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The Glass Factory, Philadelphia PA | Nearby Businesses


1517 N Bailey St
Philadelphia, PA 19121


Event Venue Near The Glass Factory

The Liacouras Center
Distance: 1.0 mi Competitive Analysis
1776 N Broad St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

(215) 204-2400

Made In America Festival
Distance: 1.0 mi Competitive Analysis
Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Philadelphia, PA 19130

044948852

Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Distance: 1.1 mi Competitive Analysis
Benjamin Frankin Pkwy
Philadelphia, PA 19130

Benjamin Franklin Parkway is a scenic boulevard that runs through the cultural heart of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Named for favorite son Benjamin Franklin, the mile-long Parkway cuts diagonally across the grid plan pattern of Center City's Northwest quadrant. It starts at Philadelphia City Hall, curves around Logan Circle, and ends before the Philadelphia Museum of Art.AttractionsThe Parkway is the spine of Philadelphia's Museum District. Some of the city's most famous sights are here: Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul; Swann Memorial Fountain; the Free Library of Philadelphia, the Franklin Institute, Moore College of Art and Design, the Academy of Natural Sciences, the Rodin Museum, Eakins Oval, the Barnes Foundation and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. From its northern end, the Parkway provides access to Fairmount Park through Kelly Drive (formerly East River Drive), Martin Luther King Drive (formerly West River Drive), the Schuylkill River Trail, and the Schuylkill Expressway (I-76).

Vie
Distance: 1.4 mi Competitive Analysis
600 N Broad St
Philadelphia, PA 19123

(215) 238-5750

The Water Works Restaurant & Lounge
Distance: 1.0 mi Competitive Analysis
1 Boathouse Row
Philadelphia, PA 19130

(215) 236-9000

Celebratory dinners in the Engine House. Romantic evenings on the riverside veranda. Business lunches in the Breezeway. Casual cocktails in the Caretaker’s Lounge. Wedding receptions under the Pavilion. The superb setting, service and dining found only at the Water Works Restaurant and Lounge add incomparable magic to special moments of every kind!

Budweiser Made in America Festival PA
Distance: 1.0 mi Competitive Analysis
Benjamin Franklin Pkwy
Philadelphia, PA 19130

(800) 653-8000

Parkway Central Library - Free Library of Philadelphia
Distance: 1.4 mi Competitive Analysis
1901 Vine St
Philadelphia, PA 19103

(215) 686-5322

Opened in 1927, the Parkway Central Library contains more than 7 million items and many special collections. We hope to see you at our events throughout the year. While you are here, be sure to visit the H.O.M.E PAGE Café for a treat.

Starr Events
Distance: 1.3 mi Competitive Analysis
667 N Broad St
Philadelphia, PA 19123

(215) 923-2675

STARR Events brings the exceptional dining experience of renowned STARR Restaurants to the world of catering and special events. Stephen STARR Events re-invents the traditional event with modern interpretations, custom menus and a focus on excellence for both intimate affairs and grand occasions, melding daring cuisine, unparalleled presentation and stellar service at some of Philadelphia, New York City and Miami’s finest venues.

Mantua Yacht Club
Distance: 1.3 mi Competitive Analysis
35th and Mt Vernon
Philadelphia, PA 19104

(215) 382-3639

ARTISTS THAT HAVE PLAYED HERE: Animal Flag Behind Deadlines Blair Ollendorf Blood Sound Broken Beak Cephalopods And Their Allies Colonial Williamsburg Cute Girl From English Darla Deal Casino Dowsing Edelweiss El Americano Fire Is Motion Hodera Howlish In Place Jesse Denaro Legs Like Tree Trunks Mammoth Indigo Marge Mike Pays Heat Minor Setbacks Mr. Sampson Nayuta No Stranger Ohbree Petal Plainview Pocket Port Arthur Poster Child Raina Mullen Risky Biscuit Roof Doctor Roz and The Rice Cakes Slaughter Beach, Dog Square Peg Round Hole Steady Hands The Color and Sound The Dealbreakers The Field Effect The Gray Company The Hempsteadys The Phonies The Reflexes Thee Idea Men Twiin Us, Today Vita And The Woolf Water Polo W. C. Lindsay

