Trees, Parks & Greenspace

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Trees, Parks & Greenspace

Join Us for Fall Garden Plant Day in Germantown

Germantown United CDC invites you to participate in our Fall Garden Plant Day on Saturday, November 4, from 11 am to 2 pm. This event is an opportunity for community members to come together and help beautify our neighborhood by planting perennial plants and preparing the gardens for the upcoming season.

The meeting point for the event will be at the top of Maplewood Mall, at the intersection of Greene and Armat Streets. All skill levels are welcome, so whether you’re an experienced gardener or just looking to lend a helping hand, we’d love to have you join us.

This event is made possible with support from the City of Philadelphia and the Department of Commerce, and through the dedicated efforts of Candice Price Garden Design and the Germantown Garden Guild.

Let’s make our neighborhood bloom together! If you plan on attending, please let us know you’re coming by registering here >>

We look forward to seeing you there and working together to create a more beautiful Germantown!

First Daffodil Bloom

Spring has definitely sprung! Germantown United CDC now supports the maintenance of several public spaces within our service area, including the renovated bus transfer plaza at W Chelten Avenue and Greene Street, also known as The Chelten Greene. Last year, we started working with Candice Price Garden Design to care for the garden here and at each end of Maplewood Mall to bring more beauty to our neighborhood. In November, dozens of volunteers came out to plant thousands of spring bulbs with us. All that work is paying off! Thanks again to everyone that came out to dig in the dirt!

Germantown United CDC featured in The Philadelphia Inquirer today

Parks can be a powerful tool to rescue struggling commercial areas. Pulitzer prize-winning writer Inga Saffron, architecture critic for The Philadelphia Inquirer, recently visited Germantown to tour the newly renovated Vernon Park, which fronts Germantown’s central business district. Read her take on the park’s comeback, neighborhood revitalization, and rising development in Germantown.

The article features Ruth Seeley, the president of the Friends of Vernon Park – the organization that courageously led the charge for the park renovations – alongside Germantown United CDC’s new Commercial Corridor Manager Emaleigh Doley, who discussed the challenges impacting efforts to improve the nearby shopping district.

This is an exciting time for Germantown. If you are energized about the neighborhood’s potential, consider joining one of the many civic groups – like Friends of Vernon Park, your local Registered Community Organization (RCO), or GU’s own volunteer committee – and get involved in moving Germantown forward!

read the full story in The Philadelphia Inquirer

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read the full story

Volunteer in Germantown at the Philly Spring Cleanup on Saturday, April 9

Update! The 9th annual Philly Spring Cleanup has been postponed until next Saturday, April 16th citywide due to weather. If you were planning on volunteering at one of the many Germantown-based cleanup projects check with the organizer to see if it’s being rescheduled. Germantown United CDC’s project, in collaboration with the Penn Knox Neighborhood Association has been moved to April 16. Read the full notice from the Streets Department >>

psc-share-400x600The 9th Annual Philly Spring Cleanup is set for Saturday, April 16th from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. (rescheduled from April 9th)! This is a great way for you, your family, your friends and your neighbors to get involved and do your part to keep our City looking its best. Dedication like yours, along with the can-do attitude of thousands of volunteers all over the city, is exactly what we need to meet our goals.

In Germantown there will be a huge presence felt all over the neighborhood with over a dozen official projects registered! Can you feel it? It’s momentum. Keep up the sweep up!

Germantown United CDC has one big project planned for the big day – we’ll be partnering with the Penn Knox Neighborhood Association on a cleanup of the Lower Germantown Business District along Germantown Avenue.

See the full list of Philly Spring Cleanup projects in Germantown below and sign up to volunteer!


Lower Germantown Business District Cleanup with Germantown United CDC & Penn Knox Neighborhood Association

Cleanup Location: 5300 Germantown Avenue

Join Germantown United CDC and Penn Knox Neighborhood Association‘s cleanup of the lower Germantown business district. Volunteers will clean the grounds of the historic Trinity Lutheran Church at 5300 Germantown Avenue and the stretch of Germantown Avenue between Penn Street and Seymour Street (5300, 5200, 5100, 5000 blocks of Germantown Ave). Supplies will be available for cleanup participants! This is a family-friendly volunteer group.

Register: Online at phillyspringcleanup.com | On Facebook at facebook.com/events/1667738116820412/

Questions for GUCDC or Penn Knox Neighborhood Association? Contact Germantown United CDC at [email protected] or 215-856-4303. Contact Penn Knox Neighborhood Assoc. at [email protected] or 215-833-3483.

