INSIDE: WHAT’S PREVENTING A FOOD HALL FROM COMING TO LAWRENCEVILLE? PITTSBURGH’S ALTERNATIVE FOR NEWS, ARTS + ENTERTAINMENT SINCE 1991
PGHCITYPAPER.COM PGHCITYPAPER PGHCITYPAPER PITTSBURGHCITYPAPER
JULY 7-14, 2021
The cast of Wizard of Oz >
Pittsburgh CLO celebrates its 75th anniversary
“Under the Stars” at Heinz Field
More photos online at
pghcitypaper.com
4 Smithfield Street, Suite 1210 Pittsburgh, PA 15222 412.685.9009 E-MAIL info@pghcitypaper.com
pghcitypaper.com PGHCITYPAPER
FIRSTSHOT BY KAYCEE ORWIG
Kids play with sparklers during Dormont’s Fourth of July celebration on Sun., July 4.
PITTSBURGHCITYPAPER
JULY 7-14, 2021 VOLUME 30 + ISSUE 27 Editor-In-Chief LISA CUNNINGHAM Director of Advertising JASMINE HUGHES Director of Operations KEVIN SHEPHERD Managing Editor RYAN DETO A&E Editor AMANDA WALTZ Staff Writers DANI JANAE, KIMBERLY ROONEY 냖㵸蔻 Photographer/Videographer JARED WICKERHAM Graphic Designer JEFF SCHRECKENGOST Digital Marketing Coordinator DARYA KHARABI Sales Representatives ZACK DURKIN, OWEN GABBEY, HANNAH MORAN-FUNWELA Circulation Manager JEFF ENGBARTH Featured Contributors REGE BEHE, MIKE CANTON, LYNN CULLEN, TERENEH IDIA, CHARLES ROSENBLUM Interns LAURYN NANIA, KAYCEE ORWIG National Advertising Representative VMG ADVERTISING 1.888.278.9866 OR 1.212.475.2529 Publisher EAGLE MEDIA CORP.
GENERAL POLICIES: Contents copyrighted 2021 by Eagle Media Corp. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without written permission of the publisher. The opinions expressed in Pittsburgh City Paper are those of the author and not necessarily of Eagle Media Corp. LETTER POLICY: Letters, or e-mails must be signed and include town and daytime phone number for confirmation. We may edit for length and clarity. DISTRIBUTION: Pittsburgh City Paper is published weekly by Eagle Media Corp. and is available free of charge at select distribution locations. One copy per reader; copies of past issues may be purchased for $3.00 each, payable in advance to Pittsburgh City Paper. FIRST CLASS MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS: Available for $250 per year (52 issues), $150 per half year (26 issues), or $32 per six weeks. For more information, visit pghcitypaper.com and click on the Subscribe tab.
COVER PHOTO: KAYCEE ORWIG READ THE STORY ON PAGE 14
2
PGHCITYPAPER.COM
1Hood Media, BOOM Concepts, Braddock Carnegie Library Association, Dreams of Hope, The Legacy Arts Project, PearlArts and Kelly Strayhorn Theater are thrilled to announce the return of Hotline Ring, a virtual fundraiser led by Kelly Strayhorn Theater, that brings together our aligned missions and you, for an evening of entertainment, sharing, and giving, to uplift the value of the arts in our communities and ensure that we thrive into the future. The event features leaders from participating organizations and an entertaining night of live musical and dance performances, interactive games, interviews, and guest appearances from community members in a variety show format hosted by Kelly Strayhorn Theater Executive Director Joseph Hall. Donate today by visiting Kelly-Strayhorn.org/HotlineRing and check out the full schedule of speakers and participatory moments coming soon!
PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER JULY 7-14, 2021
3
CP PHOTO: RYAN DETO
Brett Minarik, Phoebe Fraser, and Adam Harvey, owners of the proposed Lawrence Hall
THE BIG STORY
LAWRENCE STALLED A Pittsburgh zoning requirement means a proposed food hall in Lawrenceville is four spaces short of becoming a reality BY RYAN DETO // RYANDETO@PGHCITYPAPER.COM
S
INCE 2017, three Lawrenceville residents
have had a dream to bring a food hall to Butler Street. It would host five different food stalls, and convert an abandoned warehouse right in the heart of Lawrenceville’s business district. It would be called Lawrence Hall. Adam Harvey, one of the residents behind Lawrence Hall, believes the food hall will fit in well in the neighborhood because it would give smaller restaurateurs opportunities in a Butler Street market dominated by popular, large, and mostly sitdown restaurants. “For this thriving commercial district, we are short on space,” says Harvey. “We hope small businesses come here to thrive, and a rising tide would lift all boats. We are interested in creating a footprint here that vibes with the neighborhood.”
4
PGHCITYPAPER.COM
But there is a problem. Pittsburgh zoning code requires buildings seeking zoning variances to provide a certain amount of off-street parking. After many different proposals, the three residents — Brett Minarik, Phoebe Fraser, and Harvey — have been able to provide seven surface parking spots and bike parking at a lot nearby, but it isn’t enough. Zoning code requires a development of Lawrence Hall’s size to provide 11 off-street parking spots, and even though the Pittsburgh Zoning Board of Adjustment granted the food hall a variance lowering the parking requirements, that decision was appealed by another Lawrenceville resident and notorious citizen activist, and the judge ruled the zoning variance was improper. Basically, the only thing standing in the way of Lawrence Hall becoming a reality is four off-street parking spaces.
