Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Development to Open Near Airport

 New developments are expected to be built in the Airport area.  Two complexes alongside a new road are expected to be developed, with more than 240 acres available for more business opportunities. The development will feature more than 360,000 square feet of office space, with possibilities for more in the near future.

A major new tenant signing a lease for two buildings with a development team that expected to build only one for a future tenant to come. A new road opening up more than 240 acres for new development. And the potential to come for another 7,000 acres of land owned by the Airport Authority of Allegheny County.

Such are signs of progress surrounding the Pittsburgh International Airport detailed by three well-established developers in the area and Allegheny County Chief Executive Rich Fitzgerald who participated in a panel discussion at the Corridors of Opportunity event at the Hyatt Regency Hotel hosted by the Pittsburgh Business Times.

“This corridor continues to grow and to grow in a very positive way,” Fitzgerald said.

Joining Fitzgerald on the panel were Dick Donley, principal of Chaska Properties and co-general partner in the new Pittsburgh International Business Park, which is developing in partnership with Continental Real Estate Cos.; Bill Hunt, chairman of Downtown-based Elmhurst Group, owner of the Airside Business Park among other airport area properties; and Jerry Bunda, president of Imperial Land Corp., the developer of the Findlay Industrial Park, along with plans for others.

Donley is the newest developer to operate in the airport corridor. His joint venture with Continental Real Estate achieved a major boost in October when it reached a lease with mortgage services company Service Link LP, to occupy two 54,000-square-foot buildings the joint venture has started building. Donley described the development so far, which is working with a ground lease with the Allegheny County Airport Authority, as succeeding well beyond expectations.


With more than $14 million of public investment already invested in the infrastructure, Donley said the project as a whole calls for 360,000 square feet of flex office space.


Bunda is hopeful to see similar results at Findlay Industrial Park. The park has seen recent progress with the extension of its main road, Solar Drive, further into property at the master planned development, which he said will now make newly available more than 240 acres for development.

Hunt, whose company has owned Airside Business Park for some time and has been a developer in the western suburbs for 28 years, noted that the tenant demand in the airport area has gradually become more diversified over the years, improving from the days when US Airways dropped the airport as a hub.

For more information see Biz Journal.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Hill District and East Liberty Developments

East Liberty is becoming the place to develop in Pittsburgh.  The mayor and two senators from Pittsburgh are announcing a development in East Liberty that will create jobs and help the area's economy.  East Liberty is set to acquire a new boutique hotel that is being constructed from a historic building that has set empty for years.  This funding that has opened up is also helping to support new developments in the Hill District as well.

Two major neighborhood development projects, one in East Liberty, the other in the Hill District, received word of a federal infusion of grant funding.

An $800,000 grant will go to East Liberty Development Inc. to help fund the renovation of a historic five-story former YMCA building in the center of the neighborhood into a new 63-room
boutique hotel.

In the Hill District, a $789,000 grant will go to the Hill House Economic Development Corp. to help build a new Shop ‘N Save grocery store long pursued in the neighborhood.
Both grants came from the Office of Community Services, a federal agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The funding was announced by Pittsburgh Mayor Luke Ravenstahl along with community leaders from East Liberty Development,Inc. and the Hill House Economic Development Corp.
According to an announcement from the mayor’s office, Ravenstahl worked on securing the grants with U.S. Sen. Robert Casey, D-Pa., and U.S. Rep. Mike Doyle, D-Pittsburgh. Both new developments are expected to create hundreds of jobs, according to the mayor’s announcement.

The hotel plan will be pursued as a partnership between ELDI’s private real estate arm, ELDI Real Estate LLC, and Edile LC, led by East Liberty entrepreneur Matt Ciccone. The plan calls for redeveloping a historic building that has sat vacant for 10 years into what may be the city’s first boutique hotel at a total development cost of $19 million, including $500,000 in loans from the city’s Urban Redevelopment Authority to help acquire the building.

With a budget of $11.5 million, the new Hill District grocery store is planned to be a new 30,000-square-foot Shop ‘n Save providing full-service shopping and selection in a project expected to create 100 jobs.

The project, which has faced budget shortfalls and delays, has established a broad range of funding support that includes a $1 million Community Development Block Grant and $275,800 in deferred land acquisition financing from the URA.

The grocery store is to be operated by local store owner Jeff Ross and the construction project is being managed by Massaro Corp. on behalf of the developer, Hill House Economic Development Corp.

Ravenstahl praised the Obama administration for providing financial support to help continue to spur new development in the city.

For more information see Biz Journal.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

University of Pittsburgh and CMU Come to Bakery Square

SEI with Carnegie Mellon will partner with the University of Pittsburgh to take over 38,000 square feet of space in Bakery Square.  This extra space will help them prepare for the growth of their software engineering and cyber security programs.  The US Government is also working with SEI to develop new cyber security software.  Through these programs, East Liberty is being developed into a branch of the Oakland tech community.

Walnut Capital Partners has leased most of the remaining first-floor space in Bakery Square to the Software Engineering Institute of Carnegie Mellon University, the latest validation of the East End neighborhoods of Larimer and East Liberty becoming a branch campus for the city’s university district in Oakland.

Bakery Square will soon be joined across the street by Bakery Square II, a development of Walnut Capital.Walnut Capital announced Wednesday that it had reached an agreement ago for SEI, which will take 38,000 square feet of office space at Bakery Square. SEI will join such other local institutions as the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center’s Technology Development Center and the University of Pittsburgh, which operates an office for its School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences and its Masters of Science in Prosthetics and Orthotics Program, along with the building’s predominant tenant, Google.

Paul Nielsen, director and chief executive officer of the SEI, noted the lease represents an expansion for the institute, whose main office is on Fifth Avenue in the heart of Oakland.
”While our main headquarters will remain in the Oakland section of Pittsburgh near the Carnegie Mellon University campus, we look forward to opening up additional space at Bakery Square,” said Nielsen, in a prepared statement. “The extra space there will help us prepare for the anticipated growth of our programs in software engineering and cybersecurity.”

Also nearby on Penn Avenue is Chatham Eastside, an expansion of the instution’s larger campus nearby on Fifth Avenue, bringing the presence of three universities to a stretch of Penn Avenue that would have seemed highly unlikely 10 years ago.

The institute has 500 employees and in addition to its Pittsburgh headquarters it has offices in Los Angeles, Arlington, Va., and Frankfurt Germany. While no projections were provided on how many people would work at SEI's new office, a 38,000 square foot lease projects to 190 people base on a formula of five employees per 1,000 square feet.

The SEI was established in 1984 at CMU by the Department of Defense as a federally funded research center. It works with various government agencies, academia and industry on a variety of software engineering activities. The institute is active in the areas of cyber security, process management and research and development.

In 2010, the US government extended its contract with SEI through June 2015 with a value of $584 million.

Todd Reidbord, president of Walnut Capital, described the lease as another example of the project's ability to draw on the strengths of the city's universities, institutions and high tech partners. Jeremy Kronman and AndrewMiller of CBRE represented Walnut Capital in the lease while Keefe Ellis represented SEI. Downtown-based Strada LLC will design the space for SEI.

The prospect of the SEI establishing an office at Bakery Square bodes well for the surrounding neighborhoods as well for the potential for Bakery Square II, which Walnut Capital plans to expand across Penn Avenue on a school property to be redeveloped into a major mixed-use development comprising office space and apartments.