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Volunteer for one of many other Philly Spring Cleanup project sites in Germantown! 

cleanup map

Sign up in advance or just show up to lend a hand!

1. 5200 Knox Street Block Clean Up
Location: 5200 Knox Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19144

2. Baynton Hill Clean Up
Location: Wister Train Station, Wister Station, Rufe St., E Penn St., Baynton St., Philadelphia, PA, 19144

3. 4800 Germantown Avenue Block Clean Up
4800 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia, PA, 19144 – Activities: clean up and bag trash and recyclables

4. Chew & Belfield Neighbors,Inc.
Location: 6211 W. Chew Ave., Philadelphia, PA, 19138 – Activities: Clean empty lots, Prune And cut down trees, Paint curbs, Remove debris, Teach how to keep community clean & safe, Clean yards and alleys

5. Clean lot on Manheim and Tocoma St.
Southside Church, 5058 Wayne Ave., Philadelphia, PA, 19120

6. Duval Improvement Association Neighborhoold Cleanup
Sherman & Pomona Streets (6328 Sherman), Philadelphia, PA, 19144
Activities: Cleanup various areas including under the railroad bridge at Pomona and Sherman Streets.

7. Educators and field Study Instructors Partner with Philly Spring Clean Up Volunteers at Awbury Arboretum
Location: Agricultural Village at Awbury Arboretum, Across from Septa’s Washington Lane Train Station, 901 E. washington Lane, Philadelphia, PA, 19138
Activities: Digging, cutting and pulling invasive plants

8. Germantown Ave. and Wayne Junction Clean Up
Location: Germantown Ave. and Stenton Ave., 4518 Germantown Ave., Philadelphia, PA, 19144
Activities: Cleaning up from Manheim and Germantown south to Stenton Ave. and Germantown Ave. and the Wayne Junction area.

9. Hood Cemetery Clean Up
Location: The Hood Cemetery, 4901 Germantown Ave, Philadelphia, PA 19144, Philadelphia, PA, 19144
Activities: Street clean up down historic E Logan St, from Wakefield St to Germantown Ave, and along Germantown Ave from the corner of E Logan to New Germantown Pizza (4923 Germantown Ave).

10. Keep Lingelbach Community Clean
Location: Lingelbach Elementary School, 6340 Wayne Avenue, Philadelphia, PA, 19144
Activities: Clean area surrounding Lingelbach Elementary School that is most widely traveled by our students as they walk to and from school.

11. Let’s Get These lots clean!
Location: 126 E Herman St , Philadelphia, PA, 19144
Activities: Help clean up abandon lots in Germantown! We need help removing trash and cutting down over grown grass and bushes.

12. Lower Germantown Business District Cleanup with Germantown United CDC and Penn Knox Neighborhood Association
Location: Trinity Lutheran Church, 5300 Germantown Avenue, Between Penn St and Queen Lane, Philadelphia, PA, 19144
Activities: sweeping and bagging up litter/trash along the sidewalk and street of the Germantown Avenue business corridor (5300, 5200, 5100, 5000 blocks); raking leaves, picking up sticks, general cleanup and maintenance of Trinity Lutheran Church grounds (5300 Germantown Avenue)

Office of Sustainability Greenworks Germantown Discussion, Wednesday, May 4

GWlogo2015Please join the City of Philadelphia’s Office of Sustainability and Germantown United CDC on May 4th 6:30 p.m. at the Flying Horse Center at 5534 Pulaski Ave for a discussion about Greenworks and how Philadelphia’s sustainability plans can help improve your community quality of life.
 
Over the past eight years, Philadelphia’s Greenworks plan has set a path for Philadelphia to become a more sustainable, vibrant and healthy city to live work and play. As the plan was designed to expire in 2015, the Office of Sustainability is now beginning the process of updating the plan to set goals for the next eight years and beyond.
 
Join us to share your thoughts on how Greenworks can better meet the needs of your community, what issues are most pressing to you, and what programs or initiatives you’d like to see in the coming years.
 
Please RSVP and share this invitation with your members and other interested neighbors. If you are unable to attend you can also share your thoughts through this online survey, or join us for a Twitter chat on April 22nd from 12:00-1:00 p.m.

Neighbors rally to save urban farm in Germantown – learn how you can help

garden_2011_may_29_043-2The Germantown community has an extraordinary opportunity to acquire a 0.65-acre parcel of land at 5407 Wissahickon Avenue, formerly the site of the Old Tennis Court Farm, and reactivate this once-thriving community garden.

