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Tag: semiquincentennial 250th

  • Whose 250th Is This Anyway?

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    Hey, have you heard about one of the marketing slogans Boston planners floated for that city’s slate of 2026 birth of the nation events?

    “The Revolution started here,” Beantown’s boosters say. “Philly just did the paperwork.”

    Booyah. For those of us who grew up with a deep disdain for the Celtics, it’s a traumatic diss. And what has been the response of our tough, blue-collar town — without whom, one could argue, we might still be subjects of the crown?


           Listen to the audio edition here:


    Uh, kinda crickets. No “Yo, Boston! We got yer paperwork right here,” complete with a prime-time TV reading of the Declaration of Independence on the Art Museum steps by, say, Questlove, Quinta Brunson, and, I don’t know, Pink?

    Don’t get me wrong. Philly has a year of great parties planned, with neighborhood get-togethers, World Cup soccer, baseball’s All-Star Game, the NCAA college basketball tourney. But what’s missing, in these times of national torment, is something to reverberate through the decades to come in a way that stirs the civic soul. Something that reestablishes Philly as the nation’s center of Enlightenment values. You know: Here, we double down on justice, tolerance, truth, and unbridled exploration. That’s the role we played for the country’s 100th anniversary, when Philly’s Centennial Exhibition shaped the national zeitgeist by celebrating American ingenuity and entrepreneurialism.

    “The farmer saw new machines, seeds and processes; the mechanic, ingenious inventions and tools, and products of the finest workmanship; the teacher, the educational aids and system of the world; the man of science, the wonders of nature and the results of the inventions of the best brains of all lands,” wrote James McCabe in The Illustrated History of the Centennial Exhibition.

    That was long before the advent of the Philly Shrug. Fast-forward 100 years: In 1976, the city threw a party and hardly anyone showed up, after Mayor Frank Rizzo, mystifyingly, spoke darkly of danger in the streets and calling in the National Guard.

    Until recently, some of us feared we were heading for a reprise of that debacle, thanks to eight years of inattention by the perpetually gloomy Mayor Jim Kenney. But Mayor Cherelle Parker (pushed by Councilmember Isaiah Thomas) and a group of civic leaders have stepped up to save what could have been an embarrassment. They deserve credit, but there’s still one looming question: Can we do something bold that once again models for a desperate country how to come together as a nation?

    Where we were

    Let’s look back at how we got here. As chronicled by David Murrell in a 2022 Philly Mag piece, nearly 15 years ago investment banker Andrew Hohns, a civic innovator who founded Young Involved Philadelphia, started agitating for a 2026 plan that would shape Philadelphia for decades to come. He envisioned investments that would grow the city and change its national image. Hohns founded the nonprofit USA250 and enlisted first local historian and former mayoral candidate Sam Katz and then former Mayor and Governor Ed Rendell to helm the ambitious project. Problem was, 2026 was so far off; many thought there were more pressing problems deserving immediate attention.

    Early in President Trump’s first term, the government formed the federal U.S. Semiquincentennial Commission, the official body tasked with planning the celebration. In short order, America250, as it was called, started making all the wrong types of news. There was infighting, allegations of shady side deals, and sexual harassment charges. Hohns, who was on the federal commission, stepped down in protest. Soon, it became clear that cities like Boston, New York, Charleston, and especially Washington, D.C. — now that President Trump, with his “Triumphal Arch,” has seen its marketing value — would all be competing to own the nation’s birthday.

    It’s not just about quantifying economic impact, or maximizing visitors, or throwing grand parties, even though all those things are cool. It’s also about restoring a sense that Philly can once again do big things.

    Meanwhile, USA250, renamed Philly250, went small ball, focusing, as one civic leader told me, “merely on block parties.” Yes, there were some exciting, headline-making draws, like the FIFA World Cup games and, as Hohns had lobbied for, the Major League Baseball All-Star Game. But there wasn’t much that fit the vision of boldly using the anniversary to rebrand Philadelphia on the world stage, as the Centennial celebration had done.