Minarik, Fraser, and Harvey have the capital, and the experience in the hospitality industry. They are confident Lawrence Hall will be a success, but have grown frustrated at the stoppage. Even so, they have garnered considerable support to their side. Both neighborhood community groups — Lawrenceville United and Lawrenceville Corporation — have rallied to Lawrence Hall’s cause, and are lauding the three residents for their commitment to working with the community and responding to the many residents’ needs. Minarik says Lawrence Hall has also received support from the administration of Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto, who has been involved with helping the team file appeals in court over the development. They even proposed an alternative-transit plan for Lawrence Hall, which would have been pioneering in the Pittsburgh zoning world, had a judge not dismissed it.
IMAGE: MOSS ARCHITECTS
A July 2018 architectural rending of Lawrence Hall’s exterior
But experience and desire, as well as community and governmental support, doesn’t mean much when it comes to zoning decisions. And, in this case, just one person opposed to the project can stall it for years, even over just four off-street parking spaces. “Parking is a concern for everyone. We don’t take that lightly,” says Minarik. “Everything is positive about this project, but it’s four parking spaces.” Minarik and Fraser, who are married, moved to Lawrenceville in 2017. Soon after, the couple became interested in the property on 4609 Butler St., saw a for sale sign, and started to think about its potential as a food hall. Not long after that, they met Harvey, who had extensive experience in the restaurant and hospitality industry. They all realized Pittsburgh is short on food halls compared to other cities, and thought the large property on Butler Street was perfect for their concept. First built in 1890, the property at 4609 Butler St. has had several uses over the years. Minarik says at one point it was a theater, then it became an auto shop in the 1940s, and then, after being utilized for a construction business, it eventually was used for storage. For years it has stood vacant. Inside, the ceilings are over
two dozen feet high, and it boasts about 6,000 square feet of space. Minarik says they want to preserve the original structure as much as possible, and would build skylights to add in natural light. The plans are for five vendor stalls inside the space that would accommodate seating and room for about 130 people. The hall will also include a 26-seat bar, serving beer, wine, and cocktails.
board’s decision in June 2019. Minarik, Fraser, and Harvey went back to the drawing board, and came back with an adjusted plan meant to meet the appeal to the judge’s ruling. “We had reduced the scope of our buildout, purchased the only available lot in the area that could provide some parking, and restructured our project and zoning package to significantly reduce what we were asking the ZBA to
“WE ARE BEING STYMIED BY FOUR PARKING SPACES.” In 2018, the residents’ plan was approved and granted a zoning variance by Pittsburgh’s Zoning Board of Adjustment. But in October of that year, Raymond Czachowski and Eric Kukura appealed the zoning board’s decision. Kukura is co-owner of The Abbey, a large restaurant, bar, and cafe space located very close to 4609 Butler St. Czachowski is a longtime Lawrenceville resident and property manager. A judge ruled in favor of Czachowski and Kukura, and overturned the zoning
approve,” reads the Lawrence Hall website. After this adjusted plan, Kukura didn’t showcase public opposition, but Czachowski did speak out at the zoning board hearing in February 2020. When the zoning board again approved the variance for Lawrence Hall, Czachowski filed another appeal to the courts. According to the residents, they started to negotiate possible solutions with Czachowski. These included bringing valet-style parking to a small lot they purchased on the corner of Butler and
Plummer streets. The residents also tried to get permission to park cars at the nearby lots of Busy Beaver hardware store and the Boys and Girls Club, but those were non-starters, legally speaking. According to the Lawrence Hall website, Czachowski then “moved the goalposts” and said that valet-parking must be undertaken at the Lawrence Hall entrance (not the satellite parking lot), which community groups strongly opposed. Instead, the residents worked with the community groups to create an alternative transit plan to mitigate any possible traffic concerns. These included permanent discounts for customers who rode bikes or used ride-hail services to visit Lawrence Hall, commitments to prioritize hiring employees who could walk to work, and paying public transit costs for all of Lawrence Hall employees. This alternative transit plan mirrored workforce plans that are generally lauded by environmentalists and transit advocates. But in November 2020, a judge ruled against the zoning board again, and called Lawrence Hall’s alternative-transit plan “aspirational in nature” and said it is “impossible to quantify how many employees are walking, taking the bus, biking, or using a rideshare program to get to work.” (The American Community CONTINUES ON PG. 6
PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER JULY 7-14, 2021
5
LAWRENCE STALLED, CONTINUED FROM PG. 5
CP PHOTOS: JARED WICKERHAM
The exterior of Lawrence Hall
Survey estimates how many people commute to work using various methods — like walking, public transit, bike, driving, and taxi — every year and publishes the data on the U.S. Census website.) Fraser adds that the way the judge ruled against Lawrence Hall could even set a precedent against other developers who may want to institute alternative parking plans as a way to limit off-street parking requirements. Harvey says it doesn’t make sense that the Lawrence Hall development is being blocked because if he, Minarik, and Fraser were to purchase a large restaurant space on Butler Street, and not change the use of the building, they wouldn’t have to supply off-street parking spaces. According to Lawrence Hall’s website, if instead of one 6,000-square-foot space, they had three 2,000-square-foot spaces — even containing the same number of businesses, customers, employees, etc. — no parking would be required.