With the goal of raising the full purchase price for the land and related costs by late October 2016, the gardeners of the Old Tennis Court Farm and the Friends of Cloverly Park are working with Natural Lands Trust to purchase the property, protect it in perpetuity through a conservation easement, and return it to productive community green space.

The Old Tennis Court Farm Protection Project is a partnership of the Old Tennis Court Farm gardeners and the Friends of Cloverly Park. Germantown United CDC is serving as fiscal sponsor.

Make a tax-deductible donation toward the purchase of the Old Tennis Court Farmsite online via GUCDC’s website or by mail with a downloadable donation form.

Visit friendsofcloverlypark.org for fundraising updates and additional information about the project.

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Project Background

In 2009, members of the Germantown Monthly Meeting and other community members founded a community garden on the site of the former tennis courts of Germantown Friends School in the 5400 block of Wissahickon Avenue, adjacent to Cloverly Park. In 2015 the garden was closed so that GFS could sell the property.

The Old Tennis Court Farm made a significant contribution to its surrounding community:

  • It was a place for Germantown neighbors of all ages, races, genders, and financial status to work and learn together as they grew fresh organic fruits and vegetables for their own tables and those of family, friends, neighbors, and local food security programs.
  • Of its 47 plots, eight were maintained as community service plots specifically for donation to local food security programs, and several individual gardeners also contributed produce to the community. Over six years, thousands of pounds of fresh, organic fruit and vegetables were donated to programs such as those of Whosoever Gospel Mission, SHARE, and others.

With a goal of acquiring and preserving the property at 5407 Wissahickon Avenue and returning it to productive community greenspace, the Old Tennis Court Farm Protection Project is a collective effort of the Old Tennis Court Farm gardeners, the Friends of Cloverly Park, and Natural Lands Trust. Neighborhood Gardens Trust is providing technical assistance and Germantown United CDC is serving as fiscal sponsor.

Purchase of the 0.65-acre site by Natural Lands Trust would preserve the site in perpetuity and allow for eventual transfer to an entity such as the City of Philadelphia (as part of Cloverly Park) or Neighborhood Gardens Trust.

Once returned to operation, the Old Tennis Court Farm would:

  • Provide a sunny area to grow nutritious organic fruit and vegetables for neighbors without adequate garden space;
  • Offer mentoring for those with little or no gardening experience;
  • Provide healthy food to neighbors in need and local food security programs;
  • Invite local schools and organizations to schedule service days or cultivate group plots;
  • Serve as forum for neighbors who otherwise might not meet and share interests;
  • Showcase off-grid solar power to motivate energy sustainability by local residents, schools, and other neighborhood gardens; and
  • Absorb stormwater and prevent additional run-off into the Wissahickon watershed.

To date, the effort has received widespread encouragement and support, including that of members of Philadelphia’s City Council, the Senate and House of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the Secretary of Agriculture of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the Philadelphia Department of Parks & Recreation, the City Commissioner and City Planning Commission, Germantown United CDC, multiple community organizations, and neighborhood associations.

Announcement: Cleaning Services in the Central Germantown Business District

Supplementary street cleaning services in Germantown’s central business district will be continued thanks to a partnership between the Germantown Special Services District (GSSD) and Germantown United CDC (GU). This interim service plan aims to support the neighborhood’s merchant community, residents and visitors by providing clean and inviting streets in the heart of Germantown. As part of this collaborative effort, street sweeping–a service provided by the GSSD that was limited due to constraints in recent months, has been secured for an additional eight weeks, three times weekly. Services will continue to be provided by Friends of Germantown Northwest, LLC.

Both the GSSD and GUCDC support merchants and commercial property owners as part of their respective organizational missions.

This interim service plan is being funded by Germantown United CDC, who has reallocated $26,800 awarded to the organization by the Philadelphia Department of Commerce. The funding will also supplement the GSSD’s operational costs through June 30, 2019. During this time, the GSSD will continue its work to reestablish regular year-round services.

“The interim service plan grew from our shared desire to address the immediate and pressing need for clean streets in Germantown’s primary commercial artery,” says Julie Stapleton-Carroll, board president of GUCDC.

“The GSSD’s board of director’s is committed to the development of a long-term and sustainable solution. This collaboration signals a desire on the part of the Germantown Special Services District and Germantown United CDC to work together in the best interest of our community,” added Trapeta B. Mayson, interim board president of the GSSD.

The GSSD and GUCDC thank the Philadelphia Department of Commerce, Mayor Kenney, and 8th District Councilwoman Cindy Bass for their continued partnership and support of our efforts.