    It was, in contrast to the ambitious ethos of our founding, an example of the incremental thinking that has come to be modern Philadelphia’s curse.

    But a green shoot emerged last year when a group of yes-minded civic leaders stood up to do something about it. Among them were Visit Philly CEO and Citizen Media Group board member Angela Val and Philadelphia Visitor Center CEO Katherine Ott Lovell — a pair who have come to be called the Laverne and Shirley of 2026 event planning.

    Things began happening. In early 2025, Philly250 was folded into Ott Lovell’s portfolio at the Visitor Center as Philadelphia250, with Rendell as its chair. Gregg Caren and Maria Grasso at the Convention and Visitors Bureau stepped up as well. And Parker rose to the challenge. In 2024, she named nonprofit executive Michael Newmuis the City’s 2026 director; now there was someone in city government waking up every day and thinking solely about how Philly could capitalize on the 250th. There were also now millions to spend from city coffers — the result of Thomas’s 2024 hearings on the lack of planning for 2026, hearings that pressured Parker into coughing up funds. (Even with all this, though, there were critics, including Hohns, who thought the City was simply too late to the game.)

    Meanwhile, the Connelly Foundation put together a group of philanthropic funders for the effort, including the William Penn and Comcast foundations. The $16 million Philadelphia Semiquincentennial Funder Collaborative — which now has seven founding philanthropies — would underwrite innovative plans to mark the 250th. For a city and region long characterized by siloed civic investment efforts, it modeled the power of philanthropic collaboration.

    The result? The Wall Street Journal named Philly the world’s number one place to visit in 2026. We have a potential tourism bonanza, a total estimated economic impact north of $700 million, and a solid roster of events and programming throughout the year. Under the leadership of Ott Lovell, to cite just one example, the Visitors Center has amassed an army of “Phambassadors” — everyday Philadelphians charged with helping the city and region put our best foot forward when company shows up.

    The downside, still? Scant programming that lives on after 2026 to stir and shape the civic soul. The 250th is an opportunity to create new institutions that will grow the city — as Atlanta had done following the 1996 Olympics and as Philly had done before. Past American birthdays, after all, have given us the Mann. Music Center, the African American Museum, the Please Touch Museum, and FDR Park, to name just a few.

    But that doesn’t mean it’s too late to add some substance to the 2026 sizzle, as some loosely connected local patriots have been trying to do.

    A monument to democracy?

    It’s tempting to characterize Rendell as our resident lion in winter, but when it comes to 2026, he’s been a dog with a bone. He has raised $5 million for an idea he calls the National Light — a permanent, interactive, domed monument to democracy. At a time when civics and civility are imperiled, Rendell has imagined something that’s part museum and part public square, an illuminated civic space in Center City with curated, interactive content. Something that returns us to democracy’s roots, when Athenians debated civic issues in public assemblies.

    I spoke to him recently, right after he’d read Walter Isaacson’s new book, The Greatest Sentence Ever Written, a chronicle of the 10-day collaborative editing done by Jefferson, Adams, and Franklin on the text of what would become the Declaration of Independence. Rendell ties the disunity of this moment to the fact that so few know about that one. Philadelphia250 has done polling. They found that most of the country doesn’t even know this is our national birthday. In fact, most of the country — like our city — knows very little of civic import, period.

    “Our polling shows that less than 30 percent of Philadelphians have any idea what Martin Luther King Jr. said in his ‘I Have a Dream’ speech,” Rendell told me. “They know it was a great speech. Well, at the National Light, you could see it in context, get questions answered in real time, debate the message.” Had his vision come to life, he added wistfully, “it would have been great.”

    For a time, it looked like it would happen. Rendell had hired designers, and the City even provisionally greenlit a site for his idea — the renovated, spaceship-like Fairmount Park Welcome Center at LOVE Park.

