Category Archive: Pittsburgh Tribune Review
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Poke Run Presbyterian Church Divided Over Historic Building
By Chuck Biedka, VALLEY NEWS DISPATCH
Friday, September 10, 2010
Last updated: 7:11 amNine members of Poke Run Presbyterian Church are asking Westmoreland County Court to side with history and preserve the church’s academy building and its contents.
The four couples and one individual filed a lawsuit Thursday to stop their congregation from demolishing the academy building and prevent the sale of antiques or other items inside.
Trustees insist that the congregation followed all congregational and Redstone Presbytery rules when it voted, 61-49, in June to demolish the wooden academy building, said trustee Vice President Walt Lange yesterday.
Trustee President Vince Goodiski said the congregation, organized in 1785, attracts 150 people to its two Sunday services. The church is located along Poke Run Church Road in Washington Township, across Route 66 from the intersection with Route 366.
Goodiski, a member since the 1980s, said the members voted to use the space to add an elevator and ground-floor access to the fellowship hall in the basement of the church.
The academy building has “no amenities, a crumbling foundation, musty smell,” and its metal roof recently sustained wind damage, he said.
Goodiski also said an older $10,000 ramp leading to the front of the church is inadequate and, at the back of the church, a $7,000 chair lift needs to be replaced to accommodate wheelchairs.
“It’s not feasible to fix the lift, and people who use the ramp and come into the church late are immediately seen by everyone else,” he said.
The nine members believe the handicap access is sufficient, and they want to have the building that opened in 1889 classified as a historic structure, member Maynard Miller said.
Both sides in the dispute retain deep emotional attachment to the church, even if they disagree about the fate of the academy building. Many have attended the church for decades.
Miller, whose name appears first on the lawsuit, said the academy served as the township’s first high school, starting in about 1919 and lasting about 10 years.
Miller said his wife, Martha, was baptized in the church, and she married him there in 1946.
James W. Dunmire is among those who are asking for an injunction.
“This is historic. We don’t want the building destroyed,” Dunmire said.
Goodski said the congregation has dealt with the issue for “at least five or six years” and this is “not something that came up as a last minute thing as they are trying to say.”
Goodski said they have offered the building to the nine “and anyone else to move it.”
One solution may be to “put the building on a slab” and move it elsewhere on the church property, he said, although that could be tricky because of the condition of the academy and its maintenance budget.
Goodiski could not say how much the church has spent on the building.
The church land includes the academy and church as well as an education building.
Goodiski and Lange believe the education building can be enlarged to handle community meetings, including those for the Kiski Valley Habitat for Humanity and Beaver Run Community 4-H Club.
He said the congregation wants to remove the building “so that we can better reach out into the community.”
The complaint includes a request for an injunction but a hearing on that hasn’t been scheduled.
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Sculpture of Steel Worker to Highlight Natrona Heritage Park
By Tom Yerace, VALLEY NEWS DISPATCH
Tuesday, September 7, 2010Natrona’s history is forever linked to industry, and that is the focus of a new park being planned there.
“We’ve been working with Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation, and one of the focuses of Natrona Comes Together is to preserve the history of Natrona,” said Bill Godfrey, president of the grassroots neighborhood improvement group, in discussing the proposed Natrona Heritage Park.
Natrona’s first major industry was salt mining by The Pennsylvania Salt Manufacturing Co. dating to 1850. In fact, Godfrey said the park site, which is about 100 feet by 100 feet, is the site of the old Penn Salt company store.
Although Penn Salt evolved into a chemical conglomerate, it eventually became overshadowed in Natrona by the steel industry and Allegheny Ludlum Steel Corp., now known as ATI-Allegheny Ludlum.
It is the steel industry that is the focus of the heritage park, according to Godfrey and Stephen Paulovich, the New Kensington native who is a renowned Louisville, Ky.-based sculptor.
Paulovich is known throughout the Alle-Kiski Valley for his sculptures at the coal miners memorial in Harmar and for the statue of New Kensington football legend Willie Thrower at Valley High School’s stadium.
According to Paulovich, the park’s dominant structure will be a sculpture of an 8-foot-high steel worker set on a base that will have the sculpture rise 18 feet above the park.
In addition, there will be smaller sculptures of buildings in Natrona, some of which still exist, he said.
Paulovich said he will donate his services, including any foundry work.
“I was trying to get something more public art-oriented,” Paulovich said. “Things that are more historical that kids can walk around and look at.
