Convention Countdown: Philadelphia Chinatown’s Friendship Gate

This unique landmark welcomes visitors to the city's Chinatown neighborhood.

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Flickr user Tom Ipri, via Creative Commons

This month, the architecture industry is headed to Philadelphia for three days of lectures, meetings, and some real-life, business-card-swapping networking. What should you see during AIA Convention 2016?

Philadelphia Chinatown’s Friendship Gate: Venture east of the Pennsylvania Convention Center and you’ll find the city’s bustling Chinatown neighborhood—a seven-block hub for the commerce, cuisine, and culture of several Asian-American communities. Established in the 1870s by a wave of Chinese immigrants, the area has diversified in the last half-century to include Indian, Korean, Vietnamese, and Japanese, as well as Southeast Asian, influences. The neighborhood’s prominent entrance at 10th and Arch streets is anchored by the Friendship Gate, which was built in 1983 by artisans using tiles from Tianjin, China, one of Philadelphia’s sister cities, and installed a year later. The colorful, 40-foot-tall gate features designs from the Qing Dynasty.

Read ARCHITECT’s complete coverage of the AIA Convention 2016.

About the Author

August King

August King is an editorial intern for ARCHITECT. He studies technology and design at Sarah Lawrence College in Yonkers, N.Y. Follow him on twitter @augustArchitect.

August King

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