    “Sometimes we let the perfect be the enemy of progress,” Gould said. “And I wish Philadelphia could be a little more welcoming to risk.” — the Sixers’ David Gould

    But Parker mysteriously rescinded it last July. To hear her tell it, all told, Parker has invested in excess of $100 million in our 2026 celebration, though others say that number is a little misleading, given that it includes expenditures on non creative items like new cars for the city’s Department of Fleet Services, training for cops, and new crowd control barriers. The actual investment in content may be more like $75 million, they argue. Either way, Rendell’s idea ran up against all that spending. He needed another $10 million, at the very least, but the well dried up.

    Others suspect that it might not have helped that Rendell was such a fervent backer of Rebecca Rhynhart against Parker in the 2023 mayoral primary. Still others say that getting his project built wasn’t the issue; the real question was who would maintain and run it once the power of Rendell’s watchful eye was no longer on it?

    “I’m very sad,” Rendell told me from his East Falls home. “Sad for us. Because no other city has come up with anything better. If I was still governor, I would have given Philadelphia $30 million and said, Go come up with something that owns this nationally and changes Philadelphia’s direction, because America needs a new revolution — and it should start here.

    It’s an argument he made to the current occupant of his old office in Harrisburg; the state budget allocates $40 million to the 250th, but that’s spread out among the Commonwealth’s 67 counties. Yet the revolution happened here, Rendell argues. Sure, Luzerne County should have a parade — but leave that to the locals. “Why would you give $500,000 to a county that had no people living in it in 1776?” he wonders. He won’t share precisely what he said to Governor Shapiro, but it’s not hard to discern what Rendell’s political advice might have been: Focus on what you can own—particularly when you’re making a national name for yourself.

    “Josh is doing a terrific job and I support him,” Rendell told me. “But he’ll too often take the safe route. You’ve got to have some political moxie.” As for Parker, Rendell said she was afraid to spend more money. “In business,” he told me, “there’s a saying: You have to spend money to make money.”

    There’s talk that Rendell’s National Light might end up inside the Constitution Center, which is fine, I suppose, even if it smacks of a half-assed compromise. But there’s better news, at least, in that our 82-year-old former guv isn’t the city’s only would-be 2026 change agent.

    Rendering of National Light at LOVE Park. Photo courtesy ESI Design/NBBJ.

    Andy Toy, a city worker who heads the Philadelphia Policy Forum and sits on the Philadelphia250 board, called me over the summer, when the 40th anniversary of the groundbreaking Live Aid concert was underway. Why don’t we revisit that, he suggested — only this time it’s called “Democracy Aid” and instead of fighting famine in Africa, the proceeds go to civic-minded nonprofits right here? I hooked him up with legendary rock impresario and Live Aid producer Larry Magid, who rightly pointed out that not only would Toy need millions to secure the type of national acts he was targeting, but the moment probably wasn’t right for a democracy rally. In these crazy times, sad to say, being pro-democracy has come to be seen as somehow partisan.

    But Magid remembered that he’d once helped produce one of Norman Lear’s Declaration of Independence Road Trips — featuring celebrities like the late Rob Reiner dramatically reading aloud the words of our revolutionary founding. Could something like that be the answer to Boston’s throwing of shade?

    It’s not too late. I’ve talked to countless folks — people who build things — and they’re still cooking up plans for 2026 and beyond. Despite Magid’s misgivings, Toy is still dreaming of some type of ambitious concert. Another entrepreneur pointed me to a Boston (there’s that damn city again) art collective called Silence Dogood (an homage to one of Ben Franklin’s pseudonyms) that has been projecting lighted Revolutionary War messages — quotes from

    Thomas Paine, for example — in vintage-style typefaces on buildings throughout the city.

