Almost all hotels, bed and breakfasts, and inns are concentrated in Midtown, with a few near University City, and there are towers and motels suitable for ethnic minorities around the airport. Most hotels in Philadelphia are national chains. The most lacking thing here is ordinary small hotels, there are few of them. Most hotels have parking spaces for about $25 per day.
Philadelphia has well-preserved places of interest that record this glorious history: Independence Palace, Liberty Bell, National Independence Historical Park, Independence Avenue, Franklin Museum, etc.
Among the many buildings, the most famous is the "Independence Palace". This is a two-story old red brick building with milky white doors and windows, a milky white spire, and a large clock embedded between the main house and the tower. It was in this unpretentious building that the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution were born. It was also the command center of the American Revolutionary War, so it became an American historical heritage building and was named "Independence Palace". The interior of the building retains the meeting scenes and furniture decoration of that time.
The "Liberty Bell" near "Independence Palace" is a symbol of American independence. On July 4, 1776, with the loud ringing of bells, the Declaration of Independence was made public to the world for the first time. On April 16, 1783, the "Liberty Bell" bell announced the victory of the American War of Independence. Since then, every National Day (July 4th), the bell symbolizing American independence has been rung. This bell was cast in London, England. It is about one meter high and weighs about 943 kilograms. It was shipped to Philadelphia in 1752