For the past couple months I have been invited to cover QOTA (Queers on the Avenue), but for one reason or another I haven't been able to get down there to attend. This changed last night when I had some free time as I wanted to see a lot of friends that I don't get to see all the time, plus two of my favorite people James McManaman and David White were opening their 2nd art store in the City "Absolute Abstract" at 1616 East Passyunk Avenue. Their other store is in Center City on another happening street 13th Street in Midtown Village.
David White, Where Magazine Publisher Laura Burkhart & James McManaman in their new store on East Passyunk Avenue
Not 150 years old, but just as important, this guy on East Passyunk states that at 86 yrs old he's the oldest on the Avenue, has a PURPLE HEART (Thank you sir), and likes that life has returned to the avenue.
... Renee Gilinger is the director of the East Passyunk Avenue Business Improvement District. Just off the plane from a vacation in Europe, she should be exhausted. But instead she’s standing on a chair, enthusiastically calling out the winning raffle tickets for gift baskets from JimmyStyle and Absolute Abstract, and reveling in the once-again stellar turnout. She’s long been involved in organizing the gay community, but QOTA is her great success. “I always knew there was a true LGBT presence here,” she says. “But until you have a space where everyone says ‘This is accepted,’ there’s an uncertainty. An older gay gentleman who has lived here for years told me he has never felt this comfort level.”
Bill Gehrman at this months QOTA event thanks the crowd for coming, and conducts the raffle which I didn't win:(
Kurt Schoenkopf, Darren Fava, Robert Bain and John Yeagley
(Again from Phila Mag June 2009)
IN A STRANGE twist of fate, it just might be that the new gayborhood’s real patriarch, its guiding light, is … Vince Fumo.
The embattled politico’s Citizens’ Alliance — the neighborhood improvement effort that was the centerpiece of the “misspending” that’s landing him in jail — bought up blighted properties along the Avenue beginning in 2000, and started rehabbing them and renting them at cheap rates to viable, renaissance-inducing tenants. Those tenants agreed to abide by certain rules: no ugly security gates, later hours of operation, changing window displays, and other business-smart guidelines that the older mom-and-pop shops pay little attention to.
VISIT EAST PASSYUNK AVENUE FOR INFORMATION


4 comments:
Awesome Hughe! Thanks for covering and for the kind words! See you soon - David
I've been to the Avenue and it's fun - lots of good restaurants, nice stores and a very pleasant atmosphere. It has a small-town vibe (which is refreshing) - it's not a "scene"!!
Thank you for this coverage. I just recently moved to South Philly and was amazed at how the neighbors welcomed my family. Plus it's very close to Rt 95 and convenient to my husband's employment in Cherry Hill.
Sarah & Bill Henderson
Thank you for pointing out our local war vet. He mentioned he has lived on Tasker Street his whole life...I loved that he came out to the Ave that night!
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