An old heater (left) and an old advertisement (right) from Lawrence Park Garage, one of the original owners, inside of Lawrence Hall
“We are being stymied by four parking spaces,” says Harvey. The man behind the challenges and successful appeals, Czachowski, has a long record of opposing development projects, including apartment buildings and converting out-of-use churches. By many accounts, he’s known throughout Lawrenceville as a NIMBY, a term that means “Not In My Backyard” and is generally applied to citizen activists that oppose development of neighborhoods, whether that is housing, business, or transit. In 2012, Czachowski spoke out against a proposed redevelopment of the Holy Family School, a church and rectory, into market-rate apartments. That proposal, now scrapped, included 57 apartment units and 88 parking spaces, which is well above zoning requirements. According to the Pittsburgh PostGazette, Czachowski said in 2021 that he will fight the development in zoning CONTINUES ON PG. 8
6
PGHCITYPAPER.COM
PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER JULY 7-14, 2021
7
LAWRENCE STALLED, CONTINUED FROM PG. 6
CP PHOTO: JARED WICKERHAM
The inside of Lawrence Hall
on the basis of the “intensity of the residential part. It’s too many units.” Czachowski did not respond to multiple requests for comment for this story. Minarik is from Cleveland, Fraser is from Southern California, and Harvey is from New York, but all have made Lawrenceville their home. All told, Minarik says the group has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal and consultant fees alone trying to get Lawrence Hall through a zoning change. This is separate from the money it would cost to renovate and run the facility. “I’ve dealt with Brooklyn and Manhattan zoning boards, and we have found a way to yes,” says Harvey. “But this is crushing. We explored every option, even excavating our site, and would still fall short [in terms of parking.]” Lauren Byrne Connelly is the director of the community development group Lawrenceville Corporation. She says the Lawrence Hall owners worked
through the group’s community process and met with Lawrenceville residents multiple times to address concerns they had about the project. She says Lawrence Hall would be a good fit in the neighborhood’s business district.
a real estate market like Lawrenceville.” Connelly also lauded the residents for exploring the possibility of a workforce development partnership with the Boys and Girls Club, where youth and young adults could gain experience in managing
“WHAT EXISTS NOW IS OUTDATED AND INCONSISTENT.” “These buildings have been vacant for years, and the reactivation of this part of the business corridor was exciting to us and to many others in the community,” says Connelly. “We have seen the food hall model work in other places, and we thought that this could be attractive to start-ups and entrepreneurs. It was already tough to bring a food concept into your own brick and mortar retail location before COVID and that has only become more challenging since, and especially in
a business. She says she is hopeful the struggles of Lawrence Hall will help motivate Pittsburgh zoning changes, especially ones that help encourage non-car mobility and creative parking solutions. “What exists now is outdated and inconsistent, and doesn’t contemplate 21st century mobility values, networks and uses,” says Connelly. “Additionally, there are seas of surface parking just behind where the [Lawrence Hall] is proposed that sit underutilized while
Follow managing editor Ryan Deto on Twitter @RyanDeto
8
PGHCITYPAPER.COM
others nearby can’t identify parking solutions. Shared parking agreements and solutions are something we have been working to figure out and specifically those issues that property owners raise related to demand and liability.” City government has become more willing to lower and eliminate some parking requirements in order to better accommodate development. In 2020, Pittsburgh ended the off-street parking minimums for newly constructed single-unit attached residences, and followed that by restricting curb cuts to maximize on-street parking spaces and maintain better street conditions for pedestrians. But parking requirements for commercial spaces haven’t been adjusted on a wide scale, and the zoning code as a whole hasn’t been rewritten in decades. Minarik says he has reached out to Pittsburgh city councilors for help, and adds that the “nicest thing we can say is they have been unresponsive.”
•
Explore cannabis as a support for what ails you. Become a medical cannabis patient. We provide low-cost certifications and expert assistance, over the phone. $125 - New Cannabis Card Certification $75 - Card Recertification $75 - New Certification for Veterans/SSI/Disability
www.herbalcarerx.com • 215-554-4044 • HELP@HERBALCARERX.COM
Live! Dealer School at the Westmoreland Mall
deal yourself a new career at Live
Register now to attend the Live! Casino’s Dealer School and receive FREE training that could lead to an exciting career opportunity as a Blackjack Dealer at Live! Casino. Classes are filling up fast, so sign up today to take advantage of this amazing, free opportunity. Classes Begin July 19, 2021 Monday-Friday 10:00AM-2:00PM or 6:00PM-10:00PM
pittsburgh.livecasinohotel.com/DealerSchool SCAN QR Code to learn more
GAMBLING PROBLEM? CALL 1-800-GAMBLER 001645_9.25x4.8125_v2.indd 1
7/1/21 PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER JULY 7-14, 2021
9
11:08 AM
Metro Community Health Center offers patients full mental health care services, with or without insurance, or the ability to pay.
CP PHOTO: RYAN DETO
Two cheese dogs with the works at Jim’s in West Mifflin
.FOOD.
