Philadelphia's Center City West is the downtown area west of City Hall. It contains downtown's upscale shopping district, the financial district, and the museum district along the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, culminating in the Philadelphia Art Museum and Fairmount Park. To the east is Broad Street, Philadelphia's arts corridor, and the east side of Center City; to the south is the quieter end of South Street and South Philly; and to the west, beyond the Schuylkill River, is West Philly and University City.

Understand edit

When Philadelphia was settled by Europeans, the core of the city was on the eastern part of the city, nearby the Delaware River, in what is now Old City. City founder William Penn plotted out the entire grid street structure of Center City from the Delaware to the Schuylkill Rivers so that the city would develop in an organized fashion, and over time the city did extend development westward and beyond.

Because Old City was where the business and market areas were concentrated, much of the western half of Center City became the residential neighborhood. A lot of the housing stock dates from the 1800s, when wealthy businessmen built their homes alongside communities of working-class neighborhoods. In the 1950s, Philadelphia began to expand the business district westward as well, and with the University of Pennsylvania located just across the Schuylkill River, the area has retained its desirability for many residents. In particular, Rittenhouse Square is surrounded by high-rise apartment towers housing the moneyed elite, and the neighboring blocks have long been one of the most desirable residential locations in Philadelphia. Fortunately, the park itself has retained a unique ability to exclude no one, no small feat considering Philadelphia's history of tension between different racial and social classes. On any given day, especially weekends and in the summer, the park will be populated and used by just about anyone and everyone.

Commercial businesses came westward with the planning of Penn Center, a rather unwelcoming business district west of City Hall just north of Market Street. However, this enabled other commercial development to occur in the area, and in 1985 One Liberty Place became the first building to break the unofficial height limit in Philadelphia, which was top of Penn's hat on City Hall. With a ground floor mall at the base of the building, this development helped spur retail development, which in turn contributed to the reversal of urban blight and flight in the early 1990s. Today, the three blocks north of Rittenhouse Square (Walnut, Sansom and Chestnut Streets) and eastward to Broad Street is Center City's upscale shopping district, where fashionable clothing brands have established a presence. In addition, many restaurants, bars and nightlife destinations are located in this particular area as well.

North of the business district is the spectacular Benjamin Franklin Parkway, a grand boulevard that begins at the famous LOVE Park near City Hall and continues northwest, through Logan Circle, and ends at the Philadelphia Art Museum and Fairmount Park. Designed in 1917, the Parkway is one of the city's earliest urban renewal projects and takes many of its cues from similar boulevards in France. Today, the parkway is the spine on which most of the city's museums are located.

Get in edit

 
Map of Philadelphia/Center City West

By train edit

Center City is served by SEPTA trains, both the subway and regional rail. All regional rail lines stop in Center City West, at Suburban Station (16th St and JFK Blvd). If you are coming in from the airport, or Trenton, trains will stop here. Suburban Station only serves SEPTA trains, so if you are coming into Philadelphia on Amtrak, you will disembark at 30th Street Station, just across the Schuylkill River.

SEPTA has only two subway lines, both of which run through Center City. The Market-Frankford Line (or the El, because it used to be elevated) is an east-west line running underneath Market Street, connecting West Philly to Northeast Philadelphia. Unfortunately, because the subway was constructed at a time when nothing much existed between the Schuylkill River and City Hall, it does not stop in the middle of Center City West. The Broad Street Line is the second subway line, running north-south. However, as Center City is best explored on foot, just get off at City Hall and walk; no need to make a transfer on the subway line unless Center City is not actually your final destination.

A third train line, operated by the Delaware River Port Authority (DRPA) is called PATCO and comes in from Camden across the Delaware River. The train terminates in Center City West at 15th and Locust.

By trolley edit

SEPTA runs trolleys from West Philly and University City into Center City West, which stops at 22nd, 19th and 15th Streets before terminating at City Hall. If you are coming in from the west, trolleys are slower but can be more convenient depending on your final destination. In Center City, trolleys run underground.

