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Wanamaker Light Show in Philadelphia draws crowds for final viewing before two‑year hiatus

PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — The Wanamaker building was packed throughout Christmas Eve as thousands of visitors gathered for a final look at the historic Wanamaker Light Show before it goes dark during a two-year hiatus. The building will be under construction during the 2026 and 2027 holiday seasons.

For many, the show has lasted a lifetime, whether that lifetime spans decades, or just a few years.

Paulette Steffa showed Action News a black-and-white photo of herself as a 3 year-old child, at the very first light show in 1956.

“I think this is my 14th year coming,” said 14-year-old Nora Gradel of Swedesboro, New Jersey. “So every year.”

The future of the show became uncertain earlier this year when Macy’s closed its Center City store inside the Wanamaker building.

Emily Feehery comes to the show every year with her mother, Theresa. She said, “We were really worried. We kind of had a premonition last year that it might be the last time for a while and thankfully Mom took a bunch of pictures of Dickens Village and everything to kind of document.”

Gradel said the possibility of losing the tradition was devastating. “I was so upset, I cried about it. Because I’ve come here for so long, every year on Christmas Eve we come here and I just couldn’t imagine Christmas Eve without it.”

The Philadelphia Visitor Center ultimately led a fundraising effort that brought in $500,000 to keep the lights on for this season. If the crowds this season were any indication, it appears to have been a worthwhile effort. “It’s been unreal,” said Maita Soukup, Vice President of Experience and Engagement for the Philadelphia Visitor Center. “We’re seeing on some weekend days 9,000, 10,000 people pouring through these doors.”

RELATED: Beloved Wanamaker Light Show, Dickens Village saved after $500K fundraising effort

“It’s the best Christmas gift we could have is to have Wanamaker’s open one more time,” Steffa said.

Christmas Eve marked the final set of shows before it pauses for renovations under the building’s new owners. Allie Bonner of Brewerytown said, “I hope it comes back bigger and better than ever after that closure, but yeah, we’re lucky we got here on the last day.”

“It was a relief,” said Chris Carroll, who lives in Washington D.C. now but grew up in the local Philadelphia area. “There was some speculation last year about them not bringing it back, or maybe bringing it back. So we love it, and we hope they continue it either somewhere else or whenever the renovations are complete.”

Soukup said the Visitor Center intends to remain involved. “The Visitor Center is in partnership with the building and we want to do everything we can to keep this tradition alive.”

Plans for the building’s future are still being developed. The new owners have proposed using the first three floors for retail and converting the upper floors into loft apartments, though those ideas remain preliminary.

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