THE PARRISH COMMUNITY PARK
How a group of hard-working neighbors created The Fastest Park in the East.
November/December 1980
By Paul Hogan
Here's how a group of hard-working neighbors created "The Fastest Park in th e East", otherwise known as . . .
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By Paul Hogan
In MOTHER NO. 65, we reported on "Urban Homesteading", an inner-city renovation program — established in Philadelphia, Baltimore, and other cities — which allows citizens to purchase abandoned or repossessed houses for "a dollar down". . . and then helps the buyers obtain loans to restore their newly acquired properties. Now we'd like to share with you a story — about an offshoot of the original program — that describes how residents of one such "made-over" neighborhood pooled their time and resources to create a community park . . . for a total cost of one dollar!
While I usually work with community groups to plan and build public playgrounds, I agreed — several years ago — to help the people of Philadelphia's Parrish Street Community develop their own neighborhood mini- park.
The project began with a "block meeting", during which the community members gathered and discussed what they . . . wanted to do with the tiny vacant lot . . . . . . they'd purchased for $1.00 — under the urban homestead program — from the city. It was decided that the area really had no need for a playground (one had just been built nearby). Instead, the group decided to create a quiet place for older folks . . . a park which would provide them with room to relax, plant flowers, sit under a tree and play checkers, or work in a small community vegetable garden. (I was pleased to observe that the neighborhood children recognized the needs of their parents and their grandparents, and agreed to help.)
After the initial gathering, we held three or four "design meetings", which allowed all the parties involved with the park to discuss its layout and construction. Representatives from the city, Bell Telephone of Pennsylvania, the Garden Club of America, the Playground Clearing House, the Pennsylvania Department of Community Affairs, and the classrooms of the nearby elementary school — as well as the entire block association — attended the sessions.
When the time came for real "roll up your sleeves and get busy" work, almost everyone in the neighborhood assembled to help clear the lot. City workers removed old cars, mattresses, and shopping carts . . . the children rounded up . . . smaller items (such as throwaway bottles and cans) . . . and older residents used wheelbarrows to haul the accumulated litter to the corner trash basket. In two days the lot stood empty and waiting.
The local telephone company donated topsoil, utility poles, and the concrete needed to repair the sidewalk. Free labor was contributed by community members. My only moment of apprehension during the entire project came as we finished pouring the sidewalk. In an effort to forestall the obvious, I delivered a short lecture to the young ones. "Hey, I know there's one thing that you and I would love to do . . . and that's write our names, draw pictures, and put our handprints in the concrete, right?"