“I think you’re seeing East Liberty transforming itself into a branch of the Oakland tech community and there’s certainly room for other areas to do the same,” said Councilman Bill Peduto, whose district includes portions of East Liberty.

Walnut Capital, whose financial partner on the development is RCG Longview Fund, expects to soon begin construction on Bakery Square II in January and projects it will be occupied in the summer of 2014.

Gregg Broujos, managing director of the Pittsburgh office of Colliers International, expressed surprise at the first floor space not renting out as retail, “because everyone thought that retail would fly off the shelf.”

He expects that Walnut Capital filling its remaining space intended for retail should bode well for other East Liberty developers such as Steve Mosites and Ed Lesoon, who have been working to lease empty store fronts at the same time that the SEI will further the revitalization of the area.

“It just continues to bolster all the development going on there,” he said.

For more information see BizJournal.

Friday, August 24, 2012

Wood District and Market District Renovation Projects

Four million dollars in restoration work is underway for several different historic structures in the Wood District and Market District Corridors.  This partnership between the mayor’s office and a preservation organization is a first in this country.  The Pittsburgh Historic and Landmarks Foundation (PHLF) is being employed by the city to hire and supervise the construction projects of these two corridors. 

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiiZHClIR0ZBjDjkQ-0z8ftoyXV8BgYtP-FNkatxnog5duQ38PWvv68mnDbAVq_h8SzjtT4QWyjTX3X20CvWa_Yfhrmg3RV51-BEsQ6RhffezGEb-UZUudJOes2RLqWeJBo1CXAB8Zlydc/s1600/9654.jpgThe Wood County Corridor project is being emphasized as a women’s retail district. The men’s corridor will be on Market and Fifth Street. The project has garnered a great deal of interest from different retail stores, who are interested in moving in as soon as space becomes available. This peaked interest is great for the project, as the construction is starting soon.  One of the first tasks on the restoration list is to restore the cast iron facades on the front of the buildings. As the president of PHFL Arthur Ziegler explained, “We’re the city of iron and steel. We have three of these in a row on Wood Street, they are all in very bad shape, and we will take them back to what they looked like originally.”
The project is also helping a local university secure more housing for the campus.  Point Park University is working with the organization to try to secure student housing in the upper floors of the retail properties. 

The groups involved in this project are hoping that if they can improve the graphic and facades of these buildings, the same will be done in the private sector.  This will help continue the overall goal of the historic preservation of Pittsburgh.  This project and the historic preservation of the city are two goals the mayor has to promote economic revitalization in the city.

For more information please see PopCity.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

New Restaurants to Open in the Strip District

New restaurants, businesses, and night clubs are heading into the Strip District with their openings occurring in July.  These businesses are just some of the developments heading into this area of Pittsburgh.  This Pittsburgh shopping district is starting to become busy with activity, and it is bringing a whole new set of shoppers to the area to experience what it has to offer.

A string of openings have come to the Strip District, including the new Italian restaurant Emilia Romagna; Marty's Market; and R Wine Cellar.

Marty's Market
, a specialty food store and café, held a soft opening on Saturday, giving shoppers a glimpse of the new market that replaces the former Right By Nature at 2305 Smallman Street.

The market is one-third smaller than the former grocery store, and specializes in locally grown and organic foods. But Marty's seeks to distinguish itself as a unique retail experience, starting with design.


Renovations to the space include three glass garage doors--which open to the downtown skyline--two kitchen areas, and a coffee bar.  Owner Regina Koetters says transparency, from the kitchen to the street view, was a guiding principle in the market’s design.


Marty’s cafe, which seats up to 45, serves made-to-order meals from a menu that changes daily.  The cafe is also planned to serve as a community kitchen of sorts, with tastings and cooking demonstrations by local chefs and amateurs alike.


-  Just a few blocks away
Emilia Romagna will celebrate its grand opening this Friday.  The restaurant is a project of Chef Jonathan Vlasic, of the Allentown restaurant Alla Famiglia, and Peters Township’s Arlecchino.

The menu features dishes inspired by those regions of Northern Italy, as well as popular dishes from the proprietors’ other two restaurants.


Located at 108 19th Street, the space will also introduce a new nightclub to the Strip--V Ultra Lounge--which will also open on Friday.  The lounge will occupy the building’s second floor and balcony, and will feature a limited menu of antipastas, burgers, and sushi.


The lounge and restaurant are a project of Vlasic, Vince Isolde, and Chef Cory Hughes.


R Wine Cellar has opened at 2014 Smallman Street, selling house-made wines.  The cellar, a family owned urban winery, currently has four reds and four whites available, including oaked and un-oaked Chardonnays.

Although juices are currently brought in from elsewhere, all wines are fermented, blended, and bottled on site.  And several wines are made using grapes from the Lake Erie Region, including the white Traminette ($12) and the Lake Erie Red ($13).


Owner Steve Russell says they chose this location because they wanted to be in the middle of the developing Strip District.

"We think the potential here in the future is very strong," he says.


Koetters agrees, and says it’s an exciting time to be part of the Strip District, and recognizes that each new businesses is a boon to the neighborhood.


“We’re fortunate to be enjoying a great time in the Strip,” she says.  “There’s a lot of stuff going on… [and] I want Marty’s to be a vehicle to encourage more investment in the Strip.”


For more information on these restaurants go to PopCity

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Night Market on Liberty

Another reason for Pittsburghers to make their way downtown!  Market Square will host a Night Market featuring music, vendors and various types of food.  The Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership is sponsoring the event to showcase Liberty Avenue and all it has to offer.

For the first time in recent memory, an unused lot in Downtown Pittsburgh is being transformed into a one-night-only Night Market, giving city residents one more reason to venture to (or stay in) the Golden Triangle after work.  The Night Market, which takes places this Friday from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. will feature music by DJ Soy Sos, independent vendors of jewelry, art, and crafts, and food from a variety of local eateries.

Jeremy Waldrup, president of the P
ittsburgh Downtown Partnership, says his organization created this event in order to showcase this particular stretch of Liberty Avenue as a block filled with activity, including a variety of bars and restaurants, and the August Wilson Center.

“By providing individuals with another reason to come to this street we hope to encourage more folks to mill around downtown and see what opportunities there are to experience,” Waldrup says. 


At Friday’s market (located at 917-919 Liberty Avenue), the restaurant Meat & Potatoes will offer a preview of food from its new concept, Pork & Beans, which is expected to open later this fall.  And Conflict Kitchen, which is set to open Downtown in the coming months, will also be serving food.


Among the 15 independent vendors will be Tugboat Printshop and Devorah Naturals.  And café tables and chairs will be set up at the Night Market to encourage guests to linger in the space.


This Friday is also the
Pittsburgh Cultural Trust’s Gallery Crawl, which begins at 5:30 p.m.

“It should fit very well into the [Gallery Crawl] with people exploring that area,” says Ida D’Errico, of PDP.


D'Errico says this is the only Night Market currently planned, but based on the event’s success there could be more in the future.


“Pittsburgh enjoys various markets and our outdoor plazas, and so potentially this could expand into another location at some future point in time,” she says.


The Night Market is the latest endeavor to come from the Project Pop Up Program, a partnership between Mayor Ravenstahl, the URA, City Planning, and the PDP.



For more information on the Night Market please see PopCity.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

New Jobs and Developments Are Coming to Pittsburgh

Hundreds of jobs will be coming to Pittsburgh thanks to the development of three aircraft hangers and other numerous projects coming to the area.   The projects are expected to have a positive impact on the community and the economic development of the city.


