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Having a Neighborhood Picnic/Street Party in the Borough of State College

by Clare Hinrichs and Mark Bergstrom

We moved to the East Highlands neighborhood close to 18 years ago and were immediately charmed that our neighbors had a late summer neighborhood picnic/street party on Holly Alley just outside East Fairmount Park. This was a cookout/potluck/hangout that included long-time residents and new arrivals, brought together kids and seniors, solidified old friendships and launched new ones. What a way to cap off the summer!

What was once billed as the Foster 500 (Block) party has expanded over the years to include a broader range of East Highlands friends, neighbors and former neighbors. The organizers of our event have changed over time. The weather has cooperated some years more than others. Conversation has been lively and friendly. The food has always been outstanding.

We have held some version of our neighborhood picnic/street party every year. Every year, that is, until summer 2020, when COVID-19 put a major brake on this neighborhood tradition. In 2021, we again refrained from gathering. But now in 2022, we are looking to reclaim and cautiously revive this much-loved outdoor summer gathering.

So how do you plan and pull off a good neighborhood picnic/street party in the Borough of State College? Below we share the basic steps we’ve taken to organize and hold our event over the years. We also offer a few thoughts about new considerations as we continue to adjust and adapt to the COVID-19 era.

Neighbors enjoying food at their block party


Clare Hinrichs (chinrichs011@gmail.com) and her husband Tom Richard have lived in the East Highlands since 2004. She is a professor of Rural Sociology in Penn State’s College of Agricultural Sciences. Clare and Tom are ardent home gardeners. They tend flowers in their front yard hellstrip, grow vegetables alley-side, and occasionally persuade their Chicago fig tree to bear.

Mark Bergstrom (markbergstrom21@gmail.com) and his wife Amy bought their house on East Foster Avenue in 1995, returning it from a student rental to a residential home.  He is an associate teaching professor of criminology and executive director of the state sentencing commission.  The backyard of their home is usually occupied by Flat-Coated Retrievers and/or a German Shepherd dog.  As a result, a terraced vegetable garden was constructed in the front yard.  Despite rigorous efforts to protect the produce, the garden is owned by neighborhood rabbits and chipmunks.

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