Bridge Restoration & Reservoir Drive Closure

The good news is that the city is finally going to complete the restoration of the historic stone bridge on Reservoir Drive.  The bad news is that they have to close the road to do so for an estimated 9 months.  Below is a map of the road closure plan.  Starting Monday, July 11 you’ll be able to drive in through the Highland Park entrance and drive out on Farmhouse Road (the green and blue sections on the map). Cars with ADA  placards are allowed to continue on Reservoir Drive past Farmhouse Road and park at the upper parking lot to access the reservoir walkway.  There are links to this map and other details about the project on the EngagePGH website.

Neighborhood Updates

HPCC Annual Business Meeting

The HPCC’s June Community Meeting also is its annual business meeting. This year, board members prepared a presentation recapping HPCC accomplishments and events from the past year; introducing the officers and new board members for the upcoming year; providing an update on the new Super Playground; summarizing membership activities and achievements; and outlining our finances. In short, the HPCC is doing great, keeping neighbors informed and engaged, increasing our membership, and managing our finances well. For all the details, see the presentation here

PWSA Work Soon to Begin Near Park Entrance

At our June 16 HPCC Community Meeting, PWSA provided another update on the work it will be conducting along Bunkerhill Street and Mellon Terrace as part of its Water Reliability Plan. This work is expected to begin in July and take three years to complete, so be prepared for potential delays, detours, and construction vehicles in this part of the neighborhood for quite a while. They provided details about the length of planned closures, although not their timing. Highlights about the work are below. Check out the PWSA’s presentation for more.

Rising Main Upgrades are expected to start July 2022 and be completed by Summer 2025

  • Mellon Terrace, north lane, will be closed for eight weeks during construction
    • The other lane will be a one-way toward Negley Ave.
    • Detour signs will be posted
  • Mellon Street is expected to be closed for four weeks during construction
    • Traffic will be rerouted to N. Saint Clair St.
    • Detour signs will be posted
  • Intersection of Bunkerhill Street, Mellon Street, and One Wild Place
    • The intersection will be closed one weekend only, from Friday 8 p.m. through Sunday 5 a.m.
    • Detour signs will be posted

Pump Station Replacement is expected to start Dec. 2022 and be completed by Summer 2025

  • Intersection of Bunkerhill St. and N. Highland Ave.
    • The intersection will be closed for two weeks
    • Crews will work around the clock to get the work completed as quickly as possible
    • Traffic will be rerouted to N. Euclid
    • Detour signs will be posted
  • Building construction
    • The work schedule will be Mon. – Fri., 7 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    • No impacts to water service are expected

Bus Rapid Transit

At a special community meeting on Monday, June 20th, Pittsburgh Regional Transit (PRT, formerly Port Authority) provided an update on the city’s plans for the new Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) development. Funding and other constraints have caused them to restrict the initial project to the Downtown-Uptown-Oakland corridors. As a result, the extension running to Highland Park is no longer part of the plan. Long-term they hope to add it, but we will not see any new BRT stops or shelters in Highland Park until additional funding is obtained and public engagement is conducted. Once the Downtown-Uptown-Oakland BRT upgrades are implemented, if you catch the 71A or 71B in the neighborhood, part of the route will be in the BRT corridors, but the BRT elements won’t extend to our neighborhood. View the PRT presentation on our website.

Thanks to All Who Attended, Supported the Hullabaloo

After a two-year, Covid-induced hiatus, the HPCC was excited to bring back our neighborhood BBQ under a new name: “The Highland Park Hullabaloo.” On June 23rd, we converted the Rhododendron Shelter in the park to a community party zone! Over 400 people came to wind down after work with free hot dogs, a hot dog toppings bar, hot popcorn, Eat’n Park Smiley cookies, and beer and soda tasting – seven kinds of each! Rikki the Face Painter was there, along with the Pittsburgh Glass Center and Vinnie’s Shaved Ice. People enjoyed live music, won cool door prizes, and chilled on the grass with their friends and neighbors. A good time was had by all. Check out our Facebook page for more photos!

