![]() |
| The City's new Market house on the South side of Market Street at 30th Street gives evidence to how important the Schuylkill River and the adjacent railyards had become for commerce.
from The City of Philadelphia as it Appears in the Year 1893. |
Housing Patterns
While the area in general was becoming more crowded and less exclusive,
there continued to be sections of wealthy, and fashionable houses.
These were primarily single family houses. In part this was because the townhouse was on the
decline as a symbol of status and taste; and that included suburbanized ones. At the same time, a new housing form, the apartment, was becoming popular. Where each type
of house was built had a lot to do with convenience, precedence, and image.
![]() |
| Northeast corner of Baring & 36th Streets in 1891.
Wilson Eyre's Henry Cochran House partially in foreground. Eyre's
architecture was slightly ahead of his time, especially in Philadelphia.
In this example, one can see how the broad low rise roofs and flat planar
surfaces of the house's main block help emphasis mass, and make no attempt
to reflect the interior layout or uses.
photo from Vickers, Philadelphia: The Story of An American City.1893. |
The rise of apartments is attributed to both societal and technological changes. These changes also impacted the function and nature of the pre-existing forms of dwelling houses. Where before single people lived with an extended family or boarded in house, it was becoming acceptable for respectable single men, and eventually women, to live alone. As a result, the trend was toward a more nuclear family (one set of parents and their children in the house). This meant less people in the house, and therefore required less space than a house with relatives, and/or boarders. A smaller house also required less servants; a boon to middle class families. Apartments fit the bill for people who could not, or did not want to, keep house or live in a boarding situation.
Advances in building technology and mechanical systems also played a
critical role. They brought down construction costs and time, and
helped make multi-story apartments feasible. To be practical, apartments
required elevators, heat and water throughout. In many cases the
mechanical systems of the previous decades simply had not been up to the
task. Steam and hot water systems could provide heat throughout, while
elevators made upper stories accessible to all with nearly equal ease.
Apartment Houses
![]() |
![]() |
| NW corner of 42nd St. at Chester Ave. photographed about
1913.
Note the use of a hedges to visually seperate the building from the street and provide a visual base. Philadelphia City Archives, photo 7883. |
Apartment house dominates the northwest corner of 39th
and Spruce St.
photographed in 1912. Philadelphia City Archives, photo 5895. |
Architecture
At the same time, the architecture was shifting to a mix of more academic
and craftsman influenced design. Classical vocabulary again became
acceptable for residences accompanied by the expression of colonial revival.
Although this is sometimes hard to see in the exterior form of rowhouses,
but even there, within the interior design and in the motifs the change is fairly obvious.
There was a trend toward interior spaces that were less formally arranged,
and generally more open. Pine floors and faux finishes gave way to
hardwood floors and natural or plain painted finishes. The emphasis
on the sublime gave way to the elegant on both the exteriors and interiors.
Chestnut Street
![]() |
![]() |
| Chestnut Street, Looking West of 39th
This 1912 photo shows that Chestnut Street remained a landscape of fashionable mansions well into the era of trolley electrification. By this time, the Market Street Elevated Railroad (just a block north) had also been completed. Philadelphia City Archives, photo 5897. |
Chestnut Street, SW corner with 42nd Street
Subtle clues that this is a more "modern" row are the classical columns, softened lines on the tower roof, and the emphasized semi-circular window openings. Philadelphia City Archives, photo 6909, 1913. |
Institutions and Developers
The area continued to be home for many charitable institutions
as well, such as the Home for the Incurables, and a home for blind men.
One of the traditional advantages of being on the periphery of the city
was that the land was generally cheaper than in the city center, and rarely
did buildings need to be knocked down for new construction. It was
also during the 1890s that Anthony Drexel established Drexel Institute,
a technical college, on Chestnut Street only a few blocks from his own
home. However, some green spaces remained by happenstance or by design.
For example, near the 49th Street train station was the Belmont Cricket
Club.
At the same time, commercial and industrial areas did not disappear, and in some cases grew. The banks of the Schuylkill River became a site to behold. Not for its beauty, but for its industrial waste. Many of the forces that had helped shaped the growing suburb were also destroying it. Not surprisingly, currents of reform were on the way.
![]() Siegel, Moll & Parker Builders and Owners. postcard courtesy of The Library Company of Philadelphia |
![]() |
continue on to The City Beautiful, 1911-1930