Category Archive: Neighborhood Development
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Façade Improvements Coming to Jean’s Southern Cuisine in Wilkinsburg
by Michael Sriprasert
PHLF News
August 5, 2009With loan funds provided by Landmarks Community Capital Corporation through the State’s Neighborhood Partnership Program, and in partnership with TriState Capital Bank, Jean of Jean’s Southern Cuisine will be improving her façade by adding lighting that will brighten up her signage and storefront in evening hours.
The improvements will certainly shine light on one of the premier businesses on Wilkinsburg’s main street. The contractor is Union Electric Construction, Inc., which is located in Homestead.
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Crescent Apartments Receives Financing From State
by Michael Sriprasert
PHLF News
August 5, 2009The Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency recently awarded PHLF tax credits for the Crescent Apartments project, a 27-unit restoration development of two historic structures in the Hamnett Place neighborhood of Wilkinsburg.
This $9 million dollar project will be the largest to date in Wilkinsburg, and will have a transformative effect on Hamnett Place, which is soon to be listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The Crescent and Wilson House will have a community room, a computer facility, and all units will be hard wired for high speed internet. Social services will be provided by Hosanna House both on and off-site.
The Crescent Apartments is adjacent to the Housing Resource Center (HRC) and the housing restoration work ongoing in the area, all of which are PHLF initiatives. It will also contain a field office for LCCC.
The HRC and housing restoration, in addition to the Crescent, will bring PHLF’s investment to over $11 million dollars in Wilkinsburg. Sota Construction is the general contractor of the Crescent project, Landmarks Design Associates is the architect, and NDC Real Estate Management is the management agent.
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Landmarks receives preservation easement on historic downtown building
April 2, 2009
PHLF NewsOhio-based Spruce Street Properties, Ltd. has donated a preservation easement to Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation on the exterior of The Carlyle, at Fourth Avenue and Wood Street that is being converted to luxury condominiums.
A preservation easement is a voluntary legal agreement made between a property owner and an authorized preservation organization to preserve the exterior of a historic building and assure appropriate alteration. The easement will be recorded with the deed, run in perpetuity and assist current and future owners in preserving the buildings historic and architectural features.
Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation will be the monitoring agent for the easement and received a donation from Spruce Street Properties to assure the necessary funds to defend and monitor the easement forever.
“David Bishoff, a long-time owner of many buildings in Pittsburgh and a staunch supporter of maintaining the wonderful fabric of downtown through the preservation of its historic buildings, is to be commended for protecting the exterior of this important building which is a contributing structure in the Fourth Avenue Historic District,” said Foundation President Arthur Ziegler. “Once again, a creative developer has shown how we can move forward by building on our past.”
The Carlyle, formerly the Union National Bank Building, was designed by MacClure & Spahr and constructed in 1906. The 21-story neo-Classical building was a focal point of Pittsburgh?s Fourth Avenue financial district, once one of the most significant financial centers in the country. The Carlyle will provide downtown residential ownership starting at $279,000.
Pittsburgh Mayor Luke Ravenstahl attended the Foundation’s board meeting when the announcement was made.
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Landmarks supports the nomination of the Old Stone Tavern as a City-Designated Historic Structure.
PREPARED TESTIMONY OF
ANNE E. NELSON, ESQ.
GENERAL COUNSEL
PITTSBURGH HISTORY & LANDMARKS FOUNDATION
BEFORE HISTORIC REVIEW COMMISSION, CITY OF PITTSBURGH
PUBLIC HEARING ON THE OLD STONE TAVERN
CITY HISTORIC STRUCTURE NOMINATIONApril 1, 2009
Landmarks supports the nomination of the Old Stone Tavern to become a City-Designated Historic Structure.
The building was surveyed in both of Landmarks’ architectural surveys of Allegheny County and was chosen for inclusion in Landmark Architecture of Allegheny County Pennsylvania by James D. Van Trump and Arthur P. Ziegler, Jr., published in 1967, and Pittsburgh’s Landmark Architecture by Walter Kidney, published in 1997.
Walter Kidney dates the building c. 1800 since it is “a work in masonry not logs.” Van Trump and Ziegler describe the building as “[o]ne of the earliest surviving local taverns,” and state that “[t]his tavern must be preserved….”
Therefore, Landmarks supports the nomination of the Old Stone Tavern.
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Dormont Pool Receives Funds for Repairs
by Arthur P. Ziegler, Jr., President
March 4th, 2009
PHLF NewsFriends of the Dormont Pool, which formed to save this huge swimming pool when the Borough was going to close it because of the expense of repairing it, has continued to raise funds to keep the pool open and on St. Patrick’s Day presented the Borough with a check for another $50,000 to continue the repair program.
For more information, see:
http://friendsofdormontpool.org/
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The Sweeney Hotel and Saloon To Be Preserved
March 4th, 2009
PHLF NewsAt the request of Senator Jim Ferlo and the Natrona Comes Together Association in the Natrona Flats, Landmarks helped the organization secure the vacant Sweeney Hotel and Saloon built in 1900 at 36 Chestnut Street. Over the years the hotel had become a bank, an antique store, and finally The Vault Theatre, before it closed again.
Utilizing a grant from Senator Ferlo and a planned giving solution we developed, we were able to obtain the ownership of the building for the Natrona Comes Together Association.
A further grant from the Senator is enabling us to install a new roof and repair the elegant cornice work on the building. The future use for the building is still being discussed within the larger context of the Natrona’s ongoing revitalization efforts.
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Landmarks Funds Land-Use Study: Preservation Seeds Take Root
by Jack Miller, CFRE , Director of Planned Giving
March 1, 2009
PHLF NewsA Landmarks funded land-use study conducted by LaQuatra Bonci in 2003 has played a key role is preserving 161 acres of farmland at the Boys Home complex in South Fayette Township.
The Boys Home, located on Battle Ridge Road, housed troubled youth and orphans until it closed in 1972. The property was left vacant until purchased by the Township in 1987. In 2003, the Township approached Landmarks for recommendations on how to cost-effectively develop more than 200 acres of farmland while maintaining its rural character. Under our Farm Preservation Program, we looked upon this opportunity as uniquely valuable.
Landmarks appointed LaQuatra Bonci, Pittsburgh landscape designers, and Landmarks Design Associates, architects, and worked a number of months and had several community meetings to ensure that the outcome would address the residents’ priorities.
The resulting study recommended preservation of the farmland and open space. This February, the Pennsylvania Farmland Preservation Board approved the Allegheny County Agricultural Land Preservation Program purchasing the development rights to 161 acres of Boys Home acres for $1.5 million, assuring that the land will continue to be farmed or left untouched in perpetuity. Another 57 acres will be developed as a park.
The Township and Landmarks’ Rural Preservation Program, using funds from a Richard King Mellon Foundation grant, split the $50,000 cost for the land-use study.
“This is a major accomplishment by this municipality in preserving open space and letting some of its current uses continue, said Landmarks President Arthur P. Ziegler. “We were pleased to be able to assist in the effort and hope that other local governments follow South Fayette Township’s lead.”
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New Granada Theater Stabilization Funding Secured
by Anne E. Nelson, General Counsel
PHLF News
February 26, 2009On February 26, 2009, the Allegheny County Economic Development, Community Infrastructure and Tourism Board awarded Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation a $91,000 grant for the New Granada Theater stabilization project.
Thanks to this grant, the $1.1 million project is now fully funded.
The New Granada stabilization project is also being supported by a $500,000 grant from The Heinz Endowments and $500,000 from the Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program through Representative Jake Wheatley.
The Hill Community Development Corporation is the owner and our partner.