CoursesPlanning Public Space (NEW)
URBS 4490, Section 301

Planning Public Space (NEW)

Philadelphia’s commitment to mending the damage wrought by 20th Century highway development has helped drive the planning and development of signature public spaces across the city from the park capping I-95 currently in construction to the Rail Park atop the Reading Viaduct. This work has required navigating complex political and bureaucratic terrain. Using the Rail Park, and its extensions as a lens, the course will help students explore the tensions endemic to urban change.

TR 3:30pm-4:59pm

Students will learn from local project managers, advocates, and thought leaders, about how advocates engaged funders, institutions, and bureaucracies to transform Philadelphia’s waterfronts, and old industrial core. Participants in the course will work in partnership with the Friends of the Rail Park to develop a framework that fosters community and stakeholder dialogue in the long term development of “the Cut” (the subterranean extensions of the Rail Park, in Philadelphia’s loft district, and adjacent to the Community College of Philadelphia and major institutions along the Parkway).

Related Content

Other Courses of Interest

EDUC 5437

Interfaith Dialogue in Action

Instructor(s)

  • Steve Kocher

Semester

Spring 2026

Faith, belief, spirituality and religious identity are central to the lives of so many people, and so building understanding about these aspects of life – encompassing the development of our personal convictions as well as our connections to (or challenges with) institutional religion and spiritual community – is essential to understanding our world.  But conversations on these topics can be complicated, confusing, even contentious.  The Interfaith Dialogue in Action course makes space for students of all religious and non-religious backgrounds to engage with one another, reflect together, and learn skills to build dialogue between people with different faith traditions, worldviews, practices, and beliefs.  

 

Learn More
PHIL 2980, Section 301

Failure to Communicate

Instructor(s)

  • Carlin Romano

Semester

Spring 2026

The phrase “failure to communicate” became iconic in American English from the 1967 film “Cool Hand Luke,” in which Paul Newman played a convict who refuses to listen or follow orders. The film raised questions about the multiple ways we understand “failure to communicate” and its consequences. Is it sometimes a decision to resist a presumption, a premise, an interpretation, an argument, a directive from authority? Is it at other times simply a mechanical failure? This course examines “failure to communicate” in multiple cultural areas, among them literature, romance, politics, show business, law, science, war, psychology, philosophy, business, religion, humor and education.

Learn More