| Follow Us: Facebook Twitter RSS Feed

Center City : In The News

156 Center City Articles | Page: | Show All

Major renovations planned for Reading Terminal Market

The East Wing of Reading Terminal Market is getting an overhaul, with five new stalls and a demonstration kitchen planned, according to uwishunu.

Established in 1892 at 12th and Arch Streets, beloved local icon Reading Terminal Market is the nation's oldest continuously operating farmers' market. The always-abustle market sells everything from Amish baked goods and deli fare to city specialties like cheesesteaks and Famous Fourth Street cookies, while events and cooking classes showcase Philadelphia's vibrant dining scene. Given its storied history and constant usage, it's no wonder that the market is due for an exciting renovation.

Source: uwishunu
Read the full story here.


LA asks: Can the new Barnes be fiscally viable in Philadelphia?

The Los Angeles Times is the latest major media outlet to question the move of the Barnes Museum from suburban Merion to Center City Philadelphia.

Is the new Barnes Museum headed for disaster? Designed to house the art collection of the Barnes Foundation, with its hundreds of Cezannes, Renoirs, Matisses, Picassos and other early modern masters, a new building is under construction in downtown Philadelphia where the collection is scheduled to move from its current home in Merion, Pa. Yet serious questions remain about the rationale for the move and the museum's long-term sustainability.

Source: Los Angeles Times
Read the full story here.

Blooming Baltimore: Flower Show a 'must-see' for flower, garden lovers

The Baltimore Sun writes about the can't-miss-this quality of this year's Philadelphia International Flower Show.

Feeling a little winter-weary? Escape from the season of snow and ice to a refreshing look at spring at "Springtime in Paris," the 2011 Philadelphia International Flower Show that begins today at the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia.

Featured in "1,000 Places to Visit Before You Die," Philly's flower show is a must-see for flower and garden lovers. Each year, at least 60 florists, professional landscapers and horticultural and educational organizations create breathtaking, full-scale gardens and floral displays. Many have taken as long as 18 months to prepare.

Source: The Baltimore Sun
Read the full story here.

Thomas Jefferson researchers: How quitting smoking could signal lung cancer

A new study by Thomas Jefferson University researchers finds that spontaneous cessation of smoking may signal the onset of lung cancer, according to The Washington Post.

A provocative, though small, study suggests that the very act of quitting smoking may be a symptom of not-yet-diagnosed lung cancer.

That's the curious conclusion reached by a team of researchers led by Barbara Campling at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia when they surveyed 115 lung cancer patients, all of them current or former smokers, at the Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

Source: The Washington Post
Read the full story here.

A ticket out of the food desert from SEPTA, city

The City of Philadelphia and SEPTA join together to address the connection between public health and public transportation, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council and as reported in Flying Kite last week.

Don't see the link between transit and food? Philly does. The City of Philadelphia and the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) have made it a top goal to target food deserts--neighborhoods where it is difficult to access fresh food--and public transportation is at the core of their effort.

Source: NRDC Smarter Cities
Read the full story here.


Rittenhouse Square's Continental Midtown makes list of top 10 rooftop bars

 Philadelphia's Continental Midtown is one of the top ten rooftop bars in the United States, according to USA Today.

Global tapas are on this menu at this stylish lounge a few blocks from Rittenhouse Square. The bar, operated by Stephen Starr, the celebrity chef behind some of the city's top restaurants, has heaters to keep things warm and stays open year-round. "It's one of those places that has incredible views," Gerber says.

Original Source: USA Today
Read the full story here.

Philly's a vegan heaven, says WashPost

The Washington Post goes hunting for the best of Philly's abundant crop of vegan treats.

So one Saturday last month, my vegan friends and I hit the streets of Philadelphia - where the Phillies claim the country's top-ranked vegetarian ballpark - intending to do no harm to animals, the environment and presumably our health. (At our first stop, Cafe Mocha, we did, however, sample vegan donuts and cookies, and a quick sugar high reminded me that "vegan" doesn't always equal "nutritious.")

