Directions & Parking

 

How to Get Here

The Church of Saint Luke & The Epiphany is located at 330 South 13th Street (between Pine and Spruce streets) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  The neighborhood is served by a dense network of public transit lines, including buses, trolleys, rapid transit, and commuter rail.  Use the embedded map above for directions from your location to the church, whether you are traveling on foot or by automobile, public transit, or bicycle.

Parking

On Sundays free on-street parking is available for churchgoers, on the east side of 13th Street between Lombard and Spruce streets.  Parking is also available on the south side of Pine Street from Juniper Street to 12th Street.  Please note that this special allowance applies only on Sunday, and lasts only until 2 p.m.  Please place a parking permit on your dashboard. They are available in the narthex of the church or may be downloaded below.  One of the greeters stationed in the narthex will be happy to assist you.  If your car is ticketed while parked for church on Sunday, please bring the ticket to the church office.  If there are no free parking spots available,  metered street parking and commercial parking lots and garages are located in the neighborhood surrounding the church. DOWNLOAD A STREET PARKING PERMIT

Accessibility

Accessible entrances to the ground floor of the church building are located on 13th Street, directly north of the front steps, and on the south side, in the garden. On the ground floor are accessible bathrooms, the Church School Room, the Blue Room, and an elevator to the main floor. A ramp leads to the basement level kitchen and the assembly rooms used for Coffee Hour and other functions. The elevator provides access to the narthex, nave, side aisles, north chapel, and Furness Chapel.

The nave in the main church building is equipped with a public address system to make the spoken portions of the service more audible to everyone. Speakers are mounted on the walls of the north and south side aisles.

A hearing loop located in the nave transmits sound from the public address system directly to a wireless receiver called a T-coil found in most hearing aids and all new cochlear implants. Visitors use the hearing loop by switching their hearing instruments to T-coil mode. Hard-of-hearing visitors who do not have T-coil equipped hearing instruments may borrow one of our portable loop receivers with headphones. Ask a greeter for assistance.