Thank you to everyone who made it possible, including the entire HPCC board; Janine Jelks-Seale and Leah Bhagat-Young (neighborhood volunteers on the planning committee); Elisa Lucke Jones (children’s committee); the many businesses, organizations and individuals that donated door prizes; and all of the neighborhood volunteers who helped set-up, run and clean-up after the event. Events like this are a team effort – thank you Team Hullabaloo!

Thank you donors!

  • Applewood Smoke Burger Company
  • Casa Brasil
  • Centre Ave Massage & Spa
  • East End Brewing
  • Gallery Ama
  • Highland Park Garden Club
  • Joseph Tambellini Restaurant
  • Lou Iezzi & Sons Auto
  • Jeffrey Smith Salon
  • Park Bruges
  • Smiling Banana Leaf
  • Tazza D’oro
  • Teppanyaki Kyoto Restaurant
  • Trek Shadyside
  • Pittsburgh Glass Center
  • Pittsburgh Zoo and Aquarium
  • Andrea Mudd
  • Leah Bhagat-Young

Thank you musicians!

  • Monkey Goddess
  • Tom Hoffman and Friends
  • Mitch Hall
  • Howling Mob

Jim Ferlo, Highland Park Neighbor and Friend

Highland Park lost a good friend and ally recently with the passing of Jim Ferlo. City Councilman for fifteen years, followed by twelve years as our State Senator, Jim was a force to be reckoned with in both settings, never one to back down from a critical issue of principle and fairness. One of many speakers at Jim’s memorial service in Allegheny Cemetery in May, who served with him in Harrisburg, referred to him as “the conscience of the Senate.” He was that and more, with longtime residents of Pittsburgh also recalling Jim leading battles with the powers that be over historic preservation, health care, workers rights, tax-exempt properties, sustainable development, billboards… the list is long.

Newcomers to the neighborhood may not be aware of Jim’s sometimes colorful but always effective methods to push both those he served, as well as those he hoped to convince, to aim higher, but we live in a neighborhood where the proof of his impact is visible every day. The Highland Park we enjoy today had a far less certain future just a short time ago. Whole blocks suffered from disinvestment and decay, Bryant Street was dysfunctional and vacant, and the park was a shadow of what it once was. In the early 90’s, at Jim’s urging, a band of determined neighbors created the Highland Park Community Development Corporation to take on the “bricks and mortar” projects necessary to begin to reverse the tide on blocks that were at the edge of no return. The work in this corner of the neighborhood continues today, but these are now safe, livable places that attract both significant investment and great neighbors.

Bryant Street always held a special attraction for Jim. It drove him crazy that this neighborhood was saddled with a commercial district of empty storefronts, eyesore buildings, irresponsible property owners, and noise and drug use when all could see that the community was hungry for a total makeover. With Jim’s urging a new vision was set, problem properties were acquired, partners and funding were secured, and restaurants and services that the neighborhood wanted and needed began to open in restored and new buildings. Such turnarounds are complicated and take time, and while Jim was not a patient person, the Bryant Street of today would never have happened without Jim’s unwavering 20+ years of dedication and support.

As you walk around Highland Park, thank Jim for being able to enjoy the walk around the Upper Reservoir, threatened in the 90’s with a cover like the one now being replaced on the Lower Reservoir. He was in the neighborhood’s corner with other key individuals and institutions in the 10-year standoff to find the eventual solution, the Microfiltration Plant, that both assured a safe drinking water supply while also respecting the unique experience at the heart of the park that makes Highland Park special.

As you leave the park and pass by the fountain and under the granite and bronze entry piers at the end of Highland Avenue, thank Jim for making sure that the city’s proceeds from the sale of the King Estate stayed in the neighborhood, funding both the restoration of the historic Moretti statues as well as the key initial design process that led to the full rejuvenation of the entry gardens in partnership with the Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy and the City.

These are but a few of Jim’s contributions to the neighborhood he loved, and we will miss him greatly.

David Hance, president of the Highland Park Community Development Corporation