Monthly Archives: April 2013

Spring = Food Truck Season

Author: Emilie Kretschmar LaRosa

As Stephanie Yee noted yesterday, spring is right around the corner in West Philadelphia. Flowers are starting to bloom, the temperature is rising above 50 degrees, and the sun is staying out until nearly 7:30 p.m. One of my favorite things about the warmer weather is the increased opportunity for street food. As many of you know, University City and Penn’s campus is no stranger to food carts, and every year more gourmet options are available for sidewalk consumption. Some of my local favorites include Magic Carpet and Tyson Bees (love the thai basil chicken tacos!).

The Tyson Bees food truck.

The Tyson Bees food truck.

New green space, Shoemaker Green, provides a great spot for eating lunch outdoors.

New green space, Shoemaker Green, provides a great spot for eating lunch outdoors.

If you’re willing to hoof it over to Drexel’s campus (in the 33rd and Arch vicinity) then a whole new array of food options becomes available: Say Cheese Philly, Rival Bros Coffee, Mac Mart Truck, Pitruco Pizza, Lucky Old Souls, and Spot Burger to name just a few. Some of these trucks move from location to location and therefore my Twitter account has been devoted to following many of these delicious vehicles. Click on some of the names above to check out their Twitter accounts and to follow them around the city.

To continue your tour of University City food truck treats, check out The Porch at 30th Street Station. It’s about a 10 minute walk from Penn’s campus, but well worth the effort. Two days ago, on April 1st, The Porch opened it’s 2013 season with live music, entertainment and (surprise!) more food trucks.

The Porch at 30th Street Station

The Porch at 30th Street Station

With its spring kickoff, The Porch reveals an event calendar jam-packed with fun (and free) events all month long, with more programming to come throughout the spring and summer. You can read more about this great public space here but the takeaway is: new mobile food trucks stop here during the spring, summer, and fall months.  On Wednesdays you will find The Cow and The Curd, Cupcake Carnivale, Lucky Old Souls, and The Sunflower Truck Stop. On Fridays, Just Jackie’s Food Truck, Say Cheese, Spot Burger, and Sweetbox Cupcakes.

After a long winter cooped up inside eating packed lunches, I am excited to explore my new food options in the increasingly warmer sun!

(Have a great food truck recommendation? Share it with us below!)

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Filed under Campus Life, Emilie

West Philly Blooms

Author: Stephanie Yee, C’08

It’s starting to feel like spring in West Philly. The weather is warming up, the sun is shining (sometimes), and the flowers are starting to bloom. Here’s to hoping for a warm and sunny April.

Beautiful light pink color.

Beautiful light pink color.

Still blooming.

Still blooming.

 

Looks like spring!

Looks like spring!

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Photos, Stephanie Y.

Penn Serves LA: Habitat for Humanity

By Kiera Reilly, C’93  @KieraReilly

On Saturday morning, March 9th, I drove to a house in Lynnwood, California, hoping to take photos of the Penn Serves LA group working on a Habitat for Humanity of Greater Los Angeles project. There was a dumpster in the driveway, and a work truck parked out front, so I assumed I had arrived at the proper place. As I walked toward the home, I noticed people on the roof wearing Penn gear. I guess I’m at the right place, but why are they all on the roof? It turns out our job wasn’t to paint, as many of the volunteers expected, but to remove the roof from the house!

I checked in with the Habitat for Humanity on-site managers, and they said, “Oh, sure you can help…just sign this waiver, put on some gloves, grab some goggles and head up the ladder!” Gulp. This wasn’t what I was expecting, but seeing that everyone else was on the roof, I took a deep breath and up I went to join twenty other Penn alumni and friends.

Penn Serves LA volunteers hard at work taking off the roof.

Penn Serves LA volunteers hard at work taking off the roof.

