, with "WACHOVIA" mounted just below the bell on all four sides. Incidentally, that sign's design and installation is also being handled by NW Sign Industries.

    * * *

    What does a corporate sign affixed to a tower say, other than "here I am"? Does it announce "this is our headquarters"? "This city is our home"?

    Comcast Center, which is being officially dedicated today, did nothing of the sort, leaving the building to speak for itself. The signage at Comcast Center is of the stainless steel, subtle, ground level variety. Not only is there not a big red C on top of the building; some feared that Comcast would install a live feed of its television content on the tower's cutouts. That of course did not happen.

    Cigna, which leases more space than Unisys and has called Two Liberty Place home for years, has signage rights to the tower but has only exercised them at ground level, where you'll find the logo nearby that of the Residences at Two Liberty Place.

    That is precisely what Unisys should do.

    Because if they don't, allowing a company that leases 9% of the commercial space of a now mixed-use tower that has twenty floors of residences above the proposed sign, a whole lot of other companies are going to wonder when they'll be allowed to do the same. Attorney Richard Goldstein, representing the Residences at Two Liberty Place's management, says that "it will create a lot of unnecessary pressure on landlords."

    Even Two Liberty's original architect, Chicago's Helmut Jahn, disapproves, to a point of penning a letter to the ZBA asking them to reject the Unisys addition. It's an accomplishment that it's even gotten this far -- it passed the Art Commission and awaits the ZBA.

    No one in his right mind would ever suggest that Unisys does not belong in Two Liberty Place, in Center City, or in Philadelphia. It is fantastic that a historical company so deeply rooted in technology wants to be here, and here's hoping other companies like them join them here . . . but here is also hoping that it's not through some ill conceived incentive program that gives them a portion of their building's exterior space. Because if that's the case?



    No thanks.

    –B Love

    NOTES: Image of Wachovia sign by NW Sign Industries and accessed via Zoning Board of Adjustment.


    6 June 08: Today's the day



    An official wrap-up and much more in the days to come.

    –B Love


    4 June 08: On Anne d'Harnoncourt



    Anne d'Harnoncourt's sudden passing is like one of the columns being removed from the main entrance's portico at the Art Museum over which she presided for 26 years. I did not know her personally, but I know what a loss her passing means to the Philadelphia art community and, obviously, her family.

    To look at a track record that includes the most successful show in the museum's history (Cézanne in 1996), as well as the Dalí, Van Gogh, Renoir and Frida shows in my time in Philly, and of course opening of the Perelman Building and the Museum's massive expansion with the Frank Gehry addition . . . well how can you find another leader like that? Inquirer art critic Ed Sozanski said it best:
    The first thing to be said about the unexpected death of Anne d'Harnoncourt, beyond expressing profound shock and disbelief, is that the Philadelphia Museum of Art will not be able to replace her. The museum will eventually locate a successor, but that is not the same thing.
    No doubt. She will be missed.

    RIP, Anne d'Harnoncourt.

    –B Love


    3 June 08: Kick yo feet up



    Hey party people, thanks for keeping yourselves occupied the last few days. It's just been way. too. nice. to be inside sitting at a desk the last few days, so there will be a veritable photographic explosion on yr Skyline soon as I can rustle through the good ones. A new construction roundup and a Skinny update (yes yes, I've heard all about the Walnut Street Theatre jawn) and the like are coming. If you're in search of some original Skyline content, might I recommend dipping back two years into the time warp and see what was up in June 2006.

    Hava goodwin.

    –B Love




    2 June 08: Turkish Greetings



    Dear Philly Skyline,

    Greetings from Istanbul, Turkey, Europe & Asia. This is Beyoglu, across the Golden Horn, as seen from the Galata Bridge. The Galata Tower is at the peak, the dominating feature on this part of Istanbul's skyline since 1348.

    See you soon,
    NR Popkin


    1 June 08:



    Three Philly Skyline Wide Angle Skylines for the new month, for the first place Phillies, and for you, my friends.





    –B Love


    30 May 08: Inga Please



    "There's not a lot of . . . stuff with real seriousness in Philadelphia," Inga Saffron says when I ask her if she's been looking forward to her latest column. "So yeah."

    Her latest column is the long anticipated review of Comcast Center, which will appear in this Sunday's Inquirer.

    Since Comcast Center broke ground in January 2005, Inga's star has grown to include a second Pulitzer nomination, an eight page spread in Philly Mag, and indeed a certain level of notoriety.

    As you might recall from a post a couple weeks ago, this web site was established in 2002. The domain name phillyskyline.com was appropriate enough for my growing collection of photos, which it was registered for, but in hindsight can be construed as either an homage to or theft of Changing Skyline. Thankfully, Inga laughs when I tell her this, relating that her column is also an homage to or theft of "The Sky Line" -- the longtime column by New Yorker architecture critic Lewis Mumford.

    About that Changing Philly Skyline, there is nothing which has done so in her nine years as the Inquirer's architecture critic like Comcast Center has. American Commerce Center and the Girard Estate block could; Cira Centre and Symphony House have, a little. But the new Comcast tower, whose 975' height is not lost on Inga, is in her words, "a very big thing for Philly to chew on."

    In meeting Inga in her Fitler Square neighborhood last night, I tried to get a sense of whether her Comcast review would lean toward positive or negative, but she was quick to explain that she does not believe in those words. "[My position] is about discussion," she says. "I try to articulate feelings others have, or find things people might not think of in their experience." Still, I thought, it's pretty easy to tell when she approves of a fab lab like Skirkanich Hall and disapproves of a pink prefab palace like the Nightmare on Broad Street.

    With Comcast Center . . . I guess we'll find out Sunday. (Or sooner, as it will probably be posted on philly.com before the print edition.) When I ask for her thoughts on whether the building should be taller (as she implied in Cira Centre's case with her nickname Le Petite Cira), and if Arch Street got a bum deal where JFK Boulevard explodes, she stays mum, preferring instead to praise Melograno's pappardelle tartuffe, which she says is so good she won't order anything else. (I had the pappardelle with shrimp and scallops, and indeed, it was outta sight.)

    Inga does well to guard her content, but she confirms that two frequently asked questions will be answered: What's up with the top? (Is it finished? Why is it different from the rest of the building?) What's up with the cutouts? (Are they supposed to be something? Are they just an architectural element?)

    On this Comcast review, she says, "it's a little anticlimactic to do this now, since it's more or less been done for a while." I differ from this view though, simply because of the power of Inga Saffron's voice. Reserving her judgment until everything is done -- office workers have moved in, chain link fences have been removed, underground marketplace causeways have opened -- makes for a pretty climactic review, and just in time for an official grand opening the same week, I'd say.

    In the three and a half years Comcast Center has been under construction, Inga has opined on a number of individual items -- plumber pee parties, Jonathan Borofsky's sculptures, Stern's digressions from Comcast to the McNeil Center (at Penn) to 10 Rittenhouse -- but the Big Sum comes Sunday. We're all looking forward to it.

    –B Love










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