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Love Park of Philadelphia
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Look up to Love
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In Front of Love
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Philadelphia Sky
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philadelphia
21 items
set
Philadelphia cityscapes
girls
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girls
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chestnut st.
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the victory building, before renovations. If not, it was right next door.
victory building
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the victory building before renovations, 2003
el vez sign
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blue glow
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wedding dress
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Actually, I've never even been a bridesmaid ...
Zagar's garden
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www.isaiahzagar.org/
Isaiah Zagar's sculpture garden
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Around 10th & South. www.isaiahzagar.org/
looking up...
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urban decay streetscape
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ivy house
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ivy house
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up#2
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green lot
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thru the fence
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Around 13th & South
100_1888
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field of dreams
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Considering the prices of center city real estate, I'm surprised this block still exists in its current state - with two amazingly beautiful abandoned buildings so close to the center of the action.
overgrowth
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Elfreth's Alley
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Elfreth's Alley, Philadelphia
Elfreth's Alley is one of Philadelphia's oldest and longest-surviving working class neighborhoods. The alleyway was opened in 1702 by John Gilbert and Arthur Wells, two property owners who combined their land at the property line to create a small subdivision in the interior of one of William Penn's great blocks. Today there are 32 homes lining the alley built between 1728 and 1836, and they form one of the last intact 18th century streetscapes in the nation. The Alley has been home to more than 3,000 people over the last 300 years - ordinary men and women who lived and worked in sometimes dirty, dangerous, and crowded conditions.
(info taken from www.elfrethsalley.org/history.htm )
Benjamin Franklin once lived here although no one is sure in just which house. Betsy Ross visited the alley, because, although at the time of the Revolution Philadelphia was the second largest city under British rule (London was larger),
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