The development of three aircraft hangers, an environmental study to demolish a dilapidated building and other redevelopment projects expected to create hundreds of new jobs will get a boost from gaming fund revenues awarded by the Commonwealth Financing Authority (CFA).

"The approved projects will improve public safety and have a positive impact on community and economic development in Allegheny County," said Department of Community and Economic Development Secretary C. Alan Walker. "The gaming fund revenues will provide important infrastructure improvements to the area, which in turn, will add capacity for future economic development."

Five projects in Allegheny County will each receive $500,000 under the CFA's action. The $2.5 million in total funding comes from the Pennsylvania Gaming Economic Development and Tourism Fund Program (GEDTF), which was established to fund community and economic development projects in Allegheny County, through revenues from the Pittsburgh – The Rivers Casino. 

GEDTF program provides grants for single-year and multi-year projects that promote community and economic development in Allegheny County, including: economic and infrastructure development, job training, community improvement, public safety, public interest and costs to administer GEDTF funds. 

For more information and a detailed list of the projects please see US Politics.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Bicycling Just Got a Little Safer in Oakland.

People who commute by Bicycle in Oakland will be happy to know their dangerous journey through four lanes of traffic will be getting a little easier very soon.  The first meeting of the ThinkBike workshops took place in Pittsburgh, and it looks like Oakland will be the lucky area to get a bicycle lane that makes it safer for the commute.




After two days of ThinkBike workshops, the City of Pittsburgh is ready to bring the highest level of bicycle infrastructure to Oakland.

Based on the recommendations of Dutch mobility experts, the City is beginning the process of installing separated cycle tracks in the Fifth-Forbes corridor of this heavily trafficked neighborhood. 


According to the City's Bicycle and Pedestrian Coordinator Stephen Patchan, cycle tracks represent the most progressive piece of bicycle infrastructure currently available, and offer the highest level of safety for both cyclists and motorist.


Cycle tracks are on-street, bicycle-only paths, and often include physical barriers, such as curbs, between automobiles and cyclists.  In Homestead, a cycle track was recently installed along the Great Allegheny Passage.  The proposed track in Oakland would be the first in Pittsburgh.


Patchan says the city has no timeline for installing the cycle tracks, and will conduct extensive public outreach and engineering studies before selecting a design and location.  He says the project will necessarily impact existing conditions for automobiles.


“We're trying to figure out a way to mitigate the impacts, but also provide a piece of infrastructure that's required for getting from hundreds [of cyclists]...to several thousand cyclists biking through that corridor.”


Although the corridor is currently used by many bicycle commuters, Patchan says the street’s current design--three to four lanes of one-way traffic--doesn’t encourage new riders.


“It takes a certain personality to ride on that street,” he says.


ThinkBike is a multi-city initiative of Dutch experts and companies to increase bicycle use in the U.S. and Canada.  Since the first workshop in Toronto, ThinkBike has been held in Washington D.C., San Francisco, Miami and Los Angeles.


Patchan says ThinkBike contacted the City to host a workshop because of its rising reputation as a bicycle-friendly city, and its maturing cycling community.


But Patchan says the city intends to do more, and create cycling infrastructure on-par with the best Dutch cities.


"We're going to be a world-class bicycle city, so we're going to need the infrastructure for it," he says.


For more information on ThinkBike go to PopCity

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Retail and Commercial Development Coming in Sheraden

Two projects that consist of retail and commercial space has been approved by the Urban Development Authority.  These new developments will bring in new clients and renters thanks to the money set aside to update the land and property.

The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) has voted to approve two projects that will bring new residences and retail or office space to the Lawrenceville and Sheraden neighborhoods of Pittsburgh, including apartments in Doughboy Square and the Neighborhood Stabilization Program in Sheraden.

The Doughboy Apartments, located in the 3400 block of Butler Street, is a mixed-used development in Lawrenceville that will include 39 residential units and approximately 17,000 square feet of first-floor commercial space. 


The infill project will be located amongst a mix of old and new structures, like The Clemente Museum’s historic Engine House 25, and newly constructed townhomes on Butler Street.


“Right now, most of this property is vacant land, so it'll provide an attractive building to anchor a pretty strategic location in the corridor,” says Tom Cummings of the URA.  “It will bring additional residents to the community that will help to bolster the main street shopping district.”


The URA approved a $1.4 million Pittsburgh Development Fund loan, and a $100,000 Urban Development Fund loan for the project, as well as a request for multifamily financing bonds up to $10 million from the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency. The total development cost of the project is $13 million.


Developer Ralph A. Falbo, Inc. is partnering with architect Chris Desmone, whose architecture firm is headquartered in the historic Pennsylvania National Bank building in the center of the Doughboy Square.


The apartments will be one- and- two-bedroom units, with basement-level parking.  A majority of the apartments will be market rate, while 20 percent will be offered as affordable housing.  Cummings says neighborhood organizations are very supportive of the housing mix panned for the project.


And in Sheraden, seven abandoned homes will be acquired, rehabilitated, and sold to owner-occupants through the Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP). 


In January the URA received a $333,400 NSP III grant from the federal program, and PNC Bank has stepped forward to provide $500,000 in acquisition construction financing.


Three of the seven homes, located on Bergman Street, have been acquired, with construction to begin within the next month.





For more information on the developments click on PopCity.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Pittsburgh Eligible in Innovative City Contest

Mayor Bloomberg of New York is hosting a contest in which cities can come up with ideas that will improve city life by addressing a problem or situation the area is facing.  The winning city will receive 5 million dollars to pursue the idea and make it a reality.  Pittsburgh is eligible to win that prize.


New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg's charity will give $5 million to one city that comes up with a groundbreaking idea for change.

Pittsburgh is among the 1,300 U.S. cities with a population of 30,000 or more eligible for the prize, or one of four $1 million awards.

Other eligible cities include Penn Hills, Bethel Park and Mt. Lebanon.

To win, cities must submit an innovative idea that would "improve city life by addressing a major social or economic issue, improving the customer service experience for citizens or businesses, increasing government efficiency and/or enhancing accountability, transparency and public engagement," according to a statement from Bloomberg Philanthropies this morning.
Pittsburgh officials said they were excited to participate in the challenge.

"Pittsburgh is a city of innovation," said Joanna Doven, spokeswoman for Pittsburgh Mayor Luke Ravenstahl. "We're thrilled to have been picked for this competition, and we thank Mayor Bloomberg for thinking of Pittsburgh."

Doven speculated that Pittsburgh would create a private-public partnership that includes residents to come up with ideas.

Bloomberg has donated more than $2.4 billion to causes aimed at impacting communities through programs centered on health, sustainability, literacy, social welfare and the arts, according to his website. Bloomberg Philanthropies donated $330 million worldwide last year.

City Councilman Bill Peduto said he hopes the city will look to residents and businesses, rather than government officials, to devise a plan for the competition.

"City government doesn't need to create it. We just need to enable it," he said.

For more information check out The Pittsburgh Tribune.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

PNC to acquire, restore historic Lord and Taylor building Downtown

PNC plans to purchase the historic Lord and Taylor building downtown and convert it into offices for their Pittsburgh banks.   PNC plans to return the building to it's classic style with granite exterior, and return it to it's original function as a bank. 

The former Lord and Taylor building, a key historic structure in Downtown’s Fifth-Forbes corridor, will soon be active again as PNC Financial Services Group has reached a deal to purchase that landmark.  The bank plans to relocate 800 employees there, returning the granite, Classical-styled building to its original use as a bank.


