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Overview : Pittsburgh
Posted by rguides on September 28, 2010 Category: Backgroud Target for: All

The vibrant ten-block district known as the Golden Triangle, at the heart of downtown PITTSBURGH , stands at the confluence of the Monongahela, Allegheny and Ohio rivers, once bitterly fought over as the gateway to the West. The French built Fort Duquesne on the site in 1754, only for it to be destroyed four years later by the British, who replaced it with Fort Pitt . Industry began with the development of iron foundries in the early 1800s, and by the time of the Civil War, Pittsburgh was producing half of the iron and one third of the glass in the US. Soon after, the city became the world's leading producer of steel, thanks to the vigorous expansion programs of Andrew Carnegie , who, by 1870, was the richest man in the world. Present-day Pittsburgh is dotted with his cultural bequests, along with those of other wealthy forefathers including the Mellon bankers, the Frick coal merchants and the Heinz food producers.

Though saddled with a Victorian reputation for dirt and pollution, the city experienced a transformation after the 1950s. A face-lift involved large-scale demolition of abandoned steel mills, which freed up much of the downtown waterfront, but all-out yuppification has been kept in check by the student population and the small-town feel of the older ethnic neighborhoods to the north and south. Pittsburgh today is one of America's most attractive and most liveable cities; resilience and enthusiasm rather than coal fumes fill the air, and sleek architecture and green parks supplant smokestacks and slums. The popular Andy Warhol Museum , opened in 1994, has bolstered Pittsburgh's image as a destination city, while an enormous new Convention Center will bring in major conferences, which is sure to add to the influx of visitors.

Each of Pittsburgh's close-knit neighborhoods the South Side and Mount Washington , across the Monongahela River from the Golden Triangle , the North Side across the Allegheny River, and Oakland , the university area in the east attests in its own way to the city's history and its resurgence. Easily accessible from each other, they retain individual identities while remaining part of a proud whole.


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Overview : Arrival, information and getting around
Posted by rguides on September 28, 2010 Category: Backgroud Target for: All

Greyhound pulls in at Eleventh Street and Liberty Avenue downtown, across from Amtrak. From the modern, efficient Pittsburgh International Airport (tel 412/472-3500), fifteen miles west, Airlines Transportation (tel 412/321-4990) runs hourly shuttles downtown (daily 7am10pm; $14 one-way, $24 round-trip) and to Oakland ($15 one-way, $26 round-trip). Almost as quick and significantly cheaper, the excellent local bus #28X runs roughly every 20min between the airport and Oakland via Robinson town center and downtown (daily 5ammidnight; $2). Pittsburgh's main visitor center is downtown on Liberty Avenue, adjacent to the Gateway Center (MonFri 9am4.45pm, Sat & Sun 9am2.45pm; tel 412/281-7711 or 1-800/366-0093, www.visitpittsburgh.com ), with subsidiary branches at the airport (MonSat 8am8pm, Sun noon8pm), Station Square (daily 10am5pm) and in the Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center (daily 10am5pm). The main post office is at Seventh and Grant (MonFri 7am6pm, Sat 7am2.30pm; tel 412/642-4472; zip code 15230).

Though Pittsburgh is a city of distinct districts, transportation between them is simple. Buses through town ($1.60), the Monongahela trolley incline to Mount Washington (daily until around midnight; $1.60) and a small "T" subway system (free downtown, $1 to cross the river to Station Square, $1.60 or $2 farther into South Hills) are all run by PAT (tel 412/442-2000), which has a downtown service center at 534 Smithfield St (Mon & Thurs 9am6pm, Tues, Wed & Fri 9am5pm) where you can pick up timetables. Twenty-five cent transfers, which must be bought simultaneously with your fare if needed, allow you to connect with any of the system's vehicles within three hours. For taxis , call Yellow Cab (tel 412/665-8100).


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