
In the "My Philadelphia" contest, students from Philadelphia shared their visions of the city. Check out the winning entries.

In the "My Philadelphia" contest, students from Philadelphia shared their visions of the city. Check out the winning entries.
Nov. 25, 2007
Being “green” is part of this city’s DNA. From its founding, Philadelphia was meant to be a “Greene Countrie Town,” set between two rivers, nestled into Penn’s Woods. As big, brawny and brawling as Philadelphia became, something in the city’s soul always aspired to live at respectful ease with nature, to preserve its legacy of urban forest and flowing rivers, to let green beauty feed its spirit.
That aspiration found its voice in the 2007 city elections, as issues of environment – preserving parks, reducing energy use, building “green” – moved toward center stage as never before, pushed by groups such as the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, Philadelphia Parks Alliance and PennFuture’s Next Great City project.
Environmental issues aren’t just a preoccupation of comfortable elites. From all corners of the city came a cry to fight the creeping ugliness, to pick up litter, thwart graffiti, clean trash-strewn lots, plant shade trees on broiling blocks. These ideas are urban and practical; they attack the disorder that breeds crime and ruins neighborhoods. Citizen forums made it clear: People all over the city thirst to live with beauty, to be part of William Penn’s green vision.
Living up to that legacy is not easy. Our bad habits are many. These goals have long been low on the priority list, so finding the will and money to achieve them is hard. But clearly “the environmental agenda” no longer smacks of distant, optional, suburban concerns. It can be part of the city’s economic strategy and help lift up its hardest blocks. Working to be “green” can, to quote the most famous Philadelphian of them all, make a city healthy, wealthy and wise.
The following steps could help:
Dogged devotion:
Create more dog runs at parks and recreation spots. These help keep animal waste off streets and create good neighborhood gathering spots.
(Illustration by Tim Ogline)