Fred Solomon, of PNC, says this building presented the best opportunity for consolidating the bank’s real estate portfolio in that neighborhood.  Solomon adds that PNC employees enjoy working downtown, citing restaurant and shopping options, and access to public transportation.

The building has been vacant since November 2004, when the department store closed its doors citing declining sales.  Its most recent owners, J.J. Gumberg Co., had purchased the building in 2005 for $2.5 million.


Built in 1924, the six-story building served as a Mellon Bank branch for seven decades before its conversion to a retail use.  Solomon says PNC believes it can easily convert the space to office uses, and will utilize the building’s new escalators and elevators.


Solomon says PNC plans to restore the building’s exterior, which was designated a city historic structure in 1999.


“We have no intention of changing anything on the building's exterior,” he says.  “We plan to honor its heritage.”


PNC plans to close on the building by the end of this month.  Remodeling will start soon after, with a completion date around the end of 2013.


Solomon says PNC has been a longtime supporter of Downtown, and cites its other developments in that area.


“The company's been on the same corner at fifth and Wood for approximately 160 years,” he says.  “We expect to be at the same intersection for much longer with the construction of the Tower at PNC Plaza, which will be our new headquarters building in Pittsburgh.”


For more details on the project check out Popcity

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Moon Township in a Development Upswing.


Moon Township is on a development upswing as more than 20 new development projects are underway in the area.  Walmart, a school, and a hilton hotel are just some of the things that the area has to look forward to in the next few years.  Many of these developments are taking place around the Cherrington Parkway.


An upturn in the economy and the planned Walmart construction on University Boulevard has renewed developers' interest in Moon Township, officials said.




"Definitely looking back at the applications for 2011, it was a slow year for development plans," said Moon Planning Director Adam McGurk. "It's hard to say what it is, but it does say that the economy is picking up in terms of commercial development." 

McGurk said more than 20 projects are now in the construction phase in the township. 
Developers this year have unveiled plans for a new, 130,000-square foot Hilton hotel, slated to be constructed off Fed Ex Drive. The project was set to break ground in 2008, but developers backed out as the economy sank into a recession that year.

The 117-room Hilton Homewood Suites, which will be designed by the Pittsburgh-based Gateway Engineers, is still in the planning phases, but could break ground as early as this summer, developers said.  

The owner of the proposed Moon Township Goddard School for Early Childhood Development said he plans to open the school's doors in January 2013. The 8,500 square-foot building will sit on the cul-de-sac on Commerce Drive
Randy Forister, senior director of development at the Allegheny County Airport Authority, said a strengthening economy has sparked new interest in airport-area development.  

"We are seeing a lot more activity this year, much more so than in the last two years," Forister said. "I think it's the economy picking up, and I think that people in general like to be near the airport."

Forister said construction is set to begin later this year on the first, 53,000-square foot building in the Pittsburgh International Business Park, a planned campus of office buildings to be located off Cherrington Parkway.

Construction on the project will be phased over a ten-year period, and will take place on 40 acres of land adjacent to the Cherrington Corporate Center.

The project has been in the works for a number of years, Forrester said. In 2009, the Moon Transportation Authority and airport authority partnered to connect utility infrastructure in the area. Ohio-based Continental Real Estate, which developed the Waterfront in Homestead, and Cranberry Business Park developer Chaska Property Advisors, are spearheading the project. 

Allegheny County, which owns the property, is leasing the land to the joint venture. No tenants for the property have yet been announced. 

Forister said the project has helped "jumpstart development” in the area.

"You’re right by the airport. It's 19 miles from downtown so you have easy access there," he said of the Cherrington Business Park. "It's just going to be a great business location."  
Mark Handlovitch, a Robinson-based Remax broker, said commercial developers are eyeing the planned University Boulevard military commissary, which could draw military personnel from across the region to the township.

After a series of setbacks, construction on the 43,000-square foot regional commissary is expected to begin this year. The building, which will replace the existing Oakdale commissary, will be built on the corner of the Interstate 376 Business Route and University Boulevard. 

"There's definitely more interest in the airport corridor," Handlovitch said. "I think it's been stagnant for a while—really since the airport moved 20 years ago. But with projects like Walmart and the military commissary, you're going to have a lot of people coming into this township." 

Walmart, which announced plans to build a 150,000 square-foot store on the grounds of the former West Hills Shopping Center, is now working with PennDOT traffic engineers to obtain a highway occupancy permit, said PennDOT spokesman James Struzzi. No ground-breaking date is yet available for the project. 

Handlovitch said he believes Walmart’s arrival in the township could be a boon to area business. The project has been in the planning phases since the national retailer purchased the defunct shopping center in 2007.

The former plaza has been razed, leaving a vacant lot at the corner of University Boulevard and Brodhead Road. 

"There's good and bad that can come with it," said Handlovitch of the Walmart construction. "But the bottom line is, it was an old rundown plaza. If we want to see growth as a township, we need updated buildings and plazas. We need new development coming in."

For more information check out Moon Patch.

Monday, May 21, 2012

The gateway project in the historic Deutschtown neighborhood is set to revitalize the neighborhood and encourage development in this unique and important Northside business district.  This project includes refurbishing Victorian storefronts and adding business and administrative space in the area.



The Historic Deutschtown neighborhood is working to give the 50,000 cars that pass through it on a daily basis even more reason to pause.  The Deutschtown Gateway Project, which is currently underway, includes restorations of several Victorian storefronts on East Ohio Street, an effort that neighborhood organizations hope will improve the entryway of this important Northside business district.

Phase I of the Deutschtown Gateway Project is the complete restoration a Victorian-era commercial building's facade at 632 East Ohio Street.  Located near I-279, it is a highly visible landmark for commuters and visitors exiting the highway. 


Among other improvements, colored art glass windows, hidden for decades behind an earlier remodeling, will soon be restored. The building’s current tenant, Grace Period, plans to expand its administrative offices to a renovated second floor.


The restoration is part of a larger redevelopment plan of the Historic Deutschtown Development Corporation (HDDC) and the Northside Leadership Conference (NSLC). 


At 620-628 East Ohio Street, a combination restoration and infill construction project will add updated retail space to the block, whose buildings are mostly vacant.  The project will create 6,000 to 8,000 square-feet of horizontal commercial office space per floor, on the 2
nd and 3rd stories of this multi-parcel redevelopment.

According to NSLC Executive Director Mark Fatla, the project will bring a type of large office space the district currently lacks.


“We’ll be able to offer the office market what it wants,” Fatla says.


HDDC is also planning renovate several other buildings it owns, including 431, 433, and 502 East Ohio Street.


For more information check out: PopCity 

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Ravenstahl Heads to Development Convention

Mayor Ravenstahl is heading to Vegas for the the International Council of Shopping Centers Convention.  Ravenstahl is setting up a booth at the convention, and hoping to explore some future development projects for Pittsburgh.  This includes a development project for the old site of the Mellon Arena. 