Photos courtesy of Friends of Germantown NW

ABOUT THE ORGANIZATIONS

The Germantown Special Services District is a locally directed municipal authority established to supplement services already provided by the City of Philadelphia. The GSSD provides services and activities that improve the cleanliness and physical conditions of the district and improve public safety. The support of property owners, merchants, local partners, city entities and residents are integral to the GSSD’s success. Learn more at germantownssd.com.

Germantown United CDC’s mission is to promote and facilitate the revitalization of Germantown and its business corridors. GUCDC currently holds a contract with the Department Commerce to provide commercial corridor management, a program that facilitates direct outreach to Germantown businesses to connect them with capacity-building and financial resources provided by the City and other organizations. These grant and loan opportunities are vital to launching, renovating and expanding businesses, improving storefronts and interiors, purchasing equipment, installing security systems, and more. Learn more at germantownunitedcdc.org.

Germantown Business Corridor Beautification Project Updates

Thousands of daffodil and crocus bulbs were planted on November 5th at three public spaces within the Central Germantown commercial corridor.

The planting prioritized locations with high pedestrian/commuter traffic and good visibility from the roadway. This beautification effort is part of Germantown United CDC’s Clean Corridors Program, supported by the City of Philadelphia Department of Commerce and the PHL Taking Care of Business Program. 

A wonderful group of volunteers made this massive planting project possible! 15+ G-town residents, business owners, and volunteers from the Weavers Way “Cooperator program worked alongside crews from GU, the Germantown Garden Guild, and Friends of Germantown NW.

Gardens at the corner of Germantown Avenue and Armat Street

Flowers were planted at:

  • The Chelten Greene (75-77 W Chelten Ave), a plaza and key bus stop at the northwest corner of Chelten Avenue and Greene Street. The plaza features a new bus shelter, wifi kiosk, plentiful seating, and a large elevated planting bed spanning the eastern edge of the space. The space is centrally located, adjacent to Vernon Park and across from the Joseph E. Coleman Northwest Regional Library.
  • The public plazas at Maplewood Mall, located at each end of the block. The plazas feature sweeping gardens and low seat walls for people to gather. The project focused on the gardens at the intersections of Germantown Avenue and Armat Street and Germantown Avenue and Greene Street, two locations with high visibility. A public art installation by Germantown-based artist and business owner Kate Kaman will be added to this location soon, part of the City’s Percent for Art program. 

GU provides stewardship, cleaning, and maintenance services within the Central Germantown corridor five days a week. Caring for and maintaining these spaces helps to foster greater civic engagement, supports revitalization efforts, and enhances environmental sustainability.

We hope to inspire a community of action-takers and build a sense of stewardship with our home. To this end, GU supported the founding of the Germantown Garden Guild in summer 2022. The volunteer-driven group contributed to the upkeep of the gardens at Maplewood Mall and The Chelten Greene, under the leadership of Candice Price, hired by GU to maintain and care for the green spaces that are part of the Clean Corridors Program during the growing season.

We’re looking forward to improving upon and continuing this work in 2023!

Working to Keep Germantown Clean

Germantown United CDC’s corridor cleaning team joined the Philadelphia Commerce Department and elected officials to celebrate the hard work and great achievements of all 200+ PHL Taking Care of Business Corridor Cleaning Program (PHL TCB) ambassadors from around the city at a Pep Rally on Earth Day.

Mayor Jim Kenney speaks at the TCB Rally, April 22, 2022

In neighborhoods across Philadelphia, PHL TCB cleaning is carried out by small crews of uniformed Cleaning Ambassadors deployed along scheduled cleaning routes identified by the City and local community organizations. Some organizations hire their own staff to perform the cleaning, other organizations contract with a private cleaning provider. In Germantown, our partners are Depaul USA and Friends of Germantown NW, two Germantown-based groups.

All PHL TCB Cleaning Ambassadors earn a minimum of $15 per hour and receive paid workforce training opportunities to equip them to perform their jobs and help them advance in their careers.

Earlier this month, Commerce released a report prepared by the policy research firm Econsult Solutions sharing the 2021 impact of the TCB program in meeting its four main goals:

  1. Making commercial districts in Philadelphia neighborhoods cleaner.
  2. Promoting the economic success of neighborhood businesses by creating an inviting environment for shoppers.
  3. Creating work opportunities for Philadelphians.
  4. Growing the capacity of local small businesses and organizations that provide cleaning services.

The results? Cleaner corridors, satisfied merchants and shoppers, quality jobs created, and greater opportunities for local cleaning firms.

Philadelphia Streets Commissioner Carlton Williams (L) with Germantown United CDC’s Matthew George (R)