“We want to incorporate some of the buildings … some of them might (still) be there, some might not,” he added. “Those buildings were so important. And if it wasn’t for steel, they wouldn’t be there.”
Among the buildings Paulovich included in his initial drawings were the Pond Street School, St. Ladislaus Church and the Windsor Hotel.
“People in New Kensington might get mad at me, but I think Natrona is the gem, architecturally, of that area,” he said.
Paulovich and Godfrey said they plan to put the project in motion within the next week or two.
They and Natrona Comes Together are developing the project with Frank McCurdy of Harrison, who taught architecture at the University of California, Berkeley, before retiring. He also is a member of the Natrona Comes Together board, Godfrey said.
“We have absolutely no money for it yet, but we have strong passion for finding funds,” Godfrey said.
“We’re going to approach Allegheny Ludlum and the unions and get some other private financing,” he said. He said that they don’t have a firm cost estimate yet. “We’ll give a presentation to anybody that will be very clear and will leave nothing to the imagination. It will be like ‘This is what you get for your dollar.’ It will be like selling any other product.
“I think it is only fair that Allegheny Ludlum celebrates the history of the steel workers who actually built the company with their sweat and toil,” Godfrey said. “We have not approached them, but we are very excited about trying to get them to donate.
“It could be a model for how a steel mill improves the quality of life for a community.”
To underscore the community’s ties to steelmaking even further, Paulovich wants to cast the sculptures in stainless steel, Allegheny Ludlum’s core product for decades.
“I was going to do it in bronze, but it just doesn’t make sense. Bronze? In a steel town?” Paulovich said. “If the guys are making stainless down there, why can’t we use stainless/”
Also, Paulovich wants those “guys” to be involved with the project.
“We want to get some of the welders from Allegheny Ludlum to come down and help us put this together for us,” he said. “I don’t sweat like they do in 4,000 degrees; they need this. It’s just amazing what they do. They have to do it, it’s going to be their sculpture.”
“For them to drive by with their kids and hear them say, ‘Hey, Dad did that,’ that would be great,” Paulovich said.
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Historical Group Seeks Bell From Kittanning’s Town Hall
by Renatta Signorini
Leader Times
Thursday, September 9, 2010
KITTANNING A local group is on a quest to find a bell that once stood high above Market Street in Kittanning’s former town hall.
Joie Pryde has driven plenty of back roads in search of the bell without luck.
“We are on a quest to acquire that bell, restore it” and get boroough permission to place it in Riverfront Park, Pryde said.
It’s the latest mission of the Kit-Han-Ne Questers, a group of local residents dedicated to the preservation and restoration of historic sites and artifacts. The group is hosting the 11th annual Antiquing Along the Allegheny this Saturday in an effort to raise money for reatoration of the bell if they ever find it.
This year’s Antiquing Along the Allegheny features about 60 vendors sprawled out in Kittanning Riverfront Park, selling antiques and handmade crafts including toys, furniture and glassware. Quester Carolyn Schrecengost said some vendors are local residents who don’t have their own shops.
“We have them coming from all around,” said Quester Rovena Chauvaux.
She will be one of the vendors using the event to make room at own home for more antiques. Chauvaux said she will be selling vases, toys and Christmas decorations, among other items.
The local chapter of the Questers is linked to the International Questers, an antique study group with members in the United States and Canada. The group requires that chapters spend any money raised on restoration projects.
In the past, the Kit-Han-Ne Questers have restored stained glass windows, the portraits of four judges in the courthouse and old theater seats.
The project completed with funds from last year’s antiquing event was purchasing three lights for the kitchen and dining room at the McCain House Museum in Kittanning that are now on display.
“We wanted to get the time period suitable,” Chauvaux said.
The new lights are circa 1900 and replaced fixtures that were from a more recent time period.
“Really, they stuck out like a sore thumb, especially the ones in the kitchen because they were obviously ’50s,” Pryde said.
She has gotten a variety of information on the local bell that once hung in Kittanning’s town hall, which was located in the building that now houses First National Bank, but has not had luck finding the piece of local history. Pryde said she has learned that the bell is apparently dated 1906 and could be located somewhere in the Harrison Township area.
Historical societies in that area have made mention of a “bell haven” that was once in a collectors yard, but Pryde has not been able to locate it.
“We’ve hit a dead end everywhere,” she said.