See edit

  • 1 Academy of Natural Sciences, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Pkwy (Parking is metered on the street or at a nearby pay lot.), +1 215-299-1000, . M-F 10AM-4:30PM, Sa Su 10AM-5PM. Not just a natural history museum, this institution also has an active research arm and library. Highlights of the museum include a 2-story dinosaur exhibit, a butterfly walk-through area, and a children's nature center with live animals. It is the oldest natural science research institution and museum in the Americas. $17.95 adults (13 & up), $13.95 children, $14.95 seniors/military/students, AAA discount $1.
  • 2 Barnes Foundation, 2025 Benjamin Franklin Pkwy (parking is at 2020 Pennsylvania Ave. $12 to 4 hours; $2 each additional hour), +1 215-278-7200, . M 10AM-5PM, Tu closed, W-Su 10AM-5PM. One of the world's most important collections of post-impressionist and modernist art, open in this location since 2012. Advance reservations strongly recommended (weeks in advance for week-end time slots); a limited number of tickets is available for same-day visits. $22–25 (weekends are higher price), children $10, discounts for seniors and students with ID.    
  • 3 The Comcast Center, 1701 John F Kennedy Blvd. Opened in 2008, at 975 feet tall, the Comcast Center is Philadelphia's tallest skyscraper and the headquareters of the cable provider. The building features a public plaza with a gorgeous fountain display, a dramatic eight-story “Winter Garden” and an energy-saving “glass curtain” that wraps around the Comcast Center, allowing for a 360° view of Philadelphia’s urban landscape. The building has also unveiled a Sony Style Comcast Labs Store, which includes an “Interactive Technology Lab” that is open to the public. The lobby has garnered attention as a tourist attraction. At first glance, the north wall of its lobby appears to be a wood veneer wall, but actually, it's a massive 2,000 square feet high-definition LED screen that's just displaying a picture of a wood veneer wall. Wait a minute, and a dancing figure might appear on the wall, or the entire wall might fade out and be replaced with a photograph or a video show. The computer-generated images are so realistic, you’ll think they’re jumping out of the wall. With a resolution 500% greater than that of an HD television, the Comcast Experience is a remarkable technological and artistic achievement. The video wall, a giant HD video screen that is actually the largest four-millimeter LED screen in the world, is located right in the building’s publicly accessible main lobby, so everyone can enjoy it. Visit during the holidays for special seasonal displays.
 
The Franklin Institute Science Museum at 222 N 20th St.
  • 4 The Franklin Institute Science Museum, 222 N 20th St, +1 215-448-1200, . 9:30AM-5PM daily, closed on Christmas Eve & Day, and New Year's Day. This museum attracts some of the top scientific exhibits in the world, including special exhibits that change every few months. Be sure to walk through the giant-sized human heart, a favorite with kids. Also features planetarium and the immense Tuttleman IMAX Theater and its four-story, domed screen with fifty-six speakers. This museum is incredibly popular as a field trip destination for local schools, so mornings and early afternoons on weekdays may be crowded with schoolchildren. Base admission $19.95 for adults, $15.95 for children 4-11 years old and senior citizens. (Special exhibits are extra cost).
  • 5 The Mütter Museum, 19 S 22nd St (Metered on-street parking or nearby pay lots), +1 215-563-3737, . 10AM-5PM daily, closed Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve and Day, and New Year's Day. It used to be open only to medical students, but this collection of medical oddities is quickly becoming one of the city's most popular attractions. Not for the faint of heart, this museum includes lots of items in formaldehyde, lots of skeletons, and one of the only women to ever decompose into soap. $16 adults, $13 seniors/military, $11 youth 6-17/students, children under 5 free. Joint ticket with the Penn Museum available for $26 adults, $16 childrenMatere.    
 
Philadelphia Museum of Art at 2600 Benjamin Franklin Pkwy.
  • 6 Philadelphia Museum of Art, 26th St and Benjamin Franklin Pkwy, +1 215-763-8100, . Tu Th-Su 10AM-5PM, W F 10AM-8:45PM, M closed. Famous on the outside for the steps seen in the film "Rocky" and famous on the inside for one of the world's largest collections of art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art is home to many rotating collections as well as a standard selection of pieces always on display. The permanent collection is especially strong in Asian and medieval art, impressionist paintings, and furniture. The museum was founded in 1876 in conjunction with the Centennial Exposition of the same year and is now among the largest and most important art museums in the United States. It sits on a hill overlooking the Schuylkill River at the end of The Ben Franklin Parkway, which was modeled after the Champs Elysees in Paris. There's an impressive view back toward City Hall from the top of the "Rocky" steps. In addition, the PMA is opening a new exhibition space in the Perelman Building on Pennsylvania Ave which will display sculpture, costumes, textiles, prints, photographs, and design. $20 adults, $18 seniors, $14 students. First Sunday of the month pay and Wednesdays 5-8:45PM, pay what you wish.    
  • 7 Rare Book Department of the Free Library of Philadelphia, 1901 Vine Street (Parkway Central branch, 3rd floor). If you're into rare books at all, take the free tour, offered M-F at 11AM, of the Philadelphia Free Library's amazing rare book collection. Besides the Gutenberg Bible, highlights include medieval manuscripts, children's book illustrations, and the stuffed body of Charles Dickens's pet raven Grip, the raven who indirectly inspired Poe's "The Raven."
  • 8 Rodin Museum, 2151 Benjamin Franklin Pkwy (Metered street parking or at Museum of Art's garage), +1 215-763-8100, . W-M 10AM-5PM. Displays the largest collection of Rodin's work outside of Paris. Suggested donation: $10 adults, seniors $8, 13-18 and students with ID $7.
  • 9 Rosenbach Museum and Library, 2008 DeLancey St, +1 215-732-1600, . Tu noon-5PM, W Th noon-8PM, F noon-5PM, Sa Su noon-6PM. Hourly tours (Tu-F 11AM-4PM) take visitors through this fine old townhouse owned by a pair of rare-book dealers, which has grown into a museum and archive. The Maurice Sendak room, full of his sketches and pages, also contains Herman Melville's own bookcase, which holds the copy of Moby-Dick he inscribed to Hawthorne. A handsome double library on another floor holds Joyce's manuscript for Ulysses. On the top floor, poet Marianne Moore's Greenwich Village living room has been installed, to go along with the Rosenbach's trove of Moore papers. $10 adults, $8 seniors, $5 children/students, free for children under 5.
  • 10 Fairmount Water Works. Features information on local watersheds as well as interpretive art.

