Dilworth Park

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Dilworth Park
DilworthParkOpening.jpg
Type Urban park
Location Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Area 0.5 acres (0.20 ha)
Created 2014
Operated by City Parks & Recreation
Status Open all year

Dilworth Park is a public space in Center City Philadelphia, along the west side of City Hall.

History

The lawn at Dilworth Park

Dilworth Park opened in September 2014. It is named in honor of Richardson Dilworth, the 118th mayor of Philadelphia.

The current park, designed by KieranTimberlake, [1] replaces Dilworth Plaza, which was designed by Vincent Kling and built in 1972. [2]

Dilworth Park contains Rosa Blanca Cafe, an outpost of Chef Jose Garces' restaurant Rosa Blanca. [3] An ice skating rink is open in the winter. [4]

Site

Dilworth Park was built on the original Dilworth Plaza section of Philadelphia City Hall, which was built on the area designated by William Penn as Centre Square. It was a public square from the city's founding in 1682 until the construction of City Hall began upon the site in 1871. It was one of the five original squares laid out on the city grid by Penn.[5] It lay at the geographic heart of the city from 1682 until the Act of Consolidation, 1854 (although it was never the social heart of the city during that long period).

Penn planned for Centre Square to be:

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a central square or plaza of ten acres to be bordered by the principal public buildings, such as the Quaker meetinghouse, the state house, the market house, and the schoolhouse. Despite the two riverfronts [Delaware and Schuylkill, Penn's city had an inward-facing design, focusing on this central plaza.[6]

However, the Delaware riverfront would remain the de facto economic and social heart of the city for more than a century.

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[…] hardly anyone lived west of Fourth Street before 1703. Consequently Penn's design of a center square as the hub of his community had to be abandoned. The large Friends meeting house which was built in 1685 at the midpoint between the rivers was dismantled in 1702. Efforts to develop the Schuylkill waterfront likewise collapsed. Of the merchants, tradesmen, and craftsmen who can be identified as living in Philadelphia around 1690, 123 lived on the Delaware side of town and only 6 on the Schuylkill side. One of the latter, a tailor named William Boulding, complained that he had invested most of his capital in his Schuylkill lot, 'so that he cannot, as others have done, Remove from the same.' Not until the mid-nineteenth century, long after the city had spilled northward and southward in an arc along the Delaware miles beyond its original limits, was the Schuylkill waterfront fully developed. Nor was Centre Square restored as the heart of Philadelphia until the construction of City Hall began in 1871.[6]

The south facade as seen from S. Broad Street at Locust Street (2013)

See also

References

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External links

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