You know about OpenDataPhilly, the city’s open data library. Now meet its cousin, PHL API.
Still a work in progress, it will eventually be a database of the all city’s APIs — you know, those tools that pipe in fresh, clean data into the tools and applications you love.
It already features loads of geospatial APIs, as well as the APIs for crime data, L&I data and 311 data. The site also features resources for developers, like tips for using a specific API, anda gallery of apps made using the different APIs.
First developed to be used at PennApps spring 2013, the city built the database with an eye toward making its APIs as “attractive” to developers as possible, said Chief Data Officer Mark Headd.
“I think cities like Philly need to look (and act) like every other company that has a public API,” Headd said in an email, referring to the fact that companies with public APIs provide resources around them for developers, like “detailed documentation, code samples, client libraries in a variety if languages, a forum for discussion and feedback.”
Only one other major city – Chicago – does this with its APIs, but Philly’s is more expansive, Headd said.
Join our growing Slack community
Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!
Donate to the Journalism Fund
Your support powers our independent journalism. Unlike most business-media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational contributions.

Philly’s Venture Cafe, the once-popular University City meetup, shuts down after 6 years

This Week in Jobs: You'll go mad over these 26 tech career opportunities

Building better founders: How to align entrepreneurial vision with investor expectations
