Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Rittenhouse Square named one of America's top public spaces

Rittenhouse Square has been named one of the top 10 Great Public Spaces in the country.

The American Planning Association chose to honor Rittenhouse Square because it is a beautiful, inviting public space that anchors a very vibrant neighborhood, and for the long-standing willingness of community members to fight to keep it that way, said APA Research Associate Tre Jerdon, a planner who helped winnow down this year's applicants.

“For Philadelphians and tourists, Rittenhouse Square is a true landmark,” said APA Chief Executive Officer Paul Farmer in a written statement. “City officials and residents have done a spectacular job in carrying out William Penn's original plan for their city and keeping Rittenhouse Square a remarkable public space.”

Jerdon said the success of Rittenhouse Square is obvious, from the beauty of the flower beds and trees, to the square's use for ceremonies and festivals, dog-walking and lunch-eating.

Rittenhouse Square also got high marks for variability: The buildings that surround it are both commercial and residential. It is equally accessible by walking or taking public transportation. And a big cross section of people use it.

“The square is constantly alive with exercisers, people who work, school children, parents, people walking their dogs, elderly people, and visitors from other cities,” Jerdon said.

The Great Public Spaces awards are one of three categories of Great Place awards given annually by the APA since 2007.

With the Rittenhouse Square Award, Philadelphia has now won in all three categories. In 2008, Society Hill was named a Great Neighborhood and The Avenue of the Arts – South Broad Street – was named a Great Street.

“Like the Phillies, we think we can win one a year,” joked City of Philadelphia City Planning Commission Executive Director Gary Jastrzab.

Philadelphia nominated Rittenhouse Square for an award back in 2008, said David Schaaf, the PCPC's director of urban design, who prepared the nominations. This year, APA suggested the city resubmit Rittenhouse Square for the public spaces award, Schaaf said.

(Schaaf and Jastrzab can already rattle off a list of spots that will be nominated for the planning world's version of the Oscars in future years, including the river drives, the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, and the Art Museum/Waterworks.)

“As one of the oldest public places in the United States, Rittenhouse Square has demonstrated that a vision for a great urban place can, over time, produce a quality environment that has a unique identity,” said Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter in a written statement. “Now more than 300 years old, Rittenhouse Square is that place where all can find recreation, engagement, delight or the solitude they seek amidst the intense energy of a thriving city.”

The planning for Rittenhouse Square began 3,000 miles from Philadelphia in 1681. That's when the idea for what was then called Southwest Square – and the other city squares – was conceived in London. The squares were surveyed the next year, when William Penn arrived.

“Early on, it was a place to herd animals,” Schaaf said. In addition to the local animals, the neighborhood was largely industrial then, and included brickyards, Jastrzab said.

Then in 1816, Philadelphians decided they wanted to enjoy the square themselves, and fenced the square to keep the animals out.

In 1825, the square was renamed for David Rittenhouse, the first director of the American Mint. And by the 19th Century, the square sat in the center of one of the most successful and prosperous neighborhoods in the city, Schaaf said. The square and nearby streets were lined with grand homes – most of which are now gone. The building that houses Urban Outfitters and Anthropology was such a mansion, Schaaf said, and the Curtis Institute was a grand townhouse.
         
In 1913, those living on and near the square used their resources to hire architect Paul Cret – one of the designers of the Parkway and the Rodin Museum – to create the pathways that cross the square. Fountains and statuary were also added.
"I would say that was probably the beginning of the true success of the square,” Schaaf said. “It was redesigned in 1913. In 1914, the Flower Market was established. The juried art show started later. It was the beginning of the civic function of the square.”

After 1919, the grand homes gave way to high rise buildings that allowed more people to live on the square, which continues to be a prestigious address. Learn more about Rittenhouse Square and its history in a document provided by Schaaf.

But what makes the area truly vibrant is that the square is used by so many people, even people who don't live nearby, Jastrzab said.

In recent years, city planners have allowed the filing in of spaces where high rise buildings may have existed but were demolished, or where they never existed before, Jastrzab said, including 10 Rittenhouse Square. “We have also supported a mix of uses in the neighborhood surrounding the square, which makes it a vibrant, humming, urban place,” he said.