Mayor Luke Ravenstahl and the Urban Redevelopment Authority are sponsoring a booth at RECon, the annual Spring convention of the International Council of Shopping Centers    scheduled for Sunday, May 20 to Wednesday, May 23 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
City officials believe it is the first time the city of Pittsburgh has established a booth at the convention, which is expected to draw more than 30,000 attendees for four days of panel discussions, networking and deal-making for new development and shopping centers throughout the country. In the past, members of the city’s Urban Redevelopment Authority have attended the ICSC convention as visitors without renting trade show space.
Ravenstahl is scheduled to participate in a panel discussion with a host of other mayors, an event former mayor Tom Murphy also participated in more than 10 years ago at the ICSC Spring Convention.
Yarone Zober, chairman of the Urban Redevelopment Authority the mayor’s chief of staff, said the idea to attend the event came out of the Downtown retail working group, which Ravenstahl started to find new ways to recruit retail into the urban core. The retail working group was established in the wake of Saks Fifth Avenue    closing Downtown after decades in operation.
“The goal is to gain additional exposure for the city of Pittsburgh,” said Zober.
Mayor Luke Ravenstahl and the Urban Redevelopment Authority are sponsoring a booth at RECon, the annual Spring convention of the International Council of Shopping Centers    scheduled for Sunday, May 20 to Wednesday, May 23 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
City officials believe it is the first time the city of Pittsburgh has established a booth at the convention, which is expected to draw more than 30,000 attendees for four days of panel discussions, networking and deal-making for new development and shopping centers throughout the country. In the past, members of the city’s Urban Redevelopment Authority have attended the ICSC convention as visitors without renting trade show space.
Ravenstahl is scheduled to participate in a panel discussion with a host of other mayors, an event former mayor Tom Murphy also participated in more than 10 years ago at the ICSC Spring Convention.
Yarone Zober, chairman of the Urban Redevelopment Authority the mayor’s chief of staff, said the idea to attend the event came out of the Downtown retail working group, which Ravenstahl started to find new ways to recruit retail into the urban core. The retail working group was established in the wake of Saks Fifth Avenue    closing Downtown after decades in operation.
“The goal is to gain additional exposure for the city of Pittsburgh,” said Zober.
The subject came up at the URA meeting on May 10 when the board voted to approve $20,000 in funding for marketing materials by Wall to Wall Studios. Zober did not provide details on what the convention would cost and did not indicate how many people would be attending as part of the Pittsburgh contingent. With URA funds expected to be used to pay for the trip in a city that's long faced budget challenges, Zober expects attending RECon will prove a good investment, describing not investing in such events as “penny-wise and pound foolish.”
The subject came up at the URA meeting on May 10 when the board voted to approve $20,000 in funding for marketing materials by Wall to Wall Studios. Zober did not provide details on what the convention would cost and did not indicate how many people would be attending as part of the Pittsburgh contingent. With URA funds expected to be used to pay for the trip in a city that's long faced budget challenges, Zober expects attending RECon will prove a good investment, describing not investing in such events as “penny-wise and pound foolish.”

For more information: go to bizjournal

Friday, May 4, 2012

South Shore Riverfront Park opens


Glad to see this park finally open. It will be a great asset to South Side businesses and property owners.

The long-awaited South Shore Riverfront Park opened Wednesday, adding another piece to the SouthSide Works development and enhancing an important link in Pittsburgh’s riverfront trail system.


To celebrate the opening of the 3.4-acre park that spans from 25th to 29th streets, Pittsburgh Mayor Luke Ravenstahl, Riverlife and the Soffer Organization  hosted a tour that showed off the project’s amenities and charted what was still to come at the riverfront site.


The park was the culmination of the original plan for the redevelopment and was "a place where everyone is welcome to enjoy one of the city’s greatest assets, the rivers," said James Lee Soffer, vice president for the Soffer Organization, the developer of the 34-acre SouthSide Works.


At least a year behind schedule, South Shore Riverfront Park will cost a total of $13 million to develop, with a $3 million final phase expected to be completed next spring that will clean up the portion of the park closest to river, extending the trail to the water’s edge and adding a landing for a water taxi.


With $10.6 million in public funds and $2.6 million in private money invested, South Shore Riverfront Park includes a 1,000-seat amphitheater, a water fountain for dogs, and various artifacts from the site’s previous history as a Jones & Laughlin Co. steel mill, along with its trails. Also planned to be added to the park is a new 300-slip marina to be operated by David Maxwell, who operates a marina in O’Hara Township.


"The full economic impact of SouthSide Works will now be realized through this park,” said Ravenstahl.


Kyra Straussman, director of real estate for the city’s Urban Redevelopment Authority, said the park will be maintained through a partnership of the Soffer Organization, the URA and Riverlife, the riverfront advocacy nonprofit organization, starting from a $1 million fund. An assessment district for the SouthSide Works development is also being planned in which the project’s various tenants and business owners would pay a small regular fee for park maintenance and programming.


The URA has contracted with Dan Beiderman, a New York-based park consultant, to establish events at the park, added Straussman, along with pursuing promotions and sponsorships. Expect for a slow rollout of scheduled events this summer on trial basis, she added.


Read more at bizjournals.com.

Monday, April 23, 2012

Turning something old into something new in Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh is making older buildings new again.

 

South Hills High School opened its doors on Mt. Washington in 1917 and closed them in 1986.  The sprawling structure sat vacant for more than twenty years, during which time the Mt. Washington Community Development Corp. replaced the building’s roof and otherwise kept it stable.   A developer finally purchased the building from Pittsburgh Public Schools in 2006 and thanks to the keen eye of architects Rothschild Doyno Collaborative and Thoughtful Balance, it has been reincarnated as South Hills Retirement Residence, 106 units of senior housing with space for community assets such as a day care facility.  The project was recently awarded LEED Gold certification accruing to a mix of co-generation and solar photo-voltaic panels that provide 70% of the building’s power, among other sustainable features.
The South Hills project is a shining example of adaptive reuse, or the re-purposing of older properties for a use other than their original design.  Taking this route can be cheaper than new development, and financing for these projects is often easier to secure.  Pittsburgh is filled with older buildings eager to be re-imagined including office buildings with a prime downtown address and schools whose architectural pedigree has placed them on the National Register of Historic Places. 
Projects currently underway in the city include the RiverVue Apartments, 218 rental units in the former State Office Building that boast Point State Park as their front yard, and the expansion of 31st Street Studios, hulking former brick and metal warehouses that are morphing, Transformer-like, into Hollywood East in the shadow of the 31st Street Bridge.
Who are the next best candidates for adaptive reuse in Pittsburgh?  It all starts downtown at the James H. Reed Building on Sixth Avenue, former headquarters of the Reed Smith law firm.  The building’s elegant entrance screams “hotel!” and who better to do the retrofit than Kimpton Hotels, masters of adaptive reuse?  Imagine “Hotel Monaco” over the doorway and a jewel-toned lobby acting as the living room lounge urbanites crave.  Around the corner is the Henry W. Oliver Building designed by architect Daniel Burnham and close by is the Union Trust Building, whose stunning mansard roof commemorates the cathedral that formerly stood in its place.  Both structures are woefully underutilized and if commercial isn’t the answer, perhaps they’re prime for downtown residential?
Then there’s the question of downtown retail, which has been debated for decades.  Lord & Taylor kept shop in the former Mellon National Bank Building on Smithfield but that structure has been vacant since 2003, and Saks Fifth Avenue has exited its shiny black cube across the street. 
Is it time for the city to rethink large-scale urban retail in favor of cultural attractions?  It’s no secret that business is booming at the Benedum.  Even so, not everyone agrees.  “The mayor is committed to marketing as many properties as he can at the upcoming shopping center conference in Las Vegas,” says Robert Rubinstein, director of economic development for the Urban Redevelopment Authority.  “If owners throw their property into the mix, the city can market a collection of shopping spaces.  Retailers want to come in a pack.”
Eager to revive a one-time cultural gem is Marimba Milliones of the Hill Community Development Corp., which owns the New Granada Theater on Centre Avenue where Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald and Cab Calloway once played.  The 1927 Art Deco building possesses National Landmark status and has already undergone a stabilization process.  Its next act awaits.  “From a regional standpoint, it’s one of the hottest reuse options available,” according to Milliones.

