Water Department scientists Will Whalon and Lance Butler, (right) remove trays of mussels from a floating cage in the Manayunk Canal beneath the Cotton Street Bridge, Philadelphia, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Alejandro A. Alvarez / Staff Photographer

By Jadon George, Philadelphia Inquirer

Early in Lance Butler’s days at the Philadelphia Water Department, his boss pulled him aside and took him to the Manayunk Canal.

Once a key player in America’s industrial might, the canal had been closed for nearly 60 years. Its stagnant waters were full of mud, weeds, and algae. And the gatehouse had become a run-down graffiti canvas.

“I feel sorry for whoever has to take this project on,” Butler, now a senior scientist at PWD, remembered saying.

Turning to look at him, the boss replied: “Congratulations.”

That was in 1998. At an event last month, Butler recounted that first visit, and what a different place the area around the canal had become.

That was evident in the venue for his remarks: the stage of the Venice Beach Performing Arts and Recreation Center, which opened in 2014 as a theater and outdoor playground with athletic courts bathed in floodlights.

Now, PWD is hoping the canal itself can have a revival.

Roger Thomas, scientist with the Academy of Natural Sciences, Patrick Center, holding Yellow Lampmussel  removed from the Manayunk Canal at Cotton Street bridge, Philadelphia, Thursday, June 26, 2025.
Roger Thomas, scientist with the Academy of Natural Sciences, Patrick Center, holding Yellow Lampmussel removed from the Manayunk Canal at Cotton Street bridge, Philadelphia, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Alejandro A. Alvarez / Staff Photographer

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