    “If I was still governor, I would have given Philadelphia $30 million and said, ‘Go come up with something that owns this nationally and changes Philadelphia’s direction, because America needs a new revolution — and it should start here.’” — former Gov. Ed Rendell

    Why not engage Philly’s Klip Collective, which has projected sensory light shows onto City Hall, to do that here, where Paine’s pamphlets began their sweep of the colonies and spread a spirit of revolution? Why not brighten our night sky with Paine’s inspiring calls to take up civic arms, messages we should once again be exporting across the nation, like, We have it in our power to begin the world over again?

    Another forward-thinking civic leader, a CEO, tells me he reached out to Philadelphia250 and wondered if the coming influx of visitors wasn’t an opportunity to sell people and businesses on relocating here.

    He offered to put together a group of CEOs to serve as volunteer tour guides for just that purpose. Imagine you’re a New York businessperson on a jaunt to Philly for the 250th and Brian Roberts is chauffeuring your group through the city, selling its charm and convenience. Maybe you’d pull up stakes in overpriced and over-congested Manhattan? Alas, no one has yet gotten back to our would-be CEO volunteer. (Which may not be surprising, since business recruitment falls not to the 2026 team but to the City’s Commerce Department, which still doesn’t have a permanent director after Alba Martinez, a big supporter of 2026 planning, stepped down last May.)

    Most promising, a group of next-gen business and civic leaders has formed to host a series of “Beyond 2026” public conversations. They had their first event at the Pennsylvania Society in New York, where, rather than simply schmooze and booze, they held a luncheon to talk about how to capitalize on 2026 and build a bigger and better city.

    It was the brainchild of Cozen O’Connor managing director Joe Hill, who seems to have his hand in all matters of policy and power in Philly, and he recruited the afore-mentioned Angela Val; Comcast’s Michelle Singer; Sixers chief corporate affairs officer David Gould; and McKinsey’s JP Julien, an inclusive economic development consultant, for a panel that tossed around a commodity we’re too often lacking in: ideas. They were egged on by Future Standard founder and CEO and Citizen Media Group co-founder Michael Forman, who challenged the room of young and young-at-heart professionals to put something on the line. A lot was said, but there was a common theme: We need a change in attitude.

    “Sometimes we let the perfect be the enemy of progress,” Gould said. “And I wish Philadelphia could be a little more welcoming to risk.”

    Welcoming to risk. It’s funny to think of those guys — and they were all guys — huddled over that parchment at 7th and Market two and a half centuries ago. The original start-up founders, on our very own cobblestoned streets. As Isaacson chronicles in his book, Jefferson and Adams differed on inalienable versus unalienable rights. Adams prevailed — we are endowed with certain unalienable, or inherent, rights. While they tussled over a prefix, it’s easy to forget how much they had at stake. They were in the tiny minority; loyalists abounded around them. Had things gone another way, they’d have been found treasonous, likely put to death. And yet there they were, fixated on just the right word to fit their revolutionary call.

    We’re here because of their welcoming of risk. And yet their attitude in the era of the Philly Shrug seems so bygone. Rendell even wrote a book about our post–20th century allergy to doing big things, titled A Nation of Wusses.

    That’s why what we do this year, of all years, matters: It’s not just about quantifying economic impact, or maximizing visitors, or throwing grand parties, even though all those things are cool. It’s also about restoring a sense that Philly can once again do big things. That we can remind the nation of our founding values, even those that, at the time, might have been aspirational: tolerance, truth, equality. That we can let New York be the financial capital, as Rendell says, and let D.C. be the political capital — but take up our own mantle as “the history and democracy capital.” That we can get our swagger back.

    And if that’s seen as arrogant or self-aggrandizing or somehow out of our reach? Well, then, as one modern-day revolutionary reminded us a few years ago: No one likes us, and we don’t care.

    MORE ON OUR SEMIQUINCENTENNIAL

    The Historic Philadelphia Block Party, part of Wawa Welcome America, brings a traditional Philadelphia community street party to Independence National Historical Park. Throughout the day, festivalgoers enjoy some of the city’s top food trucks, entertainment on two stages, street performers and interactive children’s activities.

