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Southwest Center City ( SWCC ), also known as Graduate Hospital , is a neighborhood that is located in South Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States, bordering Center City Philadelphia . The neighborhood is bordered on the north by South Street , on the south by Washington Avenue , on the west by the Schuylkill River , and on the east by Broad Street .

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18-567: [REDACTED] Look up soso , so-so , or so so in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Soso , So-so , or So so may refer to: Boris Michel Soso (1917-2002), American actor and film producer better known as Brad Dexter Soso, Mississippi , town in the United States Soso (search engine) (搜搜) a Chinese search engine site owned by Tencent Holdings Limited Soso ,

36-711: A Japanese beatboxer, looper, singer-songwriter and producer So So , a nickname for Southwest Center City, Philadelphia, a neighbourhood in Philadelphia Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Soso . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Soso&oldid=1231759443 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Hidden categories: Short description

54-442: A childhood nickname of Joseph Stalin (1878 - 1953) Julie Soso (born 1960), Papua New Guinean politician Soso (born Wang Chingyi, 2001), Taiwanese singer and member of South Korean girl group GWSN Soso, nickname of Sophia Somajo (born 1985), Swedish musician Soso people of West Africa SO-SO , a Japanese beatboxer, looper, singer-songwriter and producer So So , a nickname for Southwest Center City, Philadelphia,

72-642: A few larger architectural landmarks. On the eastern half of the neighborhood is the Scottish Rite affordable housing complex which consists of two multi-story apartment buildings that cater mostly to elderly and low income individuals. The former buildings of Graduate Hospital lie on South Street, the northern border of the neighborhood. Along Grays Ferry Avenue is the former Philadelphia Naval Asylum or Naval Home, designed in 1826 by William Strickland . This National Historic Landmark , first constructed in 1833, closed in 1976, and has been developed into condos

90-515: A neighbourhood in Philadelphia Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Soso . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Soso&oldid=1231759443 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Hidden categories: Short description

108-684: A six region area that also includes University City all the way to the Philadelphia International Airport that is part of a revitalization plan to stimulate the region. The proposal for three new Schuylkill Avenue towers proposed by the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia is for the towers to take the place of the Springfield Beer Distributor, and the former JFK Vocational School , with each tower being 26 stories high. Every year since 1975,

126-431: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages soso [REDACTED] Look up soso , so-so , or so so in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Soso , So-so , or So so may refer to: Boris Michel Soso (1917-2002), American actor and film producer better known as Brad Dexter Soso, Mississippi , town in

144-551: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages So So It is an area adjacent to the Fitler Square and Rittenhouse Square neighborhoods to the north and Point Breeze to the south, and is home to community service organizations, restaurants, churches, retail establishments, and some light industry. The neighborhood has many nicknames. The Philadelphia Planning Commission refers to it as Southwest Center City . Since

162-519: Is now known as Naval Square . The Schuylkill Arsenal was originally built at the edge of this neighborhood, but has since been demolished. Prior to the Act of Consolidation, 1854 , this neighborhood was part of Moyamensing Township . Moyamensing was originally chartered by the Dutch governor Alexander d'Hinoyossa, and in 1684, William Penn confirmed the title. The neighborhood began taking shape after

180-479: The National Register of Historic Places . In recent years, the area has experienced growth and gentrification . Hundreds of single family homes and condominium units have been built or refurbished. As a result of the neighborhood's proximity to Center City and increasing desirability, a variety of new businesses catering to the increasingly gentrified population have opened. Despite the improvements,

198-869: The 1960s a crosstown expressway running along South Street was planned. This would have created a barrier between Center City and the neighborhoods to the south. The result was widespread abandonment of properties in SWCC and the decay of the South Street business corridor. The loss of jobs and residents caused the neighborhood to decline as buildings were abandoned and left to deteriorate. The Marian Anderson House , Franklin Hose Company No. 28 , William S. Peirce School , Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Freight Shed , Royal Theater , St. Anthony de Padua Parish School , Edwin M. Stanton School , and Tindley Temple United Methodist Church are listed on

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216-556: The 1980s, it has been often referred to as Graduate Hospital , after the medical facility on the northern edge of the neighborhood. This name has become merely historical in nature since the hospital closed in 2007. Despite this, it is still used and is sometimes shortened to G-Ho . The area is also referred to as South of South or So-So. A small corner of this area is sometimes known as Devil's Pocket . The neighborhood consists primarily of nineteenth and twentieth-century rowhouses interspersed with corner stores, 22 churches and

234-482: The Civil War. In 1870, it was predominantly an Irish American community; however, the neighborhood was in a transitional period, and by 1920, a majority of its residents were African Americans . It continued to experience significant in-migration from the south prior to, during, and immediately after World War II. It remained a solid working-class neighborhood for most of the first half of the twentieth century. In

252-480: The Springfield Beer Distributor and the former JFK Vocational Center (earlier the Marine Corps Depot of Supplies ), which were demolished. The Philadelphia Inquirer states that the area will be undergoing gentrification to the point that the area may no longer be known by its current name "Devil's Pocket." Furthermore, the area is expected to become a major contributor to Philadelphia's economy with

270-440: The United States Soso (search engine) (搜搜) a Chinese search engine site owned by Tencent Holdings Limited Soso , a childhood nickname of Joseph Stalin (1878 - 1953) Julie Soso (born 1960), Papua New Guinean politician Soso (born Wang Chingyi, 2001), Taiwanese singer and member of South Korean girl group GWSN Soso, nickname of Sophia Somajo (born 1985), Swedish musician Soso people of West Africa SO-SO ,

288-488: The company and the local South of South Neighborhood Association, but this was soon resolved as the project was deemed a success. Universal Companies has since opened several small neighborhood businesses, low-income housing, and a charter school. The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia is expanding in the western part of the neighborhood and opened its first facility in 2017 along the Schuykill River. It replaced

306-571: The neighborhood still contains some abandoned and dilapidated housing, especially towards the south. The Grammy Award winning musician and local resident Kenneth Gamble founded Universal Companies in Southwest Center City to revitalize the neighborhood. Universal Community Homes, a division of the company, began the Universal Court housing project in the neighborhood in the 1990s. Originally, some tension existed between

324-408: The potential of $ 63 billion pumped into the economy as well as a job generator. The hospital has hired a consultant to plan the traffic patterns around the area as they did for Delaware Waterfront and New York's Battery Park . The plan is for "... three towers, of about 26 stories each, would be lined up along Schuylkill Avenue." The plans unveiled by the city show that Schuylkill Avenue is part of

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