Philadelphia is lucky that Rittenhouse Square and so much of the city was created in the 17th Century before cars were invented and walking and horses were the main means of transportation, Schaaf said. It is that 17th Century scale that makes Philadelphia so walkable and bike-able today, he said.

“The best thing that can happen to Rittenhouse Square is that it gets maintained,” Schaaf said, adding that any major changes would require Historical Commission approval, since the park is on both the national and local registers of historic places.
The literal maintenance of the square is done through the city's Department of Parks and Recreation and the Friends of Rittenhouse Square – the park's advocacy group. Parks and Rec and the Friends will also receive plaques to mark the APA award.

"I can't tell you how excited I am about this," said Friends of Rittenhouse President Wendy Rosen. Rosen, who has been president of the organization for 16 years, is retiring in November.

Rosen said her organization has been able to raise a lot of money over the years to fund projects that the city couldn't afford to do otherwise, including replacing the black iron railings around the park, lighting improvements, and work on the fountain, sprinklers and Gardener's Cottage. Each project cost between $100,000 and $200,000, she said.

People love "the little green oasis in the middle of all these tall buildings," said Rosen, who lives in the oldest of the tall residential buildings, 1830 Rittenhouse, which will turn 100 next year. When the Friends announced last year that, due to city funding cuts, there would be no holiday lights, people "came out of the woodwork" with donations, and restaurants held benefits, she said.

While she'll no longer be president, Rosen said she will remain active in the organization. She hopes the Friends will soon provide new lights for the center of the square, and new sidewalks are also needed, she said.

The nine other APA 2010 Great Public Spaces are: Bryant Park in New York City, NY; Charles W. Ireland Sculpture Garden in Birmingham, AL; Fountain Square in Bowling Green, KY; Emerald Necklace in Boston, MA; Ferry Building in San Francisco, CA; Campus Martius Park in Detroit, MI; Percival Landing Boardwalk and Park in Olympia, WA; Plaza Real in Boca Raton, FL; and Main Plaza in San Antonio, TX.

For more information about these public spaces, as well as lists of the 2010 APA 10 Great Neighborhoods and 10 Great Streets, and designations between 2007 and 2009, visit www.planning.org/greatplaces.

Contact the reporter at kgates@planphilly.com

Friday, June 4, 2010

One Word

Bagels

Today and Tomorrow

Need art?  Stop by the Square for the Art Show today and tomorrow!

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

One Block of 18th Street to Become Outdoor Cafe June 5


           One block of 18th Street – between Locust and Walnut – will be closed on Saturday, June 5 from 11 AM to 8 PM for the first Outdoor Café event, organized by and benefitting the Friends of Rittenhouse Square.
 Said Wendy Rosen, president of the Friends, “Tables from Parc, Devon, and Rouge will be set up in the street, and music will be provided by Curtis Institute students. A percentage of all sales from these restaurants will go to the Friends of Rittenhouse Square to help us preserve, protect, and beautify the park.”
            With artists’ booths already ringing the Square Friday through Sunday for the Rittenhouse Square Fine Art Show, the tables in the street and the music of Curtis students will lend additional European flair to the neighborhood.  Admission to the Fine Art Show is free.  Lots of good reasons to visit the Square this weekend!

Cichetteria 19, Rittenhouse Square

Just south of the Square on 19th is this relatively new place, tried it for the first time this weekend. They have some of the usual Ital-American stuff, the pasta, the pizza, but where they really shine is on the small plates. (Cichetti).

These plates are really the way people in Italy eat, especially in Venice. These are small portions of GREAT food, prepared in an authentic, careful way. This is not what you will get in a typical "Italian" restaurant in America, which is what makes it so good!

They have 5 plates for $19, and 3 plates for $12. We ordered 8 plates together, which was a good thing, because we were stuffed sharing them. They look small, but they are very filling, and very satisfying! Everything was quite different, and quite wonderful. We had, among other plates, the Baccala, caponata, crudo scallops (raw), roasted shrimp, and the highlight for me was the Broccoli Rabe with canelloni beans. Had a really unusual, wonderful, pan seared flavor. Yum!