 

Read more: http://keystoneedge.com/features/pittsburghadaptivereuse0405.aspx

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Energy firms looking to Downtown for office space

Great news for Pittsburgh! Energy firms such as Chevron, Shell and Exxon are looking for office space downtown.

While most oil and gas interests have settled in the suburbs, some may now be casting an eye to the Golden Triangle as space in places like Cranberry and Southpointe gets tighter and tighter.

One major corporation, Chevron, is said to be considering Downtown in its search for more than 140,000 square feet of space to consolidate and expand its operations in the region.

Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald said he has heard that Chevron and two other major energy companies, Shell Oil Co. and Exxon, are interested in space Downtown as well as in the suburbs.

"I think that bodes well for this region that there is competition for these sites. That's something we didn't have a few years ago, and that's a good problem to have," he said.

Likewise, Mark Popovich, senior managing director of the Pittsburgh office of Holliday Fenoglio Fowler LP, a commercial real estate brokerage, said he has heard talk Chevron and Shell could be looking for space Downtown.

"I don't know if we're hearing wishful thinking or speculative thinking, or if there's something real behind it," he said.

California-based Chevron established operations in the region in February 2011 after paying $4.3 billion to acquire Moon natural gas producer Atlas Energy, which was active in tapping Marcellus Shale deposits. The company currently occupies about 140,000 square feet in Moon, including 60,000 at the Cherrington office park.

Shell now occupies 77,000 square feet of space in Waterfront Corporate Park in Franklin Park. It also has another 30,000 square feet in Warrendale as part of its $4.7 billion purchase of East Resources Inc. in 2010.

But with Shell's decision to build an ethane cracker plant in Beaver County, the company may want to raise its profile in the region and that could lead it Downtown, Mr. Popovich said.

Read more: http://shale.sites.post-gazette.com/index.php/news/archives/24478-downtown-catching-eyes-of-energy-firms

Friday, April 13, 2012

Spotlight on Sustainability: Pittsburgh’s Waterfronts

Check out this interesting article on how Pittsburgh is transforming the “Steel City.” Have you noticed the change to the city’s riverfront?

“Pittsburgh’s riverfronts were used as transportation corridors for industrial production, and were characterized by factories, barges and pollution,” Andrews said. “While the environment has improved since then, the land surrounding them has remained relatively unchanged. The riverfronts were designed around industry rather than the community, and the land around them does not connect to our neighborhoods.”

Concerned community members are working to make better use of these parts of town, which otherwise would continue to deteriorate.

“Today we recognize the riverfronts as our most treasured assets that have tremendous potential to improve our quality of life,”stated Mayor Ravenstahl, who initiated the Allegheny Riverfront Vision, a plan to restore the riverfront corridor.

In 2010, the city received 1.5 million in funding from the Department of Transportation’s TIGER II (Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery) grant program and a Community Challenge planning grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to implement a central aspect of Allegheny Riverfront Vision: the Riverfront Green Boulevard Plan.

“I want to thank all of our partners in the federal government for recognizing the importance of this project that will spur economic development and ensure that Pittsburgh sustains its ‘most livable city’ status for years to come,” Ravenstahl added.

The grant allowed the City of Pittsburgh, Allegheny Valley Railroad, Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh, andRiverlife to create a plan to transform an existing 6.45-mile stretch of freight rail along the Allegheny Riverfront into a multi-modal transportation corridor that includes park access, open space programming, neighborhood design, stormwater management and habitat restoration.

Read more: http://www.smartgrowthamerica.org/2012/04/02/spotlight-on-sustainability-pittsburghs-waterfronts/

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

The Rust Belt Revival: What’s Happening in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

If you haven’t been paying much attention to East Liberty, now’s the time to start. Between this article and a powerful video from Pop City Media last week, the neighborhood has been making the rounds in the local news scene, and with good reason. There are a lot of creative people working in East Liberty, and their enthusiasm is sparking a sort of neighborhood revival. Check out the article below to see what they’re doing.

(Waffle Shop)

FOOD FOR THOUGHT
When artist Jon Rubin moved to Pittsburgh in 2006 to teach at Carnegie Mellon University, he decided to experiment with some of the local materials: cheap real estate and good people. "Midwestern culture values openness and community engagement," he observes. Three years ago, he rented a storefront in the city's emerging East Liberty district for $500 a month and opened
Waffle Shop, a place where hip locals can enjoy breakfast fare at all hours while participating in Web-streamed talk shows covering topics from "Michael Jackson and Teabaggers" to "Dolphin Breeding in Appalachia." The following year Rubin and artist Dawn Weleski turned the space next door into Conflict Kitchen, whose rotating menu draws from countries that the U.S. government has a political beef with—like Iran or Venezuela—helping expand the community's culinary and cultural consciousness. As Rubin says: "We're creating the place where we want to live now."

•••

(Sam Franklin, executive director of the Office of Teacher Effectiveness)

THE PUBLIC-EDUCATION MAVERICK
In 2006, when the Steel City's Mayor Luke Ravenstahl and Pittsburgh Public Schools superintendent Mark Roosevelt issued the "Pittsburgh Promise"—that all the city's qualified high-school graduates could receive financial help to attend college—Sam Franklin was still a Carnegie Mellon grad student. Today, as the executive director of the two-year-old
Office of Teacher Effectiveness, the Maryland native is trying to ensure that every one of the city's graduates is qualified, with a raft of techniques to evaluate and encourage teachers, funded in part by a $40 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. These include financial incentives and promotions for high performers. "We've historically treated—and compensated—all teachers similarly, regardless of their actual effectiveness," Franklin, 31, explains. Pittsburgh's unique character makes it an ideal springboard for broader reform, he adds. "The city is modest enough that you can actually get things done," he says, "but big enough so they can truly matter on a national level."

•••

(One of Grow Pittsburgh's urban farms)

THE STEEL CITY'S GRAY GARDENS
Developers are gradually rebuilding Pittsburgh's blighted areas, but more than 20,000 vacant lots remain. Since its founding in 2005, Grow Pittsburgh has been turning these plots into community gardens and urban farms, providing summer internships for kids and health education for all—not to mention food: The organization helps distribute produce to low-income kitchens and works with local chefs to place its lettuce and leeks in high-end restaurants.

•••

THE URBAN REPURPOSERS
The husband-and-wife-led architecture firm EDGE Studio is driving a renaissance in Pittsburgh's skyline by way of imaginative renovations. Its 2010 expansion of the East Liberty branch of the Carnegie Library used a rain-screen exterior to give the staid Nixon-era institutional building unexpected sculptural flourishes, while last year's Wigle Whiskey distillery turned a bleak warehouse into a glowing space with chandeliers made of whiskey bottles.

•••


THE ART HUB OF THE FUTURE

Yes, it's the cornerstone of the soon-to-boom Penn Ave Arts District, but Assemble is more than a gallery. The year-old space feels more like an informal classroom where visitors come for the interactive, tech-focused art, then stay for the hacker workshops, PechaKucha presentations, and dance parties. Built by Nina Marie Barbuto, a native Pittsburgher who returned after a stint in L.A., as a hub for aspiring creatives, Assemble is a place for first drafts, manifestos, artistic experimentation—paint the walls, break out the solder guns. In Pittsburgh, Barbuto observes, "You don't need much to make things happen."