The Penn Serves LA volunteers were all busy working with tools to scrape and pull tiles and nails off of the roof. Others were filling buckets with broken-up roof pieces. That became my job, filling a big paint bucket with roof pieces, walking over to the edge, and flinging the contents over the side into the dumpster. On my first attempt, about half of the contents landed on the ground, and half in the dumpster. The bucket was heavy, and I felt like I might fling myself off the roof with it! The Habitat supervisor encouraged me to go closer to the edge of the roof, and if I felt the bucket going, just let it go. Pretty soon I got the hang of it, and wandered around the roof helping to collect and dump all the tiles everyone was helping to remove.

Back-breaking work.

Back-breaking work.

The Habitat staff stopped us for water breaks, making everyone climb down, drink some water and rest. And we enjoyed a long lunch break, with a beautifully displayed spread of sandwiches, tangerines, carrots, chips and cookies provided by Jane Gutman, CW’73, PAR’14, PAR’16, one of Penn Serves LA’s directors. While we ate, our group talked about jobs, where we lived, and what we studied at Penn. Everyone seemed happy to be there and were enjoying the tough work since we were doing it together.

While most of us worked on the house, this group removed the roof from the garage.

While most of us worked on the house, this group removed the roof from the garage.

Happy Penn volunteers.

Happy Penn volunteers sporting trendy yellow safety goggles.

Now we had to move the tarp from the front lawn.

Now we had to move the tarp from the front lawn.

It was really, really heavy!

It was really, really heavy!

Habitat for Humanity currently has grants to work on homes in three areas of Los Angeles, and Lynwood is one.  The family we were completing the house for currently lives in 100 square feet of housing.   Recipients of homes are asked to contribute “sweat equity” of 250 or 500 hours, depending on whether their home was remodeled or whether they were receiving a newly built home.  They get 30-year mortgages with no interest, and only one person has ever defaulted because the folks who get the houses are all hard workers with good credit.

The roof our group removed was 1,600 square feet, and we worked alongside the woman and her family who will be living in the house. They were great and so excited about their future home.

“What a fantastic experience it was to work alongside so many terrific young Penn alums and their friends. We got crazy dirty doing really hard work, but it was so satisfying and the group was Quaker strong, determined and indefatigable,” said Jane Gutman.

Jane continued, “I am soooo tired and wait ‘til you see the photos showing how dirty we were…I probably won’t be able to walk or move tomorrow, but the Habitat guys were so encouraging and supportive and our group totally came together and just never stopped…an awesome day!”

Jane Gutman helping remove the roof pieces.

Jane Gutman helping remove the roof pieces.

Jane Gutman showing how dirty some of us got!

Jane Gutman showing how dirty some of us got!

The Habitat for Humanity event, which was co-sponsored by the Southern California Regional Advisory Board, Wharton Club of Southern California, and PennClubLA, was the fourth Penn Serves LA event since its launch in May 2012.

The Penn Serves LA Habitat for Humanity volunteers after removing the roof! Hurrah, Hurrah!

The Penn Serves LA Habitat for Humanity volunteers after removing the roof! Hurrah, Hurrah!

See all of the photos from our day here.

Are you active in community service? Want to get your favorite nonprofit involved? If you have a nonprofit in mind for a future Penn Serves LA event, let us know. Our initiative provides alumni with the unique opportunity to showcase their favorite charitable organization. Send us an email at pennservesla@gmail.com with your name and Penn affiliation, the organization you would like us to serve, why you got involved and how Penn Serves might help. The group would like to expand to other cities, so please contact us if you’d like to spearhead a similar effort in your town.

Penn Serves LA is an initiative to encourage Penn alumni, parents and family across all schools and all years to come together and serve those in need through established nonprofits working in underserved communities. Children and spouses of alumni and parents of current students are also invited to participate (please check age requirements). Penn Serves LA is regularly scheduling service events throughout the year. Penn Serves LA is working in partnership with PennClubLA, Wharton Club of Southern California, and SCRAB.

You can read about our first event at Turning Point Shelter in Santa Monica, our second event at the Midnight Mission, and our third event at Inner City Arts.

The Penn Softball team volunteered at Habitat for Humanity in New Jersey – here’s the link to a story and video about their experience.

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Filed under Alumni Programming, Kiera R., Los Angeles, Penn Serves LA, Photos, Volunteering, West Coast Regional Office