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‘Attractive’ Old Building Reborn Business in Carnegie
By Jeffrey Widmer
BRIDGEVILLE AREA NEWS
Thursday, September 9, 2010The old Ryerson Steel Building on Arch Street in Carnegie, vacant for almost three years, has gotten a new owner, who has moved his company into it.
Envirosafe Stripping Inc., which specializes in industrial painting and multimedia blasting of steel bridge beams, moved into the building this month. The company, which has 19 employees, occupies 60,000-square-feet of the 250,000-square-foot building, which Envirosafe owner George M. Vorel purchased for $3 million.
The company joins one other tenant, which occupies 40,000 square feet, Vorel said.
“I think it’s just a matter of time before we have this building full. This is a very attractive building and Carnegie is a great place to come to. We may have it 75 or 80 percent full six months from now or it may be full, I’m not sure,” said Vorel of Beaver County.
Envirosafe was established in 1994 on the North Side and moved to Neville Island in 2000. The company had an opportunity to move to Ambridge, but Vorel said the Ryerson building was “too good to pass up.”
Vorel said he would have had to lease the Ambridge property. “We were not looking to lease property,” he said. He said he liked Carnegie’s location.
“You can’t beat being where we are. It’s next to the interstate and Carnegie is a great town,” he said.
The building itself, with its size and quality, is very appealing, Vorel said.
Carnegie Mayor Jack Kobistek said it took almost 2 1/2 months to work out the deal.
“But we are very happy, because the possibility of more businesses moving in means more jobs,” Kobistek said.
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Part of Beloved Dormont Cinema to be Preserved
By Al Lowe
FOR THE TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Thursday, September 9, 2010History buffs got some good news at the Dormont Council meeting. Although Dormont’s South Hills Theater along West Liberty Avenue has been razed and will be replaced by a CVS store, its memories will live on because of plans to reassemble the theater’s box office and put it in the lobby of the municipal building.
“All I know is that I got a phone call one day at 3:30 p.m. and was told if I wanted the ticket booth, I better have it picked up by 4 p.m.,” said Muriel Moreland, who is president of the Dormont Historical Society. Her late husband, William, was the borough’s mayor for 24 years, until 1989.
Sections of the box office are being kept in her garage, off Espy Avenue.
“I hope they come get it soon because I have to put my lawn furniture there,” she said.
The Dormont municipal building has three rooms set aside for the Historical Society, which recently received a lot of memorabilia from the theater, including two masks denoting comedy and tragedy that once hung in the theater’s lobby. The theater opened in 1928 and closed in 2001, Moreland said.
Council member Joan Hodson said Monday, that, like many others, she and her husband, Jim, used to take their children to the theater. She said her husband will help to reassemble the box office in the lobby.
In other business, council voted 5-2 to pass a resolution in response to the Keystone Oaks School District’s proposal to close schools.
The resolution, written by Councilman John Maggio, states that council supports neighborhood schools and renews a willingness to collaborate with the district on planning efforts.
Heather Schmidt and Laurie Malkin cast the opposing votes.
They said they had no problems with the resolution, except for its timing. They thought that council should consider passing the resolution after a task force studying the district’s plans makes its recommendation.
Keystone Oaks is considering closing two kindergarten-through-fifth-grade elementary schools, Myrtle in Castle Shannon and Aiken in Green Tree, and converting Dormont Elementary from a K-5 school to a K-3 school for students from all three boroughs. The current middle school would be used for grades four through six, and the current high school would house grades seven through 12; grades seven eight would be kept apart from grades nine through 12.
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Shuttered N. Point Breeze Firehouse Draws Interest
By Adam Brandolph
PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Last updated: 10:22 amHigh ceilings, plenty of garage space, a classroom and a shooting range.
City officials believe Engine House No. 16 will make a great renovation.
“We want to see proposals, but we don’t have a preconceived notion of what we’re looking for,”said Claire Hosteny, senior real estate development specialist for the Urban Redevelopment Authority. “We’re just really excited because of the potential impact it could have on the neighborhood.”
Officials are seeking a buyer of the two-story brick building, located at North Lang and Penn avenues in North Point Breeze. About 30 people attended a tour of the property this morning.
The request for proposals can be found online at www.buyintheburgh.com. Bids are due Oct. 22.
The 6,500-square-foot building, which dates to the early 1900s, was last used as a firehouse in the late ’80s or early ’90s and has since been used as a police and fire training area. It is appraised at $90,000.