Do edit

 
Rittenhouse Square

Parks edit

  • 1 Fairmount Park. Consists of 63 regional and neighborhood parks, spanning both Center City and part of western North Philly. When you want to get away from the city's hustle and bustle, there is always somewhere green to go.
  • 2 Fitler Square, S 23rd St and Panama St.. Neighborhood has some good restaurants and pretty tree-lined streets. The charming 2400 block of Panama, supposedly, has been re-created on a Hollywood lot for the show Cold Case. A Saturday morning farmers' market runs spring-fall.
  • 3 Rittenhouse Square, 18th and Walnut Sts. As close to a central park as one can get in Philadelphia. Only 4 blocks west of Broad St and the main business areas, it is an oasis in the heart of the city. It is surrounded by tall buildings, and there are many nice restaurants in the area. Summer concert schedules are listed in the park. The square was named after a patriotic leader David Rittenhouse. As you explore through the square you will see outdoor art exhibits, several art sculptures, annual flower markets, a reflecting pool, and many people having a picnic or watching their children play. Some places to eat near here are: gelato and sorbetti shop Capogiro, Starr restaurant Continental and the Marathon Grill. Lodging includes the Four Seasons Hotel, AKA Rittenhouse Square, Rittenhouse Hotel, and the Ritz-Carlton. Cultural hot spots are the Kimmel Center, Wilma Theater, Prince Music Theater and the Philadelphia Horticultural Society. Another activity that one can take part in when in Rittenhouse is shopping. Some places include Barnes & Noble Booksellers (with a Starbucks Cafe inside on the 3rd floor), Armani Exchange, Philadelphia Runner, Guess, and just a few blocks away is the Liberty Place.    
  • 4 Schuylkill River Park. The newest of the city's parks, but already becoming one of the most popular. For a century, Philadelphia's waterfronts were cut off from its residents by industry and an extensive system of railroads. Now gone for decades, the waterfront is a kaleidoscope of residential development, recreation, and good living. Center City's ongoing Renaissance is being charged by new amenities such as this urban river-side park, which carves its way deep into the city, culminating in South Philly.

Buy edit

 
The Shops at Liberty Place at 1625 Chestnut St.
  • 1 The Shops at Liberty Place. On 16th and Chestnut is an elegant shopping center with stores like Nine West, J.Crew, and Express. Many professionals stop by to get a bite to eat at its large food court and some quick shopping during the lunch hour.
  • 2 The Shops at the Bellevue. Located in the historic Bellevue at Broad and Walnut Sts., the Shops at the Bellevue offer upscale shopping and a gourmet food court. Shops include Ralph Lauren, Tiffany & Co., Williams-Sonoma, Origins, and Teuscher Chocolates of Switzerland (Oprah Winfrey loves the champagne truffles). Aside from the gourmet food court and upscale shopping, the Bellevue is also home to such upscale eateries as The Palm, Bliss, XIX and J.L. Sullivan's Speakeasy, as well as the Park Hyatt Philadelphia at the Bellevue.
  • Walnut Street from Rittenhouse Square eastward to Broad Street is Philadelphia's upscale shopping district where shoppers will find major chains from Apple to Zara and local favorites such as Joan Shepp and Jacques Ferber.

