Philadelphia: Street
Places and attractions in the Street category
Categories
- Museum
- Church
- History museum
- Park
- Bridge
- Historical place
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Theater
- Neighbourhood
- Concerts and shows
- Specialty museum
- Monuments and statues
- Cemetery
- Art museum
- Nightlife
- Georgian architecture
- Shopping
- Library
- Music venue
- Sacred and religious sites
- Art gallery
- Synagogue
- Area
- Colonial revival architecture
- Concert hall
- Architecture
- Greek Revival architecture
- Music and shows
- Memorial
- Street
- Shopping centre
- Skyscraper
- Neoclassical architecture
- Universities and schools
- Science museum
- Romanesque architecture
- Performing arts
- Garden
- Square
- Ship
- Postmodern architecture
- Playground
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Natural history museum
- Reportedly haunted
- Palladian architecture
- Sculpture
- Golf
- Vernacular architecture
- Bars and clubs
- William Penn
- Italianate architecture
- Temple
- Arenas and stadiums
- Botanical garden
- Tower
- Art Deco architecture
- Romanesque revival architecture
- Beaux-Arts architecture
- Modernist architecture
- Basketball
- Tudor Revival architecture
Walnut Street
Walnut Street in Philadelphia is a bustling shopping district that serves as a premier destination for both locals and tourists seeking a high-quality retail experience. This vibrant thoroughfare boasts an eclectic mix of stores, ranging from high-end boutiques...
Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Benjamin Franklin Parkway, commonly abbreviated to Ben Franklin Parkway, and colloquially in local usage "the Parkway", is a scenic boulevard that runs through the cultural heart of Philadelphia.
Chestnut Street
Chestnut Street is a major historic street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was originally named Wynne Street because Thomas Wynne's home was there. William Penn renamed it Chestnut Street in 1684.
Girard Avenue
Girard Avenue is a major commercial and residential street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. For most of its length it runs east–west, but at Frankford Avenue it makes a 135-degree turn north. Parts of the road are signed as U.S. Route 13 and U.S. Route 30.
Cherry Street
Cherry Street is a minor east-west street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania that runs parallel to Race Street to the north and Arch Street to the south.
Centre Avenue
Centre Avenue is a main thoroughfare in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It stretches from Sixth Avenue near the Allegheny County Courthouse to East Liberty.
N3RD Street
N3RD Street is a nickname for a segment of North 3rd Street in Philadelphia, between Market Street and Girard Avenue, and its surrounding community that is home to a concentration of "nerdy" companies and spaces; "N3RD" is a double entendre as both leet for "nerd" and reflecting the "N. 3rd St." of postal addresses.
Southern Boulevard Parkway
Broad Street is a major arterial street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It runs for approximately 13 miles beginning at the intersection of Cheltenham Avenue on the border of Cheltenham Township and the West/East Oak Lane neighborhoods of North Philadelphia to the Philadelphia Navy Yard in South Philadelphia.
Roosevelt Boulevard
Roosevelt Boulevard, officially named the Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Boulevard and often referred to, chiefly by local Philadelphians, simply as "the Boulevard," or "the Boully" is a major traffic artery through North and Northeast Philadelphia.
Race Street
Race Street is a major east-west street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania that runs parallel to Cherry Street. It was one of William Penn's original gridded streets from the 1680s, although named Sassafras Street then.
Broad Street
Broad Street is a major arterial street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It runs for approximately 13 miles beginning at the intersection of Cheltenham Avenue on the border of Cheltenham Township and the West/East Oak Lane neighborhoods of North Philadelphia to the Philadelphia Navy Yard in South Philadelphia.
Market Street
Market Street, originally known as High Street, is a major east–west street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It is signed as Pennsylvania Route 3 between 38th Street and 15th Street.