•••

(Jeremy Kulousek (seated) and Eric Dan (right) of ID Labs)

HIP-HOP'S NEW HIT-MAKERS
Detroit has always had Motown, and Cleveland is home to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, but unlike its fellow Rust Belt cities, Pittsburgh has never been much of a music mecca. Until, that is, hometown hero Wiz Khalifa's "Black and Yellow" became the city's de facto anthem during the Steelers' 2010-2011 Super Bowl run. The guys behind the rapper are Eric Dan (a.k.a. E. Dan), 35, who launched
ID Labs as a recording studio in 2003, and Jeremy Kulousek (a.k.a. Big Jerm), 26, who joined him three years later. Around the same time, a teenage Khalifa scored an internship answering phones and sweeping floors, which eventually led to a fruitful collaboration: ID Labs produced (and Dan cowrote) about half the songs on Khalifa's hit album Rolling Papers. For the past few years, the duo have been working with other local hip-hop talent, including Mac Miller (whose viral hit "Donald Trump" has 52 million YouTube views and counting), Boaz, and Khalifa's protégé Chevy Woods. Despite pressure to move to one of the coasts, Dan insists that ID Labs is staying put: "We enjoy being outside the fray."

•••

(Matthew Ciccone at the Beauty Shoppe)

THE IDEA INCUBATOR
Creative entrepreneurship is booming in post-industrial Pittsburgh, and Matthew Ciccone is a major reason why. After stints working in New York City and Chicago, the 32-year-old developer returned to his hometown to attend graduate school in urban design and public policy at Carnegie Mellon University, then in 2009 launched the boutique real-estate company Edile, which caters to the nascent arts and high-tech industries in the fast-emerging neighborhood of East Liberty. Last year, he opened the
Beauty Shoppe, a sleek coworking space for fledging start-ups who've outgrown the tables at Starbucks: In fact, the price of a desk—$9 a day with a monthly membership—is based on the cost of three lattes, says Ciccone (if the name sounds familiar, it's because he's a distant cousin of that slightly more famous Ciccone, Madonna). Next up: a second, larger Beauty Shoppe location, as well as a different kind of shared workspace aimed at small manufacturers—anyone from roboticists to whiskey distillers, according to Ciccone—who need somewhere to produce their products. Ciccone is also partnering with the Ace Hotel to open a local outpost in 2014 in a vacant century-old YMCA building. "It's a rare opportunity," he says, "to shape a city where you actually live and hope to raise a family."

•••

Know This Neighborhood: East Liberty, Pittsburgh
In barely a decade, Sliberty, as the locals call it, has gone from an industrial wasteland to Pittsburgh's answer to Silicon Valley. Two years ago it improbably became home to a major Google office, and half a dozen tech start-ups have followed suit.

THE TOP SPOTS

Dinette: High-end pizza with ingredients from the roof garden.
5996 Penn Circle South, 412-362-0202 ;
dinette-pgh.com
Shadow Lounge: A neighborhood nightlife institution, with hip-hop DJs, parties, and film screenings.
5972 Baum Blvd., 412-363-5248 ;
shadowlounge.net
Waffle Shop and Conflict Kitchen: 124 S. Highland Ave., 724-681-3886 ; waffleshop.org, conflictkitchen.org
Zeke's Coffee: Its small-batch roasts are served gratis to tenants of the Beauty Shoppe.
6012 Penn St., 412-670-6231 ;
zekescoffeepgh.com

FACT: Pittsburgh is America's most livable city, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit, thanks to lifestyle factors like culture, education, and infrastructure.

Read More http://www.details.com/culture-trends/critical-eye/201204/rust-belt-revival-pittsburgh-pennsylvania#ixzz1r5HoyTK6

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Pop City Features: Why I moved to Pittsburgh

Love seeing stories like this. And there are plenty of them to hear. Every day I run into people who have deliberately chosen Pittsburgh as their home, many of them without a prior connection to the city. Pittsburgh is starting to take off, and it's exciting to be a part of that.

I'd love to see Pop City Media run a series on "Why I started a business in Pittsburgh." Whose story would you like to read?


I thought about the phrase: “You can’t go home again” during a recent trek through Frick Park on a preposterously beautiful early March day with my wife, 12-year-old daughter and Charlie, our brand new puppy.


Enveloped by steep hillsides and wooded trails, I marveled at the notion that we were walking within Pittsburgh city limits.


When had I last ventured down here? Was it really thirty years ago during a middle school field trip?


In June 2010, I moved home to Pittsburgh after 22 years. My wife, Donna, and I had grown weary of Detroit; the newspaper business was exciting, yet taxing, and the foreclosure crisis caused the property value of our city home to spiral. Rampant crime and the safety of our two young daughters also played a major role.


In summary, I quit the Detroit Free Press after 11 years as a reporter and got a marketing job at Chorus Call, a Monroeville telecommunications company. Donna and I put our Detroit home, which we bought in 2001 for $143,000, on the market with little hopes of selling it. A short-sale got us out from ownership of the Detroit property about six months later, with a credit hit. That’s an entirely different, frustrating story. The house sold for $35,000.


Which brings me back to Frick Park and Pittsburgh: It’s amazing that I still discover or rediscover new nooks and crannies of this region, at my age, almost on a weekly basis.


This is a town where you can rent kayaks on the north shore and paddle on to the three rivers. I did this on a sweltering day last summer and jokingly asked a boater for a frosty can of Yuengling. Not only did he oblige, he jumped into the Allegheny and swam it over to me.


I frequently wow out-of town guests with a cheap ride on one of the inclines and a subsequent vista view of downtown. I even toured the Frick mansion in February – I was tired of wondering what it looked like on the inside.


One of my biggest fears about dragging my family here was the possible self-perception of me trying to recapture something intangible or attempting to relive youthful memories.


But this place has changed, and, in most ways, for the better.


For example: several business meetings have taken me inside the Pittsburgh Technology Council building, which sites with other new office buildings along 2nd Avenue on the Monongahela at the site of the former J&L steel mill.The river trails give the region an entirely new vibe.  In-town developments, like the new Target in East Liberty and Bakery Square plaza, home to Google, allow residents to beam with civic pride.  And my childhood neighborhood, Highland Park, which had a pizza joint and a CoGo’s during my teenage years, now has a Thai restaurant; coffee shop and several other swanky places to dine.


I conquered mundane winter nights by joining an ice hockey club at Schenley Park. 


I keep fit jogging through town with the Square Run Club on Sunday mornings. And then there’s “book club,” a monthly male-bonding gathering at various taverns – like Dunning’s or Hough’s - sans books.


Jordan, 12, and Chloe, 9, quickly got over their moving heartbreaks and embraced new classmates and teachers at Sacred Heart Elementary School.  Jordan helped found a school environmental club and Chloe excelled on the third grade instructional basketball team. Donna, who had a medical billing job in Detroit, found full-time work within months in a similar position at UPMC on the South Side.


Renting a home in Edgewood gave me the opportunity to learn the ins and outs of Regent Square, an area I rarely visited while growing up. Now, it’s probably my favorite neighborhood in the region. Chloe got a taste of civics last fall when we accompanied a neighbor to an Edgewood Borough Council meeting to complain about speeding traffic on our street.


To be sure, there are drawbacks like the rush-hour traffic, the Squirrel Hill tunnel and the crumbling bridge infrastructure. My high school, Peabody (class of 1988), is closed and many city schools appear to be in trouble.