The owner is from Venice, he says he was a gondolier but I suspect that may be an "exaggeration". (Why would anyone leave such a lucrative occupation?) But whoever's doing the cooking in the back is a great talent.

It's a fun place, and the food is terrific and reasonable. Highly recommended.

http://www.cichetteria19.com/

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menton1 Jun 01, 2010 10:13AM
From: http://chowhound.chow.com/topics/711442

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Funds forcing a battle over Rittenhouse Square

By Stu Bykofsky
Philadelphia Daily News
Daily News Columnist

WITH THE trees dressed in emerald finery and colorful azaleas in bloom, Rittenhouse Square is a pretty, peaceful patch in the midst of a big city's brass.
But beneath the feet of the park's iconic billy-goat statue, an ugly battle is raging for the heart and soul of the ageless beauty, pitting Romantics against Realists.

Money - more specifically, the lack of it - set opposing forces in motion.

The skyscraper-rimmed jewel in the crown is arguably Philadelphia's most prestigious address. Residents of the surrounding condos, hotels and townhouses comprise a core of the city's wealthy elite, yet not even they are rich enough, or perhaps not committed enough, to maintain the genteel glamour of one of America's most beautiful open spaces.

The square is "as important to the city and downtown Philadelphia as Rodeo Drive is to L.A.," says Joanne Davidow, a member of the board of the Friends of Rittenhouse Square, a citizens group that shoulders the responsibility - and the cost - of maintaining the park's Old World elegance.

The park is under the control of the Fairmount Park Commission. Executive director Mark Focht tells me that the city pays for such things as water and electric, maintaining the fountain, snow and trash removal, most pruning and trimming of trees. One full-time Fairmount Park staffer oversees the park during the week and another works the weekend.

The Friends fund their own employee from April to October and pay for all of the turf moving, lawn mowing, private landscaping, mulching, flower planting and maintenance of the benches.

The unrest began last year. Seeing increasing costs and decreasing support from traditional donors, the Friends of Rittenhouse Square executive committee hired Dan Biederman as a consultant, Friends president Wendy Rosen told me yesterday.

Biederman transformed Bryant Park, in midtown Manhattan, from what was known as "Needle Park" for the drug trade that flourished there, to a lovely oasis. For Rittenhouse, he came up with several ideas to, basically, enhance revenue.

That's when one faction went to the mattresses. Some were horrified when they heard that Rosen might bring a food stall to the heart of the park, plus advertising and the occasional closure of 18th Street for special events.

The first fusillade was an anonymous, aghast flyer that circled the park like a pigeon, forecasting dire commercialization.

Board member Joanne Berwind resigned because she was unhappy about where Friends was heading, I was told. I reached her yesterday in Florida; she said she was busy and would call me back. She didn't.

Rosen answered the anonymous flyer with a three-page letter in which she explained that Friends has fewer than 300 members and a budget of $450,000, adding that private firms and sponsors are "cutting back."

She ruled out advertising inside the square, said that 18th Street might be closed for special events in which Friends would share in vendors' revenues. There might be a seasonal 8-by-12-foot concession booth in the square and maybe more special events within the square, she said.

That letter was answered by an anonymous two-page letter calling Rosen's plan a "disaster," adding that it would be "opening the square to hoards of people and businesses," which sounds a touch, mmm, elitist.

"We have a fabulous square that only needs support from its surrounding residents," wrote the anonymous author.

Ah, yes. But where are they?

The Romanticists want to keep Rittenhouse Square pristine and bucolic, welcoming strollers, students, babies, dog walkers. The Realists don't disagree, but note the nagging fact that bills are rising and donations are not.


Which vision of Rittenhouse Square will prevail? The side that comes up with the money.

If the Romanticists want to keep commercial intrusion out of the Square, all they have to do is open their wallets.

E-mail stubyko@phillynews.com or call 215-854-5977. For recent columns:

http://go.philly.com/byko.