We headed to the South Street district for lunch at Blackbird, a vegan pizzeria with a chalkboard menu, a drab interior and space heaters. Blackbird's owner, Mark Mebus, is a Philly native and former chef at Horizons, the upscale restaurant that put vegan dining on the map here. He opened the pizzeria last fall.

Source: Washington Post
Read the full story here.


Philadelphia singer-songwriter regains voice after surgery

Philadelphia singer-songwriter Jesse Teich regains vocal ability and goes on to thriving career following surgery on her vocal cords, reports CNN.

In her early 20s, the very thing most fundamental to Jessi Teich's career started to turn against her: Her voice.

The aspiring singer-songwriter, based in Philadelphia, started having pain while teaching 40 private voice students per week, in addition to singing at home for herself. She noticed she couldn't sing for as long as she used to, and lost about an octave and a half in her high range.

After many tests to diagnose her problem, including for thyroid cancer, Teich found out she had a cyst that looked like a water blister deep under her vocal fold and on the side of it.

Source: CNN
Read the full story here.

Azavea gets NSF grant to hone crime risk forecasting software

The National Science Foundation has awarded a $216,000 grant to Philadelphia-based Azavea to develop its advanced crime risk forecasting software, reports UPI.

HunchLab is a Web-based geographic crime data analysis and early warning software system that provides advanced crime mapping and automated notification to authorities about changes in the geographic patterns of crime incidents.

The system is targeted at the law enforcement agencies and enables police officers to develop and evaluate hunches about geographic patterns in criminal activity in the communities they patrol.

Azavea said it is collaborating with Dr. Jerry Ratcliffe from Temple University, a leading expert in statistical crime analysis who has worked with academic colleagues to develop statistical techniques for detecting "near repeat" patterns in crime.

Original source: UPI
Read the full story here.
 


Don't call it a sellout; Phila. History Museum gets leaner to pay for renovations

In an attempt to raise money for extensive renovations of its 184 year-old home, the Philadelphia History Museum has sold 2,000 items, joining a growing (and somewhat controversial) list of museums who are using their collection to pay bills, reports The New York Times.

A galloping horse weather vane sold for about $20,000, and the cigar store Indians brought in more than $1 million. A Thomas Sully oil painting of Andrew Jackson netted $80,500, and a still life by Raphaelle Peale, part of the family that put portraiture in this city on the map, was auctioned at Christie's for $842,500.

These were just a few of more than 2,000 items quietly sold by the Philadelphia History Museum over the last several years, all part of an effort to cull its collection of 100,000 artifacts and raise money for a $5.8 million renovation of its 1826 building.

In doing so the museum stepped into the quicksand of murky rules, guidelines and ethical strictures meant to discourage museums everywhere from selling collections to pay bills. It is one of the hottest issues in the museum world today. With budgets shrinking in a bad economy, the pressure to generate revenue is growing along with fears that museums are squandering public trusts meant to preserve the artifacts of the past for future generations.

Original source: The New York Times
Read the full story here.



Egypt's last queen takes over The Franklin, sheds light on her life and times

Voice of America gives us a multi-media look inside the Cleopatra exhibit, which features more than 150 artifacts of ancient Egyptian, Greek and Roman cultures, at The Franklin Institute.

University of Pennsylvania Egyptologist and the head of the Penn Museum's Egyptology section - David Silverman - is curator of the exhibit. He said he hopes it dispels some of the misconceptions about Cleopatra and gives visitors a glimpse of her time.

"People know the name Cleopatra, but what about the history? And they're learning that we don't know all the answers, but they are also learning how we can find out some of the answers," said Silverman.

An accompanying audio tour attempts to provide some answers through an actress portrayal of Cleopatra. Visitors hear the queen describe the artifacts, as well as something of their history and purpose, including those dating from her torrid romance with Mark Antony - a relationship that ended with both of them committing suicide.

