Thursday, April 9, 2015

Chinatown

Chinatown is a very busy neighborhood just north of Center City, bound by Vine Street, Broad Street, 7th Street, and Arch Street. Over its long history, many attempts to destroy or shrink the district were enacted, including building the Vine Street Expressway, the Pennsylvania Convention Center, The Gallery at Market East, The Philadelphia Police Headquarters, The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, The IRS Philadelphia Offices, and The US Federal Courthouse-Philadelphia, among others. These buildings have helped form a ring around Chinatown, but even so, the district is still quite prosperous. Although not very large, Chinatown houses a great deal of Chinese and Vietnamese businesses. The community here is quite strong, and have resisted the closure of Chinatown Station on the Broad-Ridge Spur, as well as the closure of Holy Redeemer Chinese Catholic School & Church. Most residents of the neighborhood are low income recent immigrants from East Asia, though its proximity to Center City may change this. The neighborhood is mostly made up of mixed use residential and commercial buildings, with the area as a whole centering on the intersection of Race & 10th. Chinatown is extremely walkable, and bike lanes exist on 13th and 10th. SEPTA Rail operates the Broad Street Line's Race-Vine and Chinatown Stations, the former having Local and Express train stops, whilst the latter has Broad-Ridge Spur trains. SEPTA City Division operates the 4, 16, 23, 27, 47, 47M, and 61 buses. I would suggest adding bike lanes in more areas of the neighborhood, and allocating some housing for low-income residents so gentrification doesn't kill the area.

No comments:

Post a Comment