I’m also frequently discouraged by some of my suburban colleagues’ disdain for the city and apprehension to venture in. Race relations, in my mind, leave a lot to be desired here (also a problem in Detroit).


Selfishly, I’m thrilled that my daughters now live within minutes of their grandparents: My mother and stepfather live in Friendship and my father and stepmother live in Highland Park. And I’m overjoyed to see them bond with my younger sister, a senior at Pitt.


But it’s the small family moments here that make the move worth it. I remember a summer afternoon last year when we trudged across the crowded Roberto Clemente Bridge looking out at the rivers and beckoning ballpark.


Jordan looked up at me and said: “Dad, I love Pittsburgh.”


Home again.

Read more at PopCityMedia.com.

Friday, March 23, 2012

All hail the cabs: Pittsburgh has a chance to ride in big-city style

This is great news for the city, especially for businesses downtown.

In New York or Washington, D.C., people complain that it's hard to get a cab when it rains. In Pittsburgh, people complain that it's hard to get a cab in any weather, unless the rider is at a hotel or the airport.

Pittsburgh just isn't a cab town. Several theories abound but, whatever the reason, the lack of taxis is a legitimate complaint of visitors who are used to better service elsewhere. The city has great hotels, fine restaurants and lively communities to visit -- if you have your own way to get there and back.

In a city where it is not the custom for cabs to be hailed from the street, it's not just visitors who suffer. The dreams of Pittsburgh being a true destination point are parked at the curb. Fortunately, that may change.

On Tuesday, Pittsburgh Transportation Group --which includes Yellow Cabs, shuttle vans and coaches and limousines -- announced a service by the new Pittsburgh City Cab, which will offer short runs between Downtown and nearby neighborhoods, such as the North Shore, the South Side, Mount Washington and Oakland.

The six black-and-white cars are not cabs to catch for a trip to Pittsburgh International Airport -- and that's not the only big difference from usual practice. Jerry Campolongo, director of Yellow Cab Co. and Pittsburgh City Cab, said riders can hail these taxis from the curb if they are not occupied. (Next year, regular cabs might be allowed to stop for hailing customers.)

The new idea is to promote service in the city's core, connecting restaurants and other businesses with desirable destinations nearby. Cars will be added as needed, so there is a Field of Dreams element to the plan -- provide it and they will come.

We hope the riders do come, filling more cabs and patronizing a service that other great cities have and Pittsburgh deserves.

Read more at The Post Gazette.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Mall Memories: In one shopping center, reflections of retail change

An excellent reflection in Pittsburgh Magazine on how the Northway Mall retail landscape has changed over the past 40 years. 

For a 4-year-old, it was perfect one-stop shopping. First we'd wander into Heintzelman's, a specialty foods store, and Mrs. Heintzelman would give me a slice of the featured cheese of the day. And then another. And another.

Next came Alioto's Produce. Sam Alioto would come bounding out of the back of the store with a fistful of fresh strawberries or plums or cherry tomatoes, grinning and handing them to me, then looming over me to make sure I finished every one. He was like an Olive Garden commercial: "Eat, Teddy! Eat!"

At Wlodek Select Meats, I'd get a taste of something deli-like before being led by my mother into the barber shop, where — in the very back, in a room with dueling mirrors that showed 100 reflections of me receding into the distance — a genial gentleman named Mr. Larocca would cut my hair. On the rare occasions when I didn't cry, he'd let me pick out a lollipop.

By the time we made it to the lunch counter at Woolworth's, I was just about full (though, coincidentally, never too full for a grilled-cheese sandwich and french fries).

Funny thing about these memories, my very earliest, dredged up from the first part of the 1970s: They sound like the classic American Main Street experience, straight from Norman Rockwell or Frank Capra. But they weren't; they all unfolded on McKnight Road in the North Hills, within the confines of Northway Mall.

It's hard to believe, but there were days within living memory when the shoppers of Pittsburgh went to malls primarily to get the stuff they actually needed, not just the stuff they desired.

Consider Northway Mall, known today as The Shoppes at Northway. Built by developers who expanded an early strip mall on McKnight Road, it was reconfigured in 1962 to become Western Pennsylvania’s first indoor mall. That meant something different then.

The mezzanine level was doctors’ and dentists’ offices, and on the second floor – more like the malls of today – you could find a sprawling Joseph Horne department store, which seemed, at least to a little boy, to have an inordinate amount of kitchenware. But the most extraordinary thing about Northway Mall then, the thing I remember most vividly to this day, was its anchor store, located where the recently closed Borders Books & Music sat: an A&P. A full-on supermarket! In a mall!

In short, Northway Mall in those days was, for the most part, a bastion of necessities and staples – meat and potatoes, haircuts and banking and health care and women's dresses and gray men’s suits. It was Main Street and the downtown shops, all enclosed in one convenient package.

Things are different today. At Ross Park Mall, you can leave your car with the valet parking guy while you pick up a $500 pair of jeans or a $2,500 Macbook Pro. At Century III, you can enjoy an indoor jump at “EuroBungy.” At The Mall at Robinson, actual tourists – bused over from nearby airport hotels with coupon books – roam the floors. At the Galleria of Mt. Lebanon, with the swipe of a credit card, you can own a $4,000 Restoration Hardware distressed leather sectional sofa. And while you’re doing these things, you can eat dozens of different meals, pick up thousands of types of candy, join mall walkers, attend community events, flirt with potential dates.

The average Pittsburgh mall has become a shiny, focus-grouped temple of consumerism, with the finest of mainstream merchandise sitting upon pedestals and under glass — metaphorically and, often, literally. The mall today is the First Church of the Next Big Thing. It is a place where how you feel while you’re shopping is just as important as the purchase itself.

Yet occasionally, as I walk through these towers of 2012 retail nirvana, I pause and think of Northway Mall and its long history, which accompanied me during my years  growing up in Pittsburgh and my two decades away from it.

I think of the floor-to-ceiling cage of exotic birds on the upper level, so hypnotizing that it was always surrounded by children with wide eyes whose mothers appreciated the momentary break from chaos. I think of the Herman's World of Sporting Goods where I got my Wilson Ron Guidry-model baseball mitt for Pony League.

I think of the Spencer Gifts where I scooted past all the "erotic supplies" to ogle the famous Farrah Fawcett-Majors poster and covet the Peter Frampton one that, as the sign promised, "GLOWS IN BLACK LIGHT!" I think of later arrivals, like Uncle Mike's Cigar Haven, where I passed many hours with my father while in my 20s, discussing everything from his memories of his grandmother to the local politics of the mid-1990s.

The week before I left for college in 1986, Ross Park Mall opened its doors for the first time. Abruptly, a generation of North Hills teenagers shifted its attention there, and Northway Mall became something different. Today, I'm back in the area after 20 years of just visiting, and I still go to the mall at least once a month with my boys for something you can't get at a chain-restaurant food court: Mamma Lucia pizza, arguably the best in the vicinity. And as I walk the floors, emptier than they used to be, I see far more than what is there now. I see layers — the stores that accompanied me through my life. They taught me — for better and for worse — how to be a late-20th-century consumer, what to want, what to buy, what to desire.

And as I stand in Ross Park Mall, with its surround-you shininess and the carefully calibrated shopping environments of places like Abercrombie and the Apple Store, I can't help but wonder: If they were resurrected for just a day, what would Mrs. Heintzelman and Sam Alioto (who, you might say, had the original apple store in a North Hills mall) think?

I'm not quite sure what I'd tell them.

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