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.

Read more at PittsburghMagazine.com

Friday, March 9, 2012

Grocery Wars on McKnight Road: Bottom Dollar Food vs. Giant Eagle’s Valu King

This should be interesting. Which store do you think is most likely to succeed, given their respective strategies as well as Pittsburgh demographics? Do you think they’ll both do well?

A simmering Pittsburgh grocery war may have just found its hottest battleground at Ross Towne Center and its neighboring retail properties on McKnight Road.

North Carolina-based Bottom Dollar has leased a former Goodwill location abutting the center for what may be its 13th store in the region. Right next door, in the former location of Roomful Express, ECHO Real Estate Services has leased 45,000 square feet to Giant Eagle , which may be planning to open the region’s first Valu King, a discount-oriented store concept that operates at a similar price point as Bottom Dollar, whose neighboring store will be 18,000 square feet.

Giant Eagle previously rolled out the Valu King concept in eastern Ohio and Erie, but has yet to bring it to its home market.

Herky Pollock, director of the retailer services group in the Pittsburgh office of CBRE, confirmed he represented the landlord for the former Goodwill store in reaching a deal with Bottom Dollar and that representatives of the neighboring former Roomful Express store, which is under a different owner, have told him of the plans for Valu King.

Officials for Bottom Dollar confirmed it will open a store in the McKnight Road location this fall. Dick Roberts, a spokesman for Giant Eagle, said there is “no confirmed plans for a location (for Valu King) in Pittsburgh yet.”

COMPETITION HEATING UP

But Pollock and other local real estate professionals have been notified that Giant Eagle, which operates a thriving store a short drive up McKnight Road at McIntyre Square, plans to bring Valu King to the former Roomful space.

Pollock views two discount grocery stores operating side by side in the same suburban shopping center as part of a larger outbreak in grocery competition in the Pittsburgh area, as long-dominant Giant Eagle faces an onslaught of new competitors entering the market.

That includes not just Bottom Dollar , owned by multibillion dollar Belgian conglomerate Delhaize , but also Fresh Market and Whole Foods , soon to open in Wexford, as well as Aldi and Trader Joe’s , which also are eyeing locations in the North Hills.

Kevin Dougherty, principal of North Carolina-based AdVenture Development and a Pittsburgh native, acknowledged he’s had talks with Trader Joe’s about establishing a store at his McCandless Crossing project further up McKnight Road.

He said it was only talk so far and expects Trader Joe’s is considering other locations as well in a Pittsburgh grocery market engaged in an ongoing chess match for the best locations.

“It sounds like people are repositioning and trying to give themselves the best competitive advantage,” he said.

“That would be good for the Pittsburgh market and the Pittsburgh consumer, that’s for sure.”

HEAD TO HEAD AND SIDE BY SIDE

It’s a rare circumstance to have grocery stores competing side by side, but where Ross Towne Center ends, other adjoining retail space with two other owners has made it possible. Often, Giant Eagle , in a common retail industry practice, sets up a store in a shopping center and establishes noncompete clauses to prohibit other stores from opening nearby, according to a number of retail real estate professionals, but this does not appear to be an option in this instance.

Craig Cozza, a developer with ample retail experience with retail leasing, noted it’s common for all retailers to seek noncompete clauses for the shopping centers they commit to and that grocery stores have more clout to exact such agreements since they are so coveted by landlords.

He said it’s possible Giant Eagle’s Valu King concept and Bottom Dollar could both thrive as neighbors.

There may be enough business there for both of them anyway,” he said.

Giant Eagle already has retooled its concept once before following the arrival of a competitor. When the region’s first Whole Foods opened in East Liberty a decade ago, Giant Eagle converted its Shadyside store a few blocks away into a Market District within a few years.

Giant Eagle has recently done the same in Pine, converting a Giant Eagle to Market District not far from where Whole Foods will soon open.

“For many, many years, Giant Eagle has maintained a dominant position in the region,” Pollock said. “Now that competition is coming in on the high and low end, they’re looking to shore up their dominance.”

Read more at bizjournals.com.

Friday, March 2, 2012

Why Pittsburgh Is A Hidden Travel Gem

If our city keeps getting great reviews like this, it won't be "hidden" much longer...

Pittsburgh might not be on your list of 1,000 places to fly to before you die, but perhaps it should be. With a cultural scene that rivals that of many larger cities, and its proximity to an architectural icon and a moving historical site that everyone should see before they head for the great beyond, this city of rivers and bridges deserves a visit. Plus, of course, now that Southwest Airlines and JetBlue fly here, airfares to Pittsburgh are amazingly cheap.



