February 14, 2021
Weitzman Students Win Urban Design Competition for Refinery Site Proposal

Called Farming Nature, Framing Future, the winning proposal calls for new public spaces, vertical farming, and transit.
Stuart Weitzman School of Design
102 Meyerson Hall
210 South 34th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Called Farming Nature, Framing Future, the winning proposal calls for new public spaces, vertical farming, and transit.
Michael Grant
mrgrant@design.upenn.edu
215.898.2539
A team of Master of City Planning and Master of Landscape Architecture students at Weitzman won an Edmund N. Bacon Urban Design Award from Philadelphia’s Center for Architecture and Design. The Award was presented in a virtual event held on February 11, and the students’ design will be featured at the upcoming Design Philadelphia festival and on the Center’s website.
The competition asked students to reimagine the 1300-acre Philadelphia Energy Solutions (PES) refinery site located along the Schuylkill River in Southwest Philadelphia. The winning design by Shaoan Chiu, Junwon Kim, Heejung Shin, and Nuosha Wang is called Farming Nature, Framing Future and envisions the site as the hub for urban farming and a food share system, new transit connections, and outdoor recreation spaces.
“We wanted our project to be not only clear and feasible but also novel at the same time,” says Chiu.
The students met in a contemporary urbanism course at Weitzman in the spring of 2020. Chiu and Kim, who are pursuing a Master of City Planning, had done a studio project in the Grays Ferry neighborhood, and they were interested in exploring surrounding areas, so they asked Shin and Wang, who are pursuing a Master of Landscape Architecture, to collaborate for the competition.
Founded in 2006 in memory of Philadelphia’s iconic 20th century city planner, Edmund N. Bacon (1910-2005), the annual Edmund N. Bacon Urban Design Awards honor both professionals and students whose work epitomize excellence in urban design. The student competition is open to undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral students in any field of study who matriculate during the fall semester coinciding with the competition.
This year’s professional honoree is Mindy Fullilove, a social psychiatrist and professor of urban policy and health at The New School, New York, who spoke at Weitzman’s 2017 Commencement Ceremony. Previous honorees include Judith Rodin, president of the Rockefeller Foundation and past president of the University of Pennsylvania, and Denise Scott Brown (MCP'60 and MArch'65).
The jury included Majora Carter, Principal, Majora Carter Group; Thomas Dalfo, Senior Vice President, Real Estate Service, Philadelphia Industrial Development Corporation; Jose Alminana, PLA, FASLA, SITES AP, LEED AP, Principal, Andropogon; Alan Greenberger, FAIA, Department Head, Architecture Design & Urbanism, Drexel University; Matthew Lister, Managing Director/Partner, Gehl.
Edmund Bacon is recognized as one of the most significant city planners of the 20th century. As Executive Director of the Philadelphia City Planning Commission from 1949-1970, his design concepts shaped the physical landscape of the post-World-War-II city. Bacon’s work had such national significance that he was featured on the cover of Time magazine in 1964, and brought Philadelphia into the national spotlight as a city that was ambitiously planning for its future.