Eat edit

 
Morimito Restaurant at 723 Chestnut St.
  • 1 Village Whiskey, 118 S 20th St (at Sansom), +1 215-665-1088. Su M 11:30AM-11PM, Tu-Th 11:30AM-midnight, F Sa 11:30AM-1AM. A beautifully decorated Victorian-era bar and restaurant by local restaurateur Jose Garces, which serves some of the best and juiciest burgers in Philadelphia. It's not the cheapest, and fries cost extra, but it's definitely worth it. $10-30.
  • 2 XIX (Nineteen), 200 S Broad St (19th floor of the Bellevue building at the corner of Broad and Walnut), +1 215-790-1919. Actually a hotel bar and restaurant named for the floor it's on in a historic 1904 Beaux Arts building, it just might be the highest dining spot in the city with a giant outdoor balcony with a view of downtown. $30-50.
  • 3 Parc Restaurant, 227 S 18th St (at Rittenhouse Square), +1 215-545-2262. M-Th 7:30AM-11PM, F 7:30AM-midnight, Sa 10AM-midnight, Su 10AM-10PM. One of Stephen Starr's many Philadelphia restaurants, located across from Rittenhouse Square and mimics the Parisian cafe scene in food, decor, and ample sidewalk seating. It's open for breakfast, lunch and dinner, and is always busy, even on weekdays—don't any of these people have to work? Ah, just like Paris. $10-30.
  • 4 Continental Mid-town, 1801 Chestnut St (at 18th St), +1 215-567-1800. Another Stephen Starr restaurant, located north of Rittenhouse Square. Fusion food in a brightly decorated, almost-but-not-quite retro diner. $8-20.
  • 5 Erawan, 123 S 23rd St (at Sansom), +1 215-567-2542. M-F 11:30AM-10PM, Sa 12:30-10PM, Su 4:30-10PM. Some of the best Thai food in Center City. They'll also deliver. $8-16.

Rittenhouse Square edit

  • 6 Alma de Cuba, 1623 Walnut St (between 16th and 17th Sts), +1 215-988-1799. M-Th 5PM-11PM, F Sa 5PM-midnight, Su 5-10PM; happy hour M-F 5-7PM. $50 (entrees at $25).
  • 7 The Dandelion, 124 S 18th St (at Sansom), +1 215-558-2500. M-Th 11:30AM-11PM, F 11:30AM-midnight, Sa 10AM-midnight, Su 10AM-10PM (bar open until 2AM nightly). A perfect spot for a hearty dinner in a whimsical atmosphere. The idea behind Dandelion is a British gastropub, serving not only hearty food but also hearty beer. Order either the beer-battered fish and chips or the lamb shepherd’s pie. For dessert indulge in either the chocolate hot pot or the sticky toffee pudding. Dining at Dandelion is a relaxing way to end a jam-packed day.
  • 8 Friday Saturday Sunday (FriSatSun), 261 S 21st St (at Rittenhouse Sq), +1 215-546-4232. M-Sa 5:30-10:30PM, Su 5-10PM. A good neighborhood restaurant with regularly updated menu and good, reasonably priced wine list. The decor is dreamily intimate, with strings of twinkly white lights framing the room and, oddly enough, a huge aquarium that backs the bar upstairs and lights up the faces of the bar patrons with a faint glow. A great place for a romantic adventure or a date with an old friend. FriSatSun was a key contributor to Philly's 'restaurant renaissance' in the 1970s, and is still going strong. Reservations recommended. Entrees $20-29.
  • 9 Los Catrines & Tequilas Restaurant, 1602 Locust St (at 16th St), +1 215-546-0181. Featuring over 100 tequilas. Entrees $20-26.
  • 10 Barclay Prime, 237 S 18th St (between Locust and Rittenhouse). Luxury boutique steakhouse.
  • 11 Morimito Restaurant, 723 Chestnut Street, +1 215-413-9070, . High-end sushi.

Drink edit

Center City West has an active nightlife scene around the Rittenhouse Square area. As it's also one of the wealthiest neighborhoods, crowds here can be young, hip, and beautiful—or at least pretending to be—which leads some other people to gripe about how it's all turning too "tacky" and "Manhattan-esque." Depending on how you look at it, this is either changing Philadelphia for the worse, or this is the kind of scene Philadelphia needs to keep people from leaving for the actual Manhattan. Either way, this clash of cultures results in a larger range of options this side of Broad, from the dark, blue-collar dives to the super-ritzy cocktail lounges.