Original source: Voice of America
Read the full story here.


City's CTO stepping down, returning to management consulting for now

Allan Frank, the city's first chief technology officer, announced he'll be leaving his post by Feb. 1, reports Technically Philly.

As recent as this month, Frank spoke at a government employees meet up group about his forthcoming plans for the city's IT direction. Frank will maintain some ties, serving as chair of the newly formed Mayor's Advisory Board on Technology, in which he will remain involved in these projects.

"In actuality, there is no perfect time to leave," Frank told Technically Philly. "I am confident in the new DOT leadership and talent I have attracted to continue the momentum."

Frank first joined city government in July 2008 as Mayor Nutter's Chief Information Officer. A year later, in July 2009, Frank was officially made the city's first Chief Technology Officer, consolidating IT from 33 city agencies.

Original source: Technically Philly
Read the full story here.



This look at Philadelphia Freedom worth an overnight stay

The Washington Post travel section puts together a respectable Philadelphia Freedom package that gives a refined look at U.S. history and the city's ability to share it, including the newly opened National Museum of American Jewish History.

Independence Hall is where the founding fathers signed the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, and ratified the U.S. Constitution in 1787. The Liberty Bell, cracks and all, became a symbol of the abolitionist movement and of efforts to attain freedom around the globe.

In the past decade, the historical events embodied by these icons have gained new context as the Liberty Bell moved to its own interpretive center and a museum dedicated to explaining the Constitution opened at the northern end of the mall. Now several new attractions on or adjacent to the mall are adding their own chapters, some with unexpected twists, to the traditional understanding of American freedoms and how they came to be.

The National Museum of American Jewish History, affiliated with the Smithsonian, opens its dazzling new home on the mall to the public today. The President's House commemorative site, on the spot where presidents George Washington and John Adams, as well as nine enslaved African Americans, lived before the nation's capital was moved to Washington, is set to open Dec. 15. A 15-minute 3-D film, "Liberty 360," premiered this fall in a theater across from Independence Hall and offers yet another perspective on the goings-on that led to the nation's founding.

Original source: Washington Post
Read the full story here.


Museum without walls: Free, outdoors, open 24/7

The month-old Museum Without Walls audio program uses technology to give many of Philadelphia's outdoor sculptures museum-quality perspective, reports the Associated Press.

Its self-guided audio tours are available 24-7 in several different formats: You can call phone numbers listed with each sculpture, use a free smart phone app, download the audio at http://museumwithoutwallsaudio.org to an MP3 player, or scan a special bar code (known as a QR or quick response code) on the free "Museum Without Walls" map at locations around the city.

The project's first phase includes 51 outdoor sculptures at 35 stops along a three-mile stretch of the bustling Benjamin Franklin Parkway from downtown to leafy Fairmount Park, a route popular with bicyclists, runners and walkers.

Original source: Associated Press
Read the full story here.



Comcast's NBC leadership taking shape

Bloomberg is reporting that Comcast is close to announcing its management team as it acquires 51 percent of NBC Universal.

Robert Greenblatt, Showtime's former programming chief, will oversee NBC entertainment, said the people, who declined to be identified because the decisions aren't public. Jeff Gaspin, current chairman of entertainment, has been offered a lesser role and hasn't decided whether to stay, they said.

Comcast Chief Operating Officer Stephen Burke, who will become NBC Universal's chief executive officer, is putting his imprint on the entertainment company as the new owner prepares to take over from General Electric Co. In September, he told NBC Universal CEO Jeff Zucker he would be out of a job when deal with Philadelphia-based Comcast is completed. Comcast, the largest U.S. cable company, plans to combine its pay-TV channels with NBC, which also owns broadcast networks, a movie studio and theme parks. The company's purchase of NBC is awaiting regulatory approval.

Original source: Bloomberg
Read the full story here.

156 Center City Articles | Page: | Show All
Signup for Email Alerts