There's no place quite like Pittsburgh, an implausible and affable place of distinct and likeable neighborhoods, littered across a series of steep Southwestern Pennsylvania hills and secluded hollows, perched on cliffs and huddled down by its famed three rivers. Once at the forefront of the industrialized world, the still blue-collar city is shedding its old skin and growing into a new identity, as a knowledge center and a place of creativity.


That's not to say that Pittsburgh's gone pretentious or anything. This is still the home of the Steelers and the Pirates. Hate sports? No matter: This is still a great place to kick back and knock back a few (local) beers, make some new friends maybe; it's a perfect city for slowing down and just enjoying life for a couple of days. We've got eight great reasons to visit Pittsburgh (or, rather, da Burgh) right now.


Get in the Zone
There are plenty of cool neighborhoods in town, perhaps none quite as nifty as Lawrenceville. Located not far from downtown, this industrial center along the Allegheny River that served as arsenal to the Union Army during the Civil War is now a magnet for young creatives, lured in by a charming vibe. The neighborhood is part of the city's 16:62 Design Zone, an area that features more than 100 home decor-related businesses catering to all tastes and budgets. While in the area, stop in at Dozen, the neighborhood bakery that's the rage around town right now.


$10 Opera Tickets!
One thing a lot of first-timers don't know about Pittsburgh is that while the city isn't as big as it used to be, it still retains a vibrant cultural scene from its heyday. From ballet to world-class art museums, a marvelous symphony and a healthy theater scene, Pittsburgh has just about everything you could want a city to have, arts-wise, while, for the most part, keeping everything super accessible. Curious newbies can take advantage of $10 main floor tickets to the Pittsburgh Opera, home-based at the historic (and breathtaking) Benedum Center. And let's not forget the accomplished Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra.


Good Eats
Pittsburgh has long been a town of simple tastes; for far too long, it seemed like the dining scene was content to hide out at least a couple of decades back from the present time. Recently, things have been changing, and rapidly; we're nuts for the ingredient-conscious, New American dinners at Eleven, the hardcore farm-to-table Legume Bistro in the North Oakland neighborhood* and the sleek look and feel -- not to mention the tasty American contemporary food and cocktails -- at the loungy Spoon in East Liberty. In short, you can eat really well here now, and not a moment too soon.


It's Near Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater and the Flight 93 Memorial
Just an hour's drive or so from the city is one of the most iconic dwellings in the known Universe, the weekend home Wright designed for a wealthy Pittsburgh family. Some people come to PGH just as a jumping off point to visit, but of course there are many other great things to see and do here. (Tip: only the extended tour allows indoor photography, and it's well worth the $67 admission, although there are less expensive tours as well.) And speaking of nearby sites, the Flight 93 Memorial is also within driving distance, although the final phase is still under construction. It's a moving experience.


Try the Coffee
Pittsburgh is full of surprises; you probably didn't know it had a killer little café culture brewing, did you? From the locally-roasted liquid happiness at La Prima Espresso Bar (205 21st Street) to the sleek and sophisticated 21st Street Coffee down the block at #50 -- they use beans from Chicago's famous Intelligentsia -- to the cozy, sit down and stay awhile scene at Enrico's Tazza d'Oro in the heart of residential Highland Park (1125 N. Highland Ave.), coffee lovers are covered.


Play the Market
The city's Strip District is famous as the home of its wholesale markets, late-night gin joints and the obscene sandwiches at the terrific Primanti Brothers, but lately it's been showing signs of joining the 21st century. This fall saw the inauguration of the ambitious Pittsburgh Public Market, a Friday, Saturday and Sunday affair on Smallman Street between 16th and 17th Streets that showcases the region's bounty. A must-stop on any weekend visit.


Hit the Mattress
Pittsburgh is full of museums, some of them quite famous; if you visit just one, it should be the off-the-grid, awesomely unusual Mattress Factory. Tucked away in the back streets of the often-ignored North Side, artists have been creating installations in the space since the late 1970s. The museum offers a unique residency program, which allows the artists to live on site while dreaming up and then executing the installation or work of art. The museum is currently hosting an intriguing exhibit from the Lam Center of Contemporary Art in Havana, Cuba; the show deals with issues of race and racism in contemporary Cuban art.


Square Off
Speaking of mattresses, we're loving the sparkly, zen-like new Fairmont Hotel that's popped up right off Market Square in the heart of Pittsburgh's walkable downtown. A vast fitness center, a happening lobby bar and quiet, contemporary rooms, nearly all of them with great views (request one overlooking the skyline's crown jewel PPG Building), make this a great hotel just to waste a weekend in, never mind the city. We didn't try the restaurant, Habitat, on our two recent weekend visits but will next time.


Read more at the Huffington Post.
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