Northwest Philadelphia | |
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Neighborhood of Philadelphia | |
Manayunk skyline in the Roxborough-Manayunk district in Northwest Philadelphia
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Map of Philadelphia County with Northwest highlighted neighborhood. Click for larger image. |
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Country | United States of America |
State | Pennsylvania |
County | Philadelphia |
City | Philadelphia |
Population (2010) | |
• Total | ~170,000~ |
ZIP codes | 19118,19119,19128,19129,19138,19144 |
Northwest Philadelphia is a section of the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The official boundary is Stenton Avenue to the north, the Schuylkill river to the southwest, Northwestern Avenue to the northwest, Roosevelt Boulevard to the south, and Wister Street and Stenton Avenue to the east. The area is divided by Wissahickon Creek into two subsections, Upper Northwest and Lower Northwest Philadelphia. Upper Northwest are Germantown, Mount Airy (which itself is divided into east and west), and Chestnut Hill, and Lower Northwest are Roxborough, East Falls, and Manayunk. The Philadelphia Police Department patrols two districts located within Northwest Philadelphia. The two patrol districts serving Northwest Philadelphia are the 5th and 14th districts.
Northwest Philadelphia has substantial African American, Irish-American, Jewish-American, German-American, Italian-American, and British American (English American/Scottish American) populations, but its culture is varied, and only smaller neighborhoods within it can be said to be known for one ethnicity predominating.
Compared with other sections of Philadelphia, a substantial portion of the Northwest retains a more suburban feel. For example, in East Falls one will find large Tudor homes and big modern ranch homes on sizable properties only blocks from more humble townhouses and rowhouses. Upper Roxborough boasts post-World War II suburban housing developments, while Lower Roxborough consists mostly of rowhouses and urban twin houses, apartments over storefronts, etc. There are also blocks of large Victorian homes peppered among the rowhouses. In some places the buildings and street grid have existed for three centuries, other spots nearby were farmland until after World War II, and have infrastructure that is very recently developed and suburb-like, 18th-century farmhouses to 19th-century rowhomes to 20th-century shopping centers. From an enclave of working-class Germantown rowhomes to the wealthy estates of Chestnut Hill, both may have been built in the period of 1880-1920.