Eric Townsend of Forest Hills said the building’s nonexistent parking would be a problem if he decided to turn it into a nonprofit art studio.
“I’m just looking at everything and trying to get an idea of what’s available,” Townsend said.
Some architects and other potential investors touring the building said it would likely cost upward of $500,000 to renovate, but costs would fluctuate depending on what was done.
“I’ve never seen a turnout like this for a city property before,” said Michael Whartnaby of Point Breeze. “There’s definitely an interest.”
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With New Pittsburgh Public Market, City Has Tradition Back
By Margaret Harding
PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Tuesday, September 7, 2010Visiting the Pittsburgh Public Market the first day it opened took Augie Barrante back more than 60 years.
“I used to work in the old North Side Market when I was 10 years old,” said Barrante, 73, of Wexford. “I helped out with the produce stand.”
The opening weekend of the Pittsburgh Public Market in the Produce Terminal Building along Smallman Street was nothing short of an overwhelming success, with an estimated 6,500 visitors, organizers said.
“I thought there would be 100 people (Friday), and there were 100 people in the first hour,” said Becky Rodgers, executive director of Neighbors in the Strip. “I think everyone coming through is happy to have a market back.”
The market had a “soft opening” last weekend. Its official opening is set for Friday. More than 40 vendors are expected to participate each week, Rodgers said.
“It’s so contemporary,” said Lori Barrante, 54, Augie’s wife. “It has a little bit of everything.”
Pat Cosmano’s booth of olive oils and balsamics, Cosimano e Ferrari, particularly piqued the Barrantes’ interest.
Cosmano, of Rochester, N.Y., said he has worked out of a space at the Rochester Public Market for about eight months and expanded to Pittsburgh after a relative told him about the Strip District market.
“I’m really impressed with the setup,” Cosmano said. “You have a lot of good vendors in here.”
The Rochester Public Market has about 300 booths in an indoor-outdoor setting. It won the 2010 America’s Favorite Farmers Market contest.
Rodgers expected at least 10 more booths to go up for this weekend’s opening.
“For a lot of people here, this is their second business,” Rodgers said.
Nathan Holmes helps run Clarion River Organics, a business cooperative in its third year that was selling vegetables and dairy products. Holmes said the group will bring in homemade ice cream, milk, meat and some vegetables in the winter.
“It’s really nice to have a place with a cooler,” Holmes said. “It’s exciting and people are excited.”
Teresa and Don Orkoskey of Lawrenceville said the setting reminded them of the market they grew up with in Wheeling, W.Va.
“I like the farmers’ stands,” said Teresa Orkoskey, 29. “It’s protected from the elements, but it doesn’t have that corporate shopping mall feel.”
Pittsburgh Public MarketWhere: Produce Terminal Building, Smallman Street, Strip District
What: Vendors selling items ranging from pierogies, espresso and Italian ice to textiles, olive oils and desserts
Open: Year-round, 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Fridays, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Sundays
Details: pittsburghpublicmarket.org
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Denis Theatre in Mt. Lebanon Won’t Be Silent Screen Too Long
By Rick Wills
PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Thursday, September 2, 2010A group working to renovate and reopen the Denis Theatre in Mt. Lebanon signed a sales agreement Wednesday to buy the building.
The Denis Theatre Foundation agreed to pay $668,750 for the theater on Washington Road. The theater, which opened 72 years ago, closed in 2004.
The deal should be final within 60 days, said Anne Kemerer, the foundation’s executive director.
“This is almost like an unattainable dream, especially after the economy got bad and fundraising became so difficult,” Kemerer said. “To me, a main street has a theater on it.”
The foundation has raised $663,000 and aims to raise another $1.8 million for the first phase of the renovation, which includes opening one screen, updating or replacing basic systems and installing an elevator.
The Encore, the first of three planned screening rooms, is expected to open in 2012.
The project’s second phase includes opening two more screens, restoring a stage in one theater and adding meeting rooms.
So far, the foundation has received 436 donations — the two largest are $155,000 from an anonymous benefactor and $100,000 from The Pittsburgh Foundation.
“The goal of this project is to serve a wide demographic over the South Hills. There is something about a community theater that makes a community stronger,” said Mark Lynch, a spokesman for the foundation.
The Denis opened in 1938.
“I remember standing in line to see ‘Benji’ there. The Denis Theatre is an historic building that holds lots of nostalgia for people in the area,” said Jennifer Smokelin, a foundation board member and Mt. Lebanon resident.