If you're in Center City during the summer months, be sure to take advantage of Center City Sips, a downtown-wide Happy Hour every Wednesday from 5-7PM where many bars and restaurants all participate in drink specials: $2 beers, $3 wines and $4 cocktails, and usually some selection of food specials. As it's right after the hump of the office work week, you'll see a lot of young professionals in business casual, and some places will get really crowded, but the prices are definitely right.

  • 1 Monk's, 264 S 16th St (between Latimer and Spruce), +1 215-545-7005. One of two of the best places to drink beer in Center City (the other one is Eulogy Tavern in Old City). Monk's has one of the largest beer varieties in the area, especially Belgian beer, with the right food to go with it (the burgers and mussels are standouts). Check their website to see the newest featured beer.
  • 2 McGlinchy's, 259 S 15th St (between Latimer and Manning), +1 215-735-1259. One of the few true dive bars in Center City. It's dirtier then you can imagine, and since the lighting is dim enough to be almost completely turned off, it's also dirtier then you can see. Right away, the staff genuinely doesn't like you. You will be a smoker as soon as you walk in, whether you smoke or not; McGlinchy's is one of the few bars that is exempt from the smoking ban and it's obvious from the door. The bathrooms are tiny and completely foul. You're better off not washing your hands, just to avoid touching as few things in there as possible. Fights are not uncommon, but the staff is always quick to pounce and drag it outside; McGlinchy's does not suffer fools. But the beer is ridiculously cheap, and the staff will warm up to you if you aren't an idiot, don't waste their time thinking about what you want to drink, and tip well. The crowd is often a mix of old barflys, blue collar after-workers and plenty of cute art school students. This is hands-down one of the best bars in Philly if you leave pretension at the door and roll with the vibe.
  • 3 Raven Lounge, 1718 Sansom St (between 17th and 18th Sts), +1 215-840-3577. A small bar just around the corner from Rittenhouse Square that's a lot of fun. Board games on the tables, affordable drinks, and a DJ mixing it up—once the night gets going, girls get on the bar itself because that's the only place left to dance! Other nights there will be live music or a live comedy show as well.

Coffee edit

  • 4 La Colombe, 130 S. 19th Street. Renowned Philadelphia-based coffee company's Rittenhouse cafe is a little slice of continental Europe in the City of Brotherly Love.
  • 5 Nook Bakery & Coffee Bar, 15 S 20th St (between Chestnut and Market), +1 215-496-9033. M-F 7AM-6PM, Sa 8AM-5PM, Su 8AM-4PM. Coffeehouse and bakery operated by the owners of the former Walnut Bridge Coffee House.

Sleep edit

Rittenhouse Square edit

Art Museum area edit

Connect edit

Free wifi edit

If there's something Philadelphia's plethora of students need, it's a local cafe with free wifi Internet access, and there are a handful of them scattered throughout Center City West. Of course, they can be of use for the traveler as well; most places will provide the password after you've purchased your coffee. However, unlike Starbucks, which are never in short supply, most of these locally-owned cafes encourage faster turnover and less "mobile office" syndrome by not providing electrical outlets.

  • 1 Good Karma Cafe, 331 S. 22nd St. (at Pine St.).
  • 2 Free Library of Philadelphia (Philadelphia City Institute Branch), 1905 Locust Street (at Rittenhouse Square). You'll need a library or a guest account.
  • 3 Free Library of Philadelphia (Central Library), 1901 Vine Street (at Logan Circle). You'll need a library or a guest account.
  • 4 Tuscany Cafe, 222 West Rittenhouse Square. No password, but also incredibly slow.
  • 5 Cosi, 1720 Walnut Street. No password on internet, opens as late as 11 but lacks many power sockets.
  • LaVa, 21st and South Street,. Relaxed feel, password given on purchase, a bit of a walking distance from Rittenhouse however.

Go next edit

Routes through Center City West (by subway)
Northwest PhiladelphiaNorth Philadelphia  N   S  South PhiladelphiaEND
Upper DarbyWest Philadelphia  SW   NE  Center City EastNortheast Philadelphia


Routes through Center City West (by commuter rail)
North PhiladelphiaCenter City East  N   S  West PhiladelphiaPhiladelphia International Airport
Northwest PhiladelphiaCenter City East  NW   SE  West PhiladelphiaEND
Northwest PhiladelphiaWest Philadelphia  NW   SW  Center City EastNorth Philadelphia
Bala CynwydWest Philadelphia  NW   SE  END
ENDWest Philadelphia  SW   NE  Center City EastNortheast Philadelphia
NorristownCenter City East  NW   SE  West PhiladelphiaEND


This district travel guide to Center City West is a usable article. It has information for getting in as well as some complete entries for restaurants and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.