• Same-day appointments • Therapy • Psychiatry • Diagnosis, management, and treatment of mental illness • Prescriptions • Care coordination • Linkage to services
HOURS
Monday, Thursday, and Friday 8:30 AM - 4:30 PM Tuesday and Wednesday 8:30 AM - 7:30 PM Call to schedule an appointment: (412) 247-2310
“Whole People, All People.” Metro complies with the highest COVID-19 safety standards, as outlined by the CDC, in everything that we do. 1789 S. Braddock Ave, Suite 410 Pittsburgh, PA 15218 metrocommunityhealthcenter.org
10
PGHCITYPAPER.COM
FAMOUS FRANKS BY RYAN DETO // RYANDETO@PGHCITYPAPER.COM
I
F A RESTAURANT has been around
for nearly 100 years, there is no questioning its success, even if its cooking methods are unorthodox. That’s the story with Jim’s in West Mifflin. The hot dog joint has been open since 1927, and is also known for Jim’s Famous Sauce, a spicy sweet-sour condiment loaded on its hot dogs. (The name of the restaurant will also show up on internet searches as Jim’s Famous Sauce.) The joint also sells and distributes its famous sauce, with a label claiming its greatness on “hot dogs, steaks, chicken, pasta and more.” But what really makes Jim’s stand out is how it cooks hot dogs: after grilling the wieners and assembling everything together with sauce and chopped onions on a bun, Jim’s throws the whole thing back under the broiler to provide a little extra char. According to Jim’s website, this additional broil helps keep the hot dogs toasty and delicious, even after a trip home. Eventually, Jim’s figured out the addition of melty cheese to the broiled hot dog led to a browned, blackened creation that satisfied customers. It has
become Jim’s most popular item and is what you should order when visiting the Mon Valley staple. On my visit to Jim’s, I ordered from the window two cheese dogs with the works (a cheese sauce covering a grilled dog loaded with chopped onions and Jim’s Famous Sauce), and then enjoyed them at a small metal counter under an overhang. There are tables and other outdoor seating available, but this is mostly a grab-and-go establishment.
JIM’S FAMOUS SAUCE 2600 Skyline Drive, West Mifflin. jimsfamoussauce.com
The appearance of the cheese dogs can be a bit deterring. The Velveeta-style cheese gets cooked and forms black and brown spots, as well as a little skin from the broil. They look like the hot dog version of Altoona Hotel Pizza, the quirky Central Pennsylvania pie with ingredients beneath a yellow-cheese topping that is sometimes charred at the edges. But the flavor and textures are scrumptious. The dog has a great snap
to it, and the bun is crispy, even though everything is covered in wet ingredients. The char clearly helps everything stay crispy and hot. The chopped onions add a little crunch that pairs well with the famous sauce, which is a bit spicy, and moderately sweet and sour. It reminds me of a fastfood sweet-sour sauce, but with a bit of a chili kick. I can imagine it going really well with chicken. It gets a bit more addicting as you go, but is missing some fat to help form a bit of a base to compliment the sourness. The cheese sauce provides some of the richness I desire, but not all of it. But I also am not accustomed to Jim’s style of hot dogs, and have never had anything like them. Part of me kept thinking the sauce would be a chili sauce, but instead was met with a bit of spice in a gooey sweet and sour form. The charred cheese dogs overall were very savory and satisfying, as well as extremely intriguing. Jim’s is worth a trip to Skyline Drive in West Mifflin. If you’ve been open for 100 years, you surely have found the formula to keep customers coming back.
•
Call us for suggestions for what to read or crafts, books or games for your children at home.
.FOOD.
VEGAN SWEETS
Order online anytime.
Seven Pittsburgh places to get vegann ice cream that isn’t sorbet
Monday thru Saturday 10am-7pm • Sunday 12pm-4pm
8850 Covenant Avenue • Pittsburgh, PA 15237 • 412.366.1001 5825 Forbes Avenue • Pittsburgh, PA 15217 • 412.422.2200
BY DANI JANAE DANIJANAE@PGHCITYPAPER.COM M
riverstonebookstore.com
B
EING VEGAN or lactose intolerant ant
presents challenges when it comes to enjoying ice cream. If you don’t eat dairy for whatever reason, your option is usually an icy, fruit-based sorbet, which can be delicious, but insufficient when you want something creamy. Luckily, there are a few places in Pittsburgh where you can satisfy that craving.
Millie’s Homemade Ice Cream Multiple locations. millieshomemade.com Millie’s is still pretty new in Pittsburgh, but has become a staple for frozen treats. For vegans and those less dairy-inclined, they have a wide variety of flavors available in-store or in pints found in local grocery stores. These include the current selection of dairy-free brownie batter, dairy-free mango, dairy-free mint chip, and blackout brownie.
Farmer x Baker 285 River Ave., Aspinwall. rootandheartfarm.com Farmer x Baker is also a fairly new development in Pittsburgh, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t bringing the heat. They have an all-vegan Thursday menu and a regular daily menu with plenty of vegan options. Farmer x Baker has vegan soft serve made with an oat base. Some flavors have included vanilla, strawberry, sticky bun sundae, and tahini coffee.
Sugar Spell Scoops 1014 N. Canal St., Sharpsburg. sugarspellscoops.com The menu for Sugar Spell Scoops is all vegan and made from a cashew base. They carry pints and even ice cream cakes. Check out flavors like dunk-a-roos, peanut butter ripple chip, freckled mint, and white chocolate raspberry cheesecake. The list is endless (and changes with the season), so watch online for what pint flavors they have available for purchase or at the scoop shop.
WORKING FROM HOME?