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    Larry Platt

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  • What Should Philly Look Like in 2076? Ask an Eighth Grader

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    When eighth grader Lilly Jones thinks about Philly’s future, she worries the city will become more industrial, more tech-centered — less beautiful. She envisions self-driving cars, a Center City so full of screens and flashing lights that it looks like Times Square. More skyscrapers and less greenspace.


           Listen to the audio edition here:


    “Just walking through Philly in general, there is not a lot of green. There might be some trees here and there and in some certain parts of Philly there might be some greenery, but it’s not all of Philly,” Jones says. “I just want kids, adults, elders — whoever — to be able to see how beautiful Philly can be, if it was all natural, instead of just being fake and industrial.”

    Visions of the future — especially when it comes to design — tend to bend less toward the realistic and more towards science fiction. They might focus more on exciting technologies (anyone else still waiting for flying cars?) than the practical infrastructure like housing, bridges and greenspace that helps our society function.

    But a new program from Penn and Breakthrough of Greater Philadelphia, a Germantown nonprofit that offers teacher training and enrichment courses for middle schoolers, is setting out to change that. It asked 20 eighth graders, including Jones, to come up with practical — but exciting — designs for Philadelphia’s future. Students thought about how they could expand rec centers or increase rooftop gardens in the city. The students, already participants in Breakthrough’s programming, came from schools across the city.

    The program was part of a broader project, helmed by Penn’s Weitzman School of Design, called “New Philadelphia: The People’s Vision is Coming Soon,” which considers what Philadelphians of all ages want their city to look like in 2076.

    Photo by Kait Privitera

    A new vision for Philadelphia

    The idea for “New Philadelphia: The People’s Vision is Coming Soon” grew out of an ongoing partnership Penn architecture professor Rashida Ng has developed with the Philly Peace Park, a grassroots organization that offers sustainable farming, green economy and wellness programming at their two community parks / urban farms in North and West Philly. Ng has worked closely with the park’s leaders to bring students from her and her colleague Eduardo Rega Calvo’s spatial justice seminar to their locations, and in 2023 the Peace Park participated in Penn’s Housing Justice Futures symposium, which considered how race and climate change influence housing design and policy.

    “We think that there’s a vision here for a future of Philadelphia that is more responsive to people’s needs, their desires,” Ng says. “The idea is that the things that people want in their neighborhoods are achievable.”

    “It’s not every day where adults listen to kids. [We] can give adults ideas on how we want the future to look like for ourselves and our kids and I think we can — as a community with adults and other children — make this world more than what it is.” — Lilly Jones, 8th grader

    Ng was thinking about design and the future of Philly ahead of the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence this year. She was inspired, in part, by some of the counterprotests that took place in Philly over the bicentennial in 1976, when more than 40,000 people marched in protest of the Vietnam War, unemployment, racial inequality and poverty in the city. Ahead of the 250th, Ng wanted to create an opportunity for Philadelphians to share what they wanted for their neighborhoods, how they envisioned them growing and changing, over the next 50 years. She partnered with the Peace Park on these efforts because of their track record of engaging with neighbors on design efforts.

    “We really want to encourage people to reflect and remember that America is still an experiment. It’s continuous, and that means that we can actually transform what the future looks like,” says Lavinia Davis, director of operations and special programs for Philly Peace Park. “But we have to do it together.”

    As part of the program, Ng and her partners knew they wanted to elevate the voices of children, who are often left out of the city planning process. Ng had spoken at Breakthrough’s career conversations events in the past, so they felt like a natural partner to bring children’s voices into the project. She worked with DesignPhiladelphia, a nonprofit that offers design education programming for kindergarteners through 12th graders in Philly, to create a curriculum.