Peace House Creative Space
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
1320 N Taney St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

An American Innovation Brand. Events, Art Gallery, Boutique, Recording Studio, Community Lounge, Creative Space Peace House Group consists of: Peace House Creative Space, Peace House Boutique, Peace House Muisc, PHB Label (Clothing Line)

University Barge Club
Distance: 0.8 mi Competitive Analysis
7 Boathouse Row
Philadelphia, PA 19130

Key dates in University Barge Club’s story: 1854 – The Club was founded by ten members of the University of Pennsylvania’s freshman class, who purchased the four-oared barge “Hesperus” from Bachelor’s Barge Club. Their pursuit of rowing as a club was Penn’s first official organized athletic activity. Membership in the Club was initially restricted to Penn students. As time passed, Penn alumni and then others not affiliated with the University also joined, an indicator of the spirit of camaraderie at the heart of UBC. Student membership in University Barge Club declined and eventually moved to College Boat Club, founded in 1872. In the early years, the Club rented part of the Philadelphia Skating Club (now Philadelphia Girls Rowing Club) where the two UBC boats – the four-oared Hesperus and six-oared Lucifer – were stored. Races and barge outings along the Schuylkill and Delaware were primary activities. (For more detail about the early days, see below from the Penn University Archives and Record Center below) 1858 – University Barge and several other clubs founded the Schuylkill Navy on October 5th. The oldest amateur athletic governing body in the United States, the Schuylkill Navy today oversees several regattas and governs the conduct of rowing on the Schuylkill. Its first regatta was held in June 1859. Civil War and after – Rowing by the Club essentially ceased during the War. Half of the clubs that had founded the Schuylkill Navy did not survive the period, but after the Civil War, rowing returned as a tremendously popular sport – for both participants and spectators. When Harvard raced Oxford on the Thames in 1869, more than half a million people lined the banks to watch the four mile race. In Philadelphia – the epicenter of American rowing – regattas were well-attended, attracting thousands of people to the river for a day of cheering their favorites as well as betting on the races. 1871 – Together with the Philadelphia Barge Club, University Barge built its own boathouse at No. 7 Boathouse Row, where it stands today. The architect is unknown, but thought to be the Secretary of Philadelphia Barge Club. The two clubs shared the space, each occupying half of the building, and enjoyed a healthy rivalry with many races against each other followed by celebratory dinners at their upriver social clubs – UBC’s The Lilacs and Philadelphia’s The Anchorage. UBC used the boathouse for stowing the boats and equipment, while almost all social activities took place at the Lilacs. The Club owned several “lady boats” of varying sizes which were used to ferry passengers up the river. The Marguerite and the Cyrene are still owned by UBC. 1891 – Team rowing was at first conducted primarily in four- and six-oared boats. In the 1870s, Ivy League colleges adopted the eight-oared shell. As the use of “eights” became common, University Barge and Philadelphia Barge decided to add matching bays to accommodate the larger boats. The additions were designed by Baker & Ballet. The War Years and Between the Wars – The demands of two World Wars and the Depression took a toll on active rowing. In 1932, the Philadelphia Barge Club ceased operation and merged with UBC. 1954 – The Schuylkill Navy recognized the centennial of University Barge Club with a commemorative resolution that remains on display in the Club. 1968 – Chestnut Hill Academy, a boys’ independent school, began its crew and sculling program at UBC. CHA has rowed continuously from the club since then. 1968 – The Club organized and sponsored the Graduate Sculls Regatta, a masters-only event that developed into the inclusive Thomas Eakins Head of the Schuylkill Regatta. Open to scholastic, college, club and masters rowers, the Regatta has grown from entries of a few dozen boats to over 1,400 today. 1987 – The National Park Service designated Boathouse Row a National Historic Landmark. 1990 – A men’s club from the time of its founding, UBC voted to admit women as full members, and reconfigured its floor plan to accommodate a locker and shower room in 1994. 