GET CITY PAPER DELIVER TO YOUR MAILBOX
Page Dairy Mart 4112 2 E. Carson St., South Side. dairymart.net pagedairymart.net Page Dairy Mart is a Pittsburgh fa favorite, y now carry an oat-b and they oat-based, dairyfree soft serve. You ccan choose from vanilla or any of the specialty flavors that include birthday cake, coffee, mint chocolate chip, mango, peanut butter, and more.
6 weeks for $32 VISIT WWW.PGHCITYPAPERSTORE.COM
NatuRoll Creamery 4318 Butler St., Lawrenceville. naturollcreamerypgh.com NatuRoll Creamery offers hand-rolled ice cream with tons of toppings and mix-ins. Just choose from one of their many dairyfree bases like chocolate, vanilla, chai, matcha, and more, and then add your mix-ins. Popular vegan toppings include almonds, Oreos, sprinkles, cinnamon sugar, coconut, banana, blueberry, and other nuts and fruits.
Frio Creamery 4127 Butler St., Lawrenceville. friocreamery.business.site Frio has four creamy vegan ice creams made from a coconut cream/almond milk base. Flavors include pistachio, and gluten-free chocolate cookies and cream, blueberry lavender, and gluten-free key lime pie.
Happy Day Dessert Factory 906A Western Ave., North Side. happydaydessertfactory.com Happy Day carries an almond milk-based soft serve option that comes in chocolate, vanilla, or chocolate-vanilla twist. Happy Day opened March 2020 during the pandemic, and it is still going strong, serving up creamy, cold delights.
•
PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER JULY 7-14, 2021
11
CP PHOTO: BRIAN COOK
Homewood Children’s Village CEO Walter Lewis
.BLACK-LED COMMUNITY SPOTLIGHT.
IT TAKES A VILLAGE BY DANI JANAE // DANIJANAE@PGHCITYPAPER.COM
H
OMEWOOD IS a Pittsburgh neighborhood rich with history. It was once a popular destination for Pittsburgh’s wealthy elites during the 1800s and throughout the 1900s. It wasn’t until 1950 that things began to change, spurred by the phenomenon known as “white flight,” when upper and middle class white residents left Homewood after Black people began moving into the neighborhood. The Homewood Children’s Village website attributes this change in part to
the displacement of Hill District residents by the construction of the Civic Arena. This led to an economic downturn in the neighborhood, which saw a devastating population decrease — from 30,523 in 1960 to 6,422 in 2010, by HCV’s numbers — and an uptick in rental properties, as many new Black residents couldn’t afford to buy homes. Despite the shift, Homewood Children’s Village CEO Walter Lewis believes Homewood remains a neighborhood full of creative energy.
“There is so much richness in this community in terms of who’s here today,” says Lewis. “Like walking down the street, talking to your neighbors, getting to know people, we have artists, writers, we have leaders, executives, people working for all different kinds of industries, folks that are craftsmen and owners of their own business.” When Lewis first moved to Homewood about 10 years ago, he discovered Rebuilding Together — a Pittsburgh nonprofit that helps to repair communities
— and how the group was working on homes in the area. Lewis, who describes himself as a lover of film, decided to follow them with his camera and as a way to get to know his neighbors. Originally from the Baltimore area, Lewis moved to Pittsburgh in 2009 to attend Carnegie Mellon University to study Computational Biology, after receiving his degree from Cheyney University in Delaware County. During his time at CMU, he says he felt like he was being pulled in two different
This community feature is made possible by the financial support of Peoples, an Essential Utilities Company
12
PGHCITYPAPER.COM
directions: science and community work. Lewis volunteered with the Homewood Children’s Village before being offered a position as a Program Coordinator in 2012. He slowly rose in the organization until becoming interim CEO in 2018, with the position becoming permanent six months later. “The mission of the Homewood Children’s Village is to improve the lives of the children of Homewood and simultaneously reweave the fabric of the community in which they live,” says Lewis. “And for me, it’s a mouthful, but really what it means is we’re here to meet the needs of the children and the young people that we serve.” He adds that improving the lives of these children is not just about what happens in schools, but what occurs in the community as a whole. “Kids have to leave home and walk past the abandoned buildings and vacant properties and blighted properties and things of that nature that’s impacting their environment, which is ultimately negatively impacting their opportunities for education and further advancement,” he says.
HOMEWOOD CHILDREN’S VILLAGE 801 N. Homewood Ave., Homewood. hcvpgh.org
Cradle to Career is a program Homewood Children’s Village designed to tackle this problem. The program involves community partners supporting children from early childhood to when they are preparing to enter the workforce. Some of the partners HCV works with are Trying Together, the YWCA and YMCA, the Pittsburgh Public School system, Higher Achievement Pittsburgh, and Operation Better Block. Lewis says HCV is not interested in reinventing the wheel; there are many programs that exist in Pittsburgh to support children, so they want to partner with these organizations to create a holistic approach to wellbeing. “Children don’t exist in isolation from the community, from their families, from their peer networks,” he says. “And so, part of that reweaving the fabric of the community means we support parents and family members. We support the other institutions in the community that make a community vibrant. And while we may not do all of that work
“THERE IS SO MUCH
RICHNESS
IN THIS COMMUNITY IN TERMS OF WHO’S HERE TODAY.” ourselves, we’re deeply invested in forming partnerships with folks that do those other supportive programs and services.” Some of the pressing issues facing the children of Homewood currently are related to poverty, which has been exacerbated by the pandemic. Lewis says that while some solutions have arisen, like moratoriums on evictions, the reality remains the same for many families. “There’s not enough financial resources and opportunities to allow them to sustain the kind of lives that you need to sustain in order to raise healthy, happy children and families,” says Lewis. “So a lot of the issues, I think, stem from that kind of reality.” Lewis says that while being the CEO of a nonprofit was not a part of his plan, he brings an important perspective to the work. “My background is in computer science and computational biology. I was doing scientific research before I came to the village,” he says. “But I think that research mentality and that approach and that computer science approach has definitely aided me in my journey. I think about things a little differently as a computer scientist.” Lewis adds that his research background has helped him to realize just how much we don’t know about the world we live in, and this expands to working with children. “If people had all of the answers to this stuff, all of the communities would have been transformed by now,” he says, adding, “The reality is we’ve got pieces of it.” Ultimately, HCV and Lewis want to see the community and its residents uplifted. He says that, though it sounds cliche, it really does take a village. “What Homewood can become is limitless,” he says.
