On a quiet Monday morning, Broad Street carried few reminders from a rowdy Eagles fan celebration
And, city officials won't say if they began planning a Super Bowl victory parade.

When Dee Thurner woke up Monday morning, she dreaded going to work.
The 46-year-old from Port Richmond, who works for the Hoffman Design Group, didn’t consider a Broad Street celebration when the horticulturist scheduled a routine winter service for the frozen plants along the Avenue of the Arts.
But a block in, the “worst” she had to remove from a planter was a water bottle and some confetti.
“It’s really not as bad as I expected,” Thurner said.
Crowd control barricades along the sidewalks were the only sign that a mass gathering had taken place on Broad Street. The bottles, broken and intact, as well as the casings of fireworks, were gone by sunrise.
When Sophia, who asked to use only her first name for privacy reasons, arrived to work at Good Karma Cafe at the Wilma Theater, she was “shocked.”
“I walked out fully anticipating stuff stranded around,” she said.
But by 6:30 a.m. when Sophia prepared to open the coffee shop, the street was already clean.
Center City District crews, who weren’t authorized to be interviewed, worked on routine upkeep of the Wintergarden at Dilworth Park.
But the celebration happened.
The Eagles beat the Washington Commanders in the NFC championship, and will play in the Super Bowl in less than two weeks. People read Inner Excellence on poles, posed on trash tracks, and shared a Philadelphia tradition with their kids.
» READ MORE: Eagles fans climb poles, party in the streets, and celebrate another trip to the Super Bowl
As proof, every so often throughout the morning, fans in Eagles gear walked out of hotels on Broad Street.
John Sanson, 40, from Little Rock, Ark., traveled to the game with his son, Christian, 20.
It was the third time the father-son duo came to town for an Eagles game. But seeing the NFC championship was a new level.
“This was a big one,” John Sanson said. “Broad Street was lit up last night.”
Walking back to their hotel from a late night meal after the celebration, around 1 a.m., they witnessed the cleaning effort commence.
“There were crews all over,” Christian Sanson said. “Working hard.”
Parade coming to Broad?
As for what Broad Street’s future could hold, Mayor Cherelle L. Parker’s administration wouldn’t say Monday whether it had officially begun planning for a potential Super Bowl victory parade, according to statement from city spokesperson Joe Grace and the Office of Emergency Management.
”The City’s focus is always on public safety, and that will now continue with public safety planning for Super Bowl weekend,” the statement said. “We will publicize those planning efforts as they become available.”
Police opted against greasing the poles ahead of Sunday’s NFC championship, instead using bike racks as makeshift corrals in an attempt to keep people on the streets and not the poles. It’s unclear if that strategy will stay for the Super Bowl.
”As was stated last week by Managing Director [Adam] Thiel and Mayor Parker prior to Sunday’s game, the public was urged to refrain from climbing poles. It is dangerous and can cause serious injury along with damaging city infrastructure,” the city’s statement said. “We will continue emphatically urging people to not climb poles at any time.”