1996 – Springside Academy, a girls’ independent school, joined CHA in rowing from the Club. In 2012 Springside and CHA merged to form Springside CHA. 1999 – The Lea Balcony was added to the riverside portion of the boathouse, returning the façade to its historic design. The new balcony, which allows for social gatherings of 75 and sit down dinners for 40, was designed by UBC member Jeff Walker. 2004 – University Barge Club celebrated its 150th anniversary. 2004 – To recognize and preserve the historic nature of the building that houses University Barge, the Club organized the UBC 1871 Foundation, a 501(c)(3) organization which raises funds for preservation of the boathouse and oversees all maintenance, repair and improvement of the house itself. 2009 – The Thomas Eakins Head of the Schuylkill Regatta was organized as an independent entity, separate from the Barge Club, and granted 501(c)(3) status. penn_archivesROWING AT PENN: THE EARLY YEARS, 1854 – 1901 University Barge Club (founded 1854) The sport of rowing began at the University of Pennsylvania in 1854 with the founding of the University Barge Club. This initiative was taken by students, specifically ten members of the freshman class: George H. Waring, John W. Williams, J. Ashurst Bowie, J. Beauclerc Newman, Horace G. Browne, James H. Peabody, Alexander B. Coxe, Edmund A. Robinson, Pemberton S. Hutchinson, and Chas. I. Macouen. These young men, like many Penn students at the time, were in the habit of frequenting Tom Barrett’s Gymnasium after classes were done for the day. Here on the upper floors of a building near 8th and Market Streets they learned sparring and fencing. The sport of rowing was becoming increasingly popular in Philadelphia, so when the weather turned warm, these freshmen went out to Charlie’s boathouse on the Schuylkill River near the Fairmount Waterworks; before too long they purchased a “barge,” a boat named the “Hesperus,” from the Bachelor’s Barge Club for one hundred dollars and formed the University Barge Club. In these early days, club members wore uniforms and participated in drills. The daily drills included tossing and storing the oars, handling the boat hooks and lines, practicing pushing away from and landing at the boat slip. The required sailor’s uniform consisted of a white shirt cut low at the neck with a wide, turned-down collar, bell-bottomed white duck pants, a pea jacket with brass buttons, a wide belt, and a straw hat trimmed with long ribbons. All was purchased from clothier Jacob Reed; both the hat and the belt were monogrammed with “U.B.C.” The club’s rowing activities included competitive racing, regattas and also pleasure trips to various destinations on the Delaware and Schuylkill Rivers. The University Barge Club was not listed as a student organization in the first yearbooks of 1863 and 1865, but in 1867 the yearbook mentions that the University Barge Club had won the championship flag of the Schuylkill Navy after a lull in competitions while many rowers were involved in the Civil War. According to the 1867 yearbook, the University Barge Club at that time rented part of the Philadelphia Skating Club house where it kept its two boats, the four-oared shell Hesperus and the six-oared outrigger barge Lucifer. It was common for club members to launch their boats here and then travel to their upriver house, “The Lilacs.” At first, membership in the University Barge Club was restricted to Penn students, but when the Club began to open membership to alumni and even those not affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania, student enthusiasm for the Club declined. By 1871 when the University Barge Club built its own boathouse on the Schuylkill River’s Boathouse Row, there were few Penn students on the membership rolls. The University Barge Club and its members, including some students, many alumni and others, were included in the yearbooks of 1868 through 1870. Penn students, however, were seeking an alternative. Thus, the College Boat Club was founded in the fall of 1872, a year after the University Barge Club built its own boathouse on Boathouse Row. While College Boat Club members are listed in the yearbooks from this year forward, members of the University Barge Club were omitted from the 1871, 1872 and 1873 yearbooks. When the University Barge Club members were found again in the 1874 yearbook, the following comment also appeared: “The University boasts of two boat clubs, viz. the University Barge Club, one of the most flourishing clubs on the river, composed chiefly of graduates; and the College Barge Club [College Boat Club], a young, energetic organization, engaged at present in putting up a boat house at Fairmount Park.”