WE’VE GOT GREAT
ENERGY! It’s an exciting time to be working in energy. Our passion is providing resources that are reliable, safe and life-sustaining, but this isn’t possible without the power of our workforce. AT PEOPLES, OUR EMPLOYEES RECEIVE: 9 Competitive salary, annual bonus programs, employee stock purchase program 9 Comprehensive benefits package, including medical, dental and vision coverage 9 Vacation, paid holidays, sick pay, life insurance, longterm disability insurance, retirement plans and more 9 Employee resource groups celebrating diversity, military status, wellness and volunteerism
Apply today at peoples-gas.com/careers
•
Follow staff writer Dani Janae on Twitter @figwidow PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER JULY 7-14, 2021
13
CP PHOTO: KAYCEE ORWIG
Pittsburgh CLO actors Dan Deluca (Scarecrow), Jessica Grove (Dorothy), Evan Ruggiero (Tin Man), and Drew Leigh Williams (Lion) pose in front of the stage in Heinz Field.
.THEATER.
BROADWAY GRIDIRON BY LAURYN NANIA // INFO@PGHCITYPAPER.COM
T
HE PITTSBURGH CLO is coming
back after a year of being in the dark due to the pandemic, but not to where many might expect. Instead of the Benedum Center in Downtown Pittsburgh, the theater company is making an unprecedented return at the home of the Pittsburgh Steelers, trading in football helmets and black-and-gold jerseys for a witch’s hat and a yellow brick road to debut their 2021 summer season opener, The Wizard of Oz, at Heinz Field. “Toto, we’re not at the Benedum anymore,” says CLO executive producer Michael Fleischer.
A stage has been built in the end zone to showcase the theater’s most talented performers in a two-show series titled “Summer Under the Stars” featuring the aforementioned Frank Oz classic and Pittsburgh CLO’s Broadway Musical Celebration in honor of the company’s 75th anniversary. American Idol alumni Clay Aiken, originally slated to star in The Drowsy Chaperone this July at the Benedum Center before the pandemic forced the CLO to cancel their original season line-up, is now hosting Broadway Musical Celebration, and both shows will be accompanied by the Pittsburgh CLO
Orchestra. The unorthodox venue will hold up to 4,000 guests, including tables and chairs directly on the field in front of the stage. The Wizard of Oz, the first installment of the series, begins on Thu., July 8 and continues through July 10. “It’s a show that grandmother and grandfather loved, and grandchild, and everyone in between,” Fleischer says. “The idea was we thought it was a perfect show to bring neighbors and family members out together in the outdoors.” The first day of rehearsals was on Thu., July 1. The skies were grey, and the
SUMMER UNDER THE STARS PITTSBURGH CLO’S 75TH ANNIVERSARY BROADWAY CELEBRATION July 8-10, July 21-24. Heinz Field. 100 Art Rooney Ave., North Side. $15-85. pittsburghclo.org
14
PGHCITYPAPER.COM
mid-summer humidity lingered in the air, but that didn’t seem to bother the cast of The Wizard of Oz. The stars of the show who play Dorothy (Jessica Grové), Tinman (Evan Ruggiero), Scarecrow (Dan DeLuca), and Lion (Drew Leigh Williams) appeared in awe seeing the stage being completed on Heinz Field for the first time. “Summer Under the Stars” will be their first time returning to a stage in over a year. “If you’re a native Pittsburgher, you love Pittsburgh sports — that’s the biggest thing. So to be doing a musical on an NFL field is absolutely so exciting,” DeLuca says. “It’s a sense of community and homeness.” CLO’s original production Broadway Musical Celebration follows Oz, launching on Wed., July 21 and continuing through July 24. It’s a 90-minute ode to Broadway featuring iconic numbers and medlies
CP PHOTO: KAYCEE ORWIG
CLO dancers learn new routines in a rehearsal room at Heinz Field.
from a variety of popular Broadway musicals, such as Mamma Mia, In the Heights, The Color Purple, and An American in Paris. Fleischer says CLO invited back numerous famous alumni for the Broadway Musical Celebration, including Aiken, who Pittsburgh City Paper called “fab-u-lous” as Teen Angel in CLO’s 2019 performance of Grease. About 13 other notable alumni will be present, including Norm Lewis, Robert Fairchild, Joe Serafini, and Ali Ewoldt. “It’s a celebration of Broadway,” says Fleischer. “It’s a celebration of CLO. It’s a celebration of Pittsburgh.”
