Police Headquarters

Stand on the south side of Race Street between 7th and 8th streets. You are now standing in the midst of the former entertainment district that Franklin Square was once known for. Not long after Jane Jacobs observed the square, urban renewal clearance began in this area. In the late 1960s, the commercial buildings on this block were replaced by the Philadelphia Police Headquarters, an iconic modern building known informally as the Roundhouse, and its large parking lot to the rear. Although the headquarters was designed to have a main entrance facing Race Street, this is now closed, as you can see, and the only way in and out is through the parking lot, emphasizing the automobile orientation of the landscape created by urban renewal. The police department has been seeking to move to another location for many years, but any such relocation would involve expense and controversy.

Directly across the street from the police headquarters is another round modern building that was constructed as Metropolitan Hospital in the 1960s. It was closed in the late 1980s and turned into residential condominiums in the mid 2000s.

The public art visible in this urban renewal landscape on Race Street presents a provocative contrast. In front of the former main entrance of the police headquarters there is a conventional, highly representational statue of a policeman carrying a child to safety. Meanwhile, a modern, abstract metal sculpture adorns the lawn of the former hospital across the street. What messages do these artworks send?

You can see the initial plans for this area in the image from the 1962 urban renewal plan. What do these plans and the scene you are observing here suggest to you about the urban and architectural designs used in urban renewal? Do you think they are effective? Why or why not? 

Image source: Independence Mall (Unit 4) Redevelopment Area Plan, 1962

Port Deposit
  1. Rock Run Mill - North Main Street between Mill Street and Granite Avenue
  2. First Baptist Church - 282 North Main Street
  3. Bethel A.M.E. Church - 196 North Main Street
  4. Midtown Market - 190 North Main Street (area)
  5. St. Teresa's Roman Catholic Church - 162 North Main Street
  6. The Old Sorrel - 158-160 North Main Street
  7. Site of the former McNeilly House - 131-133 North Main Street
  8. Midtown Market (more recently) - 175 North Main Street
  9. (former) Tome Memorial Methodist Church - 102 North Main Street
  10. Paw Paw Building - Port Deposit Heritage Museum - 98 North Main Street
  11. Nesbitt Hall - 99 North Main Street
  12. Creswell's Marble Shop - 97 North Main Street
  13. The Blackburn House - 75 North Main Street
  14. The Swiss Chalet - 68 North Main Street
  15. Municipal Building - 55 North Main Street
  16. Boyle House - 29 North Main Street
  17. Abrahams Building - 15 North Main Street
  18. 1 Center Street
  19. Museum - U. S. Naval Training Center Bainbridge - 6 South Main Street
  20. Gerry House - 18 South Main Street
  21. Falls Hotel - 26 South Main Street
  22. Presbyterian Church - 44 South Main Street
  23. Touchstone House - 48 South Main Street
  24. Steps (to Liberty) - 64 South Main Street
  25. Archway to Washington Hall (site of former Tome School) - 60 block South Main Street
  26. The Carriage House - 80 South Main Street
  27. McClenahan Mansion - 90 South Main Street
  28. The Gas House - on the Promenade
  29. Jacob's Ladder - 98 South Main Street
  30. Promenade - along the waterfront
  31. VFW - Jerry Skrivanek V.F.W. Post 8185
  32. What's the background story of the V.F.W. organization?
  33. What's the story of a military tank in the parking lot at the VFW?
  34. Who was Jerry Skrivanek and why does he have a VFW named after him?