Metropolitan Opera House (Philadelphia)
Distance: 1.1 mi Competitive Analysis
858 N Broad St
Philadelphia, PA 19130

The Metropolitan Opera House is a historic opera house located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania at 858 North Broad Street. Built over the course of just a few months in 1908, it was the ninth opera house built by impresario Oscar Hammerstein I. It was initially the home of Hammerstein's Philadelphia Opera Company, and was originally called the Philadelphia Opera House. Hammerstein sold the house to the Metropolitan Opera of New York City in 1910, when it was renamed. The Met used the MOH through 1920, after which various opera companies used the house through 1934. For over five more decades it remained in constant use in turn as a movie theater, a ballroom, a sports venue, and a church. The MOH then fell into serious disrepair and was unused and vacant from 1988 until 1995, when it was bought by its current owners and became the Holy Ghost Headquarters Revival Center at the Met. The church has stabilized much of the building and is currently attempting to raise the funds necessary for further historic renovation of the opera house. The MOH has been included in the National Register of Historic Places since 1972.HistoryThe Metropolitan Opera House was built by Hammerstein to be the home of his then new opera company, the Philadelphia Opera Company . Hammerstein hired architect William H. McElfatrick of the firm J.B. McElfatrick & Son to design the opera house in 1907, and construction began the following year. When it opened as the Philadelphia Opera House in 1908, it was the largest theater of its kind in the world, seating more than 4,000 people.

Studio Ice
Distance: 0.4 mi Competitive Analysis
2940 W Thompson St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

(215) 715-7237

informative , photos of our venue for groups from 8 to 75., watch ice sculptors create works of art , while hosting your event,product launch, team building and just super fun celebrations that are ice cocktail themed.Home To fearnoice.com and ice sculpture.com..

Eastern State Penitentiary
Distance: 0.8 mi Competitive Analysis
N 21st St & Fairmount Ave
Philadelphia, PA

The Eastern State Penitentiary, also known as ESP, is a former American prison in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It is found at 2027 Fairmount Avenue between Corinthian Avenue and North 22nd Street in the Fairmount section of the city, and was operational from 1829 until 1971. The penitentiary refined the revolutionary system of separate incarceration first pioneered at the Walnut Street Jail which emphasized principles of reform rather than punishment. Notorious criminals such as bank robber Willie Sutton and Al Capone were held inside its innovative wagon wheel design. At its completion, the building was the largest and most expensive public structure ever erected, and quickly became a model for more than 300 prisons worldwide. The prison is currently a U.S. National Historic Landmark, which is open to the public as a museum for tours seven days a week, twelve months a year 10 am to 5 pm.

Fort Kickass
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
1340 N Marston St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

Local Business Near The Glass Factory

Temple of Love and Praise
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
1539 N 26th St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

(215) 765-1145

Claude Adams
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
1505 N 26th St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

Eastern Electrical Liquidators.
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
1511 N 26th St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

(800) 523-3818

Franklin Electric Company
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
1511 N 26th St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

(215) 765-3965

Kingdom Hall of Jehovahs Witnesses
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
1539 N 26th St
Philadelphia, PA 19121-3717

(215) 236-2697

The Temple of Love and Praise
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
1539 N 26th St
Philadelphia, PA 19121-3717

(215) 765-1145

Athletic Square
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
2624 W Jefferson St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

Camelot Academy
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
1435 N 26th St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

J & H Fuel Oil
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
1610 N 26th St
Philadelphia, PA 19121-2807

(215) 232-9516

J & H Fuel Oil Co
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
1610 N 26th St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

(215) 232-9516

Penial Baptist Church
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
2515 W Jefferson St
Philadelphia, PA 19121-3719

(215) 235-1616

The Hidden Condom House!
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
Oxford Street
Philadelphia, PA 19121

LMT Home Remodeling
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
2516 W Oxford St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

(267) 600-8100

Golden Star Baptist Church
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
1635 N 27th St
Philadelphia, PA 19121-2822

(215) 769-0623

Lomax Patricia
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
2530 Turner St
Philadelphia, PA 19121-2841

(215) 765-5258

Open Door Baptist Church
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
1632 N 26th St
Philadelphia, PA 19121-2807

(215) 765-3853

R W Welding
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
2728 W Oxford St
Philadelphia, PA 19121-2845

(215) 763-7890

Reed & Lively Dev Group
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
2520 Sharswood St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

(267) 978-1455

Najmun
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
2510 Turner St
Philadelphia, PA 19121

(215) 360-3264