any mandatory COVID-related safety measures like mask mandates. However, the tables on the field are spaced about six feet apart. He adds that with the abundance of room Heinz Field offers, guests can choose to sit close to others or far apart in the stadium seats. The season at Heinz Field also signals a throwback for Pittsburgh CLO, which initially opened in 1946 at Pitt Stadium. After a devastating year of isolation due to the coronavirus pandemic, Pittsburgh CLO aims to uplift the community once again with musicals, and a return to their roots. “We went to the Steelers, and they
“IT’S A CELEBRATION OF PITTSBURGH.” To make the production of each show the best it can be, Fleischer says CLO hired experts from New York who usually work in live concert productions. Lighting designer Andrew Giffin — who previously attended the Pittsburgh CLO and received their Gene Kelly Award in 2014 — has worked on prestigious events, including Justin Bieber’s Believe world tour. The stage Pittsburgh CLO is using was originally placed at Flagstaff Hill in Oakland with additions of runways on either side of the stage. As for scenery, they’re incorporating a giant digital video wall rather than traditional backdrops. CLO is also installing multiple IMAX screens by the stage where cameras provided by the Steelers will shoot live close-ups of cast members during the performance for those seated farther from the stage. Fleischer says there will not be
couldn’t have been more gracious,” Fleishcer says. “[The Steelers and Pittsburgh CLO] are both here to try to take care of the community, and I think it’s going to be great.” When the Pittsburgh CLO announced their indefinite closure in April 2020, the CLO lost 252 performances, and their academy moved to online learning. During this time, the organization launched their “Raise the Curtain Campaign,” which Fleischer says did “really well.” CLO raised enough to keep the theater company afloat and to bring back shows when conditions allowed. “I have to say, and I’m sure you can talk to any theater or nonprofit in the town, no matter what they serve, this city has stepped up in a way to make sure we’re all here on the other side,” says Fleischer. “Pittsburgh has great pride in its institutions.”
Drug & Alcohol Addiction Treatment 24/7 Admissions | Masters-Level Clinicians Evidence-Based Treatment The expert, caring team at Recovery Centers of America (RCA) at Monroeville is dedicated to helping all adults achieve sobriety and recovery through best-in-class, evidence-based treatment. This includes a specialized program for first responders and military personnel. For individuals who have experienced relapse we offer a program designed to inspire, help, and reconnect patients to the road to recovery.
Residential Inpatient & Outpatient Services including Teletherapy
NOW OPEN & SERVING THE GREATER PITTSBURGH AREA Call today: 844-939-3317 recoverycentersofamerica.com
•
PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER JULY 7-14, 2021
15
PHOTO: COURTESY OF CMOA
TheGreenEyl; Connective Field by SO-IL, part of Fabricated Landscape at CMOA
.ART.
BREAKING NEW GROUND BY AMANDA WALTZ // AWALTZ@PGHCITYPAPER.COM
T
HERE WAS A TIME when architectural design
dismissed the role of humans and the surrounding environment. Heinz Architectural Center curator-at-large Raymund Ryan points this out as we explore Fabricated Landscape, a new exhibition at Carnegie Museum of Art. He describes modernist architectural renderings of past projects as being “lifeless.” “Often, there are no people,” he says. He then gestures to displayed works by the London-based firm Assemble, including a dollhouse-like model, an overview of a Liverpool neighborhood, and a children’s book-style drawing commissioned by French illustrator Marie Jacotey, all of which feature occupants or passersby. “So, this is almost the opposite.” On view through Jan. 17, 2022, Fabricated Landscape is described in a press release as asking “What does it mean for architecture to have a civic consciousness?” The exhibition tries to answer this question with a look at 10 architectural practices from around the world, all of which “embrace a new sense of urgency regarding nature and the planned environment how and where we live to how we engage with the world around us.”
The array of models, prints, textiles, installations, and more also expands the potential and varied interests of architects. In a field that favors the 50 and over crowd, Fabricated Landscape deliberately represents younger, forward-thinking talents, with every architect being born in or after 1975. Doing so demonstrates how this new generation values collaboration and the needs and character of a community, unlike architects of the past, who, unfairly or not, are thought of as chasing god-like status by seeking out only the most extravagant, high-profile projects, regardless of their impact.
FABRICATED LANDSCAPE Continues through Jan. 17, 2022. Carnegie Museum of Art. 4400 Forbes Ave., Oakland. Included with museum admission. cmoa.org
As a result, visitors are introduced to thoughtful social housing plans in Liverpool, where Assemble has worked to save existing homes in the run-down district of Toxteth, and in León, Mexico, where New York firm SO-IL developed “Las Americas Social Housing.”
