Preservation Pittsburgh
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- 1501 Reedsdale St, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
| Type | Non-Profit |
|---|---|
| Purpose | To advocate for the preservation of historically important sites, structures, landmarks, and districts in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. |
| Location |
|
Region served | Pittsburgh and Allegheny County, Pennsylvania |
| Website | www |
Preservation Pittsburgh is a non-profit advocacy group founded in 1991 to support the preservation of historic, architectural, cultural, and environmental sites and buildings within Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Founded by Mary J. Paradise, Preservation Pittsburgh's origins lay in efforts to stop the Syria Mosque Concert Hall's demolishment in 1991. The organization emerged out of the public protest campaign titled "Save the Syria Mosque Organization."[1] Although this group sparked "one of the fiercest preservation battles in the city's history," the land was eventually sold to the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, or UPMC, which constructed a surface parking lot on the site (that still stands today).[2]
In the early 2000s, Preservation Pittsburgh was one of the opponents of Mayor Thomas Murphy's "Fifth and Forbes" revitalization plan. Murphy's original plan would have demolished 62 buildings in the Downtown area. After opposition from Preservation Pittsburgh and the Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation, among others, Murphy opened up the revitalization plan to a broader group of stakeholders, including preservationists and building and business owners.[3]
Preservation Pittsburgh also advocated for the adaptive reuse of the Civic Arena, a contentious site given that it was built by displacing residents in the Hill District, a primarily African American neighborhood, using eminent domain.[4] Preservation Pittsburgh launched the "Civic Minded" design competition for the arena when it faced demolition in 2010, and announced four contest winners. These winners proposed various reuses for the arena: a park that would incorporate part of the arena's dome into the natural landscape,[5] an urban marketplace that would seek to amend the "double injustice of urban renewal and poor food access in the Hill District,"[6] a natatorium that would information about the Hill District's history,[7] and a solar-power clad dome that would help power the Lower Hill District.[8][9] The Civic Arena was demolished in 2011.[10]