Box 207
Contains 45 Results:
Preservation in Pittsburgh, Prepared by the Historic Review Commission, City of Pittsburgh, c. 1989
Subseries 4 contains materials focused on the historic preservation of buildings, particularly in relation to the archaeological aspects of structures located in construction projects.
Mellon Park, Outline of a Potential Plan of Development for a Sports Center, 1944
Subseries 3 contains reports about various parks and recreational facilities in Pittsburgh and other U.S. cities.
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Workable Program for Urban Renewal, Mayor's Office, City of Pittsburgh, c. 1955
Subseries 1 includes a wide assortment of reports concerning city planning initiatives in Pittsburgh, particularly from the City Planning Department, the City Planning Commission, and other local agencies. The subseries includes the series of reports collectively known as the Pittsburgh Plan, the city’s first proposed comprehensive planning initiative, as well as 41 issues of a periodical called Progress (1921-1941), which promoted comprehensive urban planning.
Mt. Washington-Duquesne Heights Traffic and Parking Study, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Prepared for the City of Pittsburgh by Wilbur Smith and Associates (copy 2), 1977
Subseries 7 contains reports and studies concerning city parking, including reports from the Pittsburgh Parking Authority.
Mount Washington/Duquesne Heights: Mount Washington, Duquesne Heights, A Study of Two Major Zones, Prepared by Griswold, Winters and Swain, Landscape Architects, 1970
Subseries 3 contains reports, studies and proposals for redevelopment projects in Pittsburgh from roughly 1950 to 2000. The subseries is arranged alphabetically by neighborhood. A few of the redevelopment projects include photographic surveys, namely for projects in South Side, Hazelwood, Manchester and the Hill District.
Planning for Hillside Development by Robert B. Olshansky, American Planning Association, Planning Advisory Service, Report Number 466, 1996
Subseries 1 contains reports about general planning projects, urban planning studies, and reports from various planning agencies. This subseries in particular contains annual reports from the Pittsburgh Regional Planning Association along with annual planning reports from multiple U.S. cities.
Welford Sanders Manufactured Houses, Regulation, Design Innovations, and Development Options, Manufacturing Housing Institute, American Planning Association, Planning Advisory Service, Report Number 478, 1998
Subseries 1 contains reports about general planning projects, urban planning studies, and reports from various planning agencies. This subseries in particular contains annual reports from the Pittsburgh Regional Planning Association along with annual planning reports from multiple U.S. cities.
A Planners Guide to Sustainable Development by Kevin J. Krizek and Joe Power, American Planning Association, Planning Advisory Service, Report Number 467, 1996
Subseries 1 contains reports about general planning projects, urban planning studies, and reports from various planning agencies. This subseries in particular contains annual reports from the Pittsburgh Regional Planning Association along with annual planning reports from multiple U.S. cities.
Approaches to Urban Greening, The Penn State Center, Engaging Pittsburgh, undated
Series 10 contains reports and surveys pertaining to land use. In particular, this series has a large amount of land use maps detailing master Pittsburgh neighborhood data from the 1940s and 1950s.
"The Georgetown of Pittsburgh," A Speech to the South Pittsburgh Development Council by Calvin S. Hamilton, Executive Directory of the Pittsburgh Department of City Planning, 1963
Subseries 1 includes a wide assortment of reports concerning city planning initiatives in Pittsburgh, particularly from the City Planning Department, the City Planning Commission, and other local agencies. The subseries includes the series of reports collectively known as the Pittsburgh Plan, the city’s first proposed comprehensive planning initiative, as well as 41 issues of a periodical called Progress (1921-1941), which promoted comprehensive urban planning.