While it could be seen as just another apartment complex, Ryan points out how “Las Americas Social Housing” — on display in the museum as a model — was designed to combat the highly populated city’s urban sprawl. It also forms a figure-eight to promote flow, not only in terms of how people move throughout the building, but in terms of air circulation, an important asset in a city as hot as León. The piece touched on other beneficial aspects of the project, including that the building materials would be produced in the city, creating jobs and lessening the carbon footprint of construction. What struck me most was the effort to avoid disruption, as the chosen architects appear far more concerned with reusing, reinventing, or building on, as well as creating spaces that are more flexible and democratic. This comes through in Assemble’s contributions and those by the studio of Dutch architect Anne Holtrop. “Murad Boutique Hotel” presents Holtrop’s effort in a three-dimensional form to showcase the preservation of a historic site in the Kingdom of Bahrain, while also expanding its potential use. “PORET Kindergarten” combines two- and three-dimensional works to demonstrate CONTINUES ON PG. 18
16
PGHCITYPAPER.COM
THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING LOCAL JOURNALISM
Thank you to the following readers who have signed up for Pittsburgh City Paper’s new membership campaign Aaron Aupperlee Aaron Jentzen Abbey Farkas Abby Cook Abby Kuftic Abigail Gardner Abigail Hunter Abigail Noyce Adam Hart Adam Knoerzer Adam Schweigert Adam Shuck Addi Twigg Adeline Lord Al Hoff Alaina Cauchie Alan Cox Alan Sisco Alan Steinberg Albert Presto Alec Magnani Alex Blackman Alex Dryden Alex Friedman Alex LaFroscia Alex McCann Alex Walsh Alexandra Hiniker Alexandria Rizzo Alexis Johnson Alison Marchioni Allen Ellis Allison Rowland Amanda Komar Amanda McAllen Amy Bayer Amy Bilkey Amy Hartman Amy Klodowski Amy Loveridge Amy Montgomery Amy Scanlon Amy Walker AmyJo Sanders Andrea Boykowycz Andrea Laurion Andrea Loew Andrea Lynn Andrew Bloomgarden Andrew Brown Andrew Conte Andrew Davis Andrew Hayhurst Andrew Mulkerin Andrew Seymour Andy Collins Andy Faulhaber Andy Mowrey Andy Terrick Anita Napoli Anna Reilly Anna Samuels Anni Riwen Sweetser Anthony Roscoe April Gilmore April McCann Ariel Zych Arlan Hess Armin Samii Arvind Suresh Ashleigh Bartges Ashley Kenawell Ashley Olinger Barbara Johnson Barbara Valaw Barbara Weaver Becca Tasker Ben Wilson Bennett Aikin Beth Boroumand Beth Newman Beth Nolle Beth Wickerham
Bethany Davis Bethany Hallam Bethany Hockenberry Betsy Yates Bill Lazur Bill McShane Bob Heister Brandon Haines Breanna Jay Brentin Mock Brett Scruton Brett Yasko Brian Kaleida Brian Kell Brian Kelly Brian Lysell Brian Stoots Brittany Fagan Brittney Chantele Brooke Strosnider Bryan Routledge Caitlin O’Connor Caitlin Virtue Campbell Robertson Cara & Bill Blumenschein Carlin Christy Carol Fraley Carolyn Biglow Carolyn Hall Carolyn Regan Carrie Blazina Carrie Roy Cassandra Masters Cassia Priebe Cassidy Turner Catherine Feiler Catherine Simpson Catherine Straka Cathy Elliott Chad Efaw Chad Vogler Charles Anthony Charles McMichael Cherie Winner Chloe Bark Chris Belasco Chris Flyer Chris Gillotti Chris Ivey Chris Mueller Chris Potter Chris Sichi Chris Watts Chris Whissen Christen Cieslak Christian Resch Christine Dvonch Christopher Briem Christopher Peplin Christopher Perez Christy McGuire Chuck Kowalski Chuck Pascal Cindy Hudson Clare & Dennis Pawloski Cody Schalk Colby King Coleman Lamb Courtney Ehrlichman Cory Mailliard Costa Samaras Cristy Gross Dan Gardner Dan Kaufmann Dana Bell Dana Estep Dana Farabaugh Daniel Bain Daniel Burke Daniel Jacobowitz Daniel Jones Daniel M Crawford Daniel Scullin
Daniel Tasse Danielle Walker Danielle Wenner Danika Lagorio David & Catherine Bomstein David Andersen David Boevers David Eckhardt David Eichelberger David Findley David Hartman David Lampe David Newman David Oakley David Pratt Deanna Bucci Debbie Breckenridge Debbie Saville Denis Newman-Griffis Denise Agliori Denise Seiffer Deno De Ciantis Diane Walter Divyansh Kaushik Dominic Campbell Don Pellegrino Donna Harrison Doreen Krut Dorothy Falk Dwight Chambers Eamon Geary Earl Laamanen Ed Ehrlich Ed Giles Ed Wrenn Edward Venator Eileen French Eliana Beigel Elaine Miller Elisabeth McCoy Elise Lavallee Elise Lu Elizabeth Archibald Elizabeth Butler Elizabeth Collura Elizabeth Engelhardt Elizabeth Silver Ellen Cicconi Ellen Doherty Ellen Philips Emiko MacKillop Emilie Yonan Emily Cleath Emily Forney Emily Kiernan Emily Skopov Emily Wolfe Emma Neely Emma Rehm Erica Warnitsky Erin Kelly Erin Larkin Eva Schlinger Evan DiBiase Evelyn Meinert Filomena Manns Finnian Carstens G Ronald Ripper Gabriel Ackman Geo Maroon Geoffrey Hutchison Georgann Jenkins George Kanakis Georgia Crowther Geral Schatten Gillian Kratzer Gina Vensel Gordon Core Greg Carey Greg Kellerman Greg Kochanski Greg Seaman
Gregory Johnstone Gregory Nesbitt Gregory Scott Gretchen Swecker Hal B