    Then, they brought in a team of Penn grad students to teach courses on planning and design across nine sessions, held every two weeks during Breakthrough’s fall semester. Lessons focused on everything from sustainability and resiliency to how design affects community building.

    “I think it’s important to expose them to design and the role that it plays in society,” says Michael Spain, director of design education for DesignPhiladelphia. “If they understand these concepts and how it works and how it affects them, we’ve done our job.”

    Photo by Kait Privitera

    Designing Philly’s future

    The program started small, teaching students about “third spaces” — places outside of home, work or school where people can gather and build community. Then, they asked students to build models and collages of third spaces that either already existed in their lives or that they would like to see using construction paper, cardboard and magazine clippings.

    Some students mentioned libraries and recreation centers in their neighborhoods. Others said Breakthrough was their third space. Many designed spaces had outdoor areas with fields or basketball courts and indoor spaces where they could spend quiet time reading or playing on a tablet. Philly has more than 150 recreation centers, but students wanted more places where young people could gather for free. (Makes sense, considering they’ve been banned from malls, carnivals and a host of other places).

    “There’s not a lot of community centers in Philly, so that’s what we put in our new city model,” says Kaleah Parker, a student who participated in the program. “It had libraries, basketball courts, track fields, football fields, and it was about access to stuff you could do outside of home and school.”

    “We want to encourage people to remember that America is still an experiment. It’s continuous … we can actually transform what the future looks like. But we have to do it together.” — Lavinia Davis, Philly Peace Park.

    As the program progressed, students moved from designing individual spaces to neighborhoods and considering what they want Philly as a whole to look like. Instructors asked students what they’d keep from Philly’s existing infrastructure — they loved our historic sites, the promise of the stadium district and Philly’s 4,000 murals — and what they’d change. Many said they wanted more natural space, like urban forests in the city. Others took a more futuristic approach to greening the city, envisioning rooftop gardens and covering our sports arenas with vining plants. They drew sketches and built models, and used AI design tools.

    “I was able to be creative and work with them to make ideas for a better future for all of us,” says Andy Nguyen, another student who participated in the program. “We learned how to keep clean and care for the environment in the projects that we worked on.”

    Jones wants to create a greener city as a way to counter both the lack of nature she sees when she walks through the city today and the industrialism she fears is in store for the future. She liked working with other students to combine their ideas. The program also got her interested in becoming a graphic designer.

    “It’s not every day where adults listen to kids,” she says. “I think us kids can give adults ideas on how we want the future to look like for ourselves and our kids and I think we can — as a community with adults and other children — make this world more than what it is.”

    Photo by Kait Privitera

    What will Philly actually look like in 2076?

    Ng is in the process of reviewing the student’s projects so that she can work with the Philly Peace Park and an AI visualization lab to incorporate them into part of “New Philadelphia: The People’s Vision is Coming Soon,” a larger exhibit coming later this year. Students who participated in the program also had an opportunity to share their designs last month with teachers, parents and friends.

    “Each individual eighth grader had a different view of their community,” says Sakina Parks, program manager for Breakthrough.

    While the City might not be gathering ideas from eighth graders any time soon, design educators say it’s important to think about the needs of children when designing cities. Kids will have to live with the design decisions adults make. Today’s eighth grader will be in their sixties for the country’s tricentennial.

    When city planners think about the need the needs of vulnerable residents — including children, women and the elderly — they make cities safer and more accessible for everyone. Kids are also good at outside-of-the-box, innovative thinking.

    Ng says, “What’s really wonderful about children is … their ideas about the future are a little bit less fixed, and it’s sometimes easier to tap into the imaginations of children.”

    The process also transformed the students themselves, encouraging them to think about environmental justice and homelessness — and how better urban design can help ensure people have affordable, healthy places to live.

    “We’re not necessarily creating more designers, but good citizens,” Spain says.

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    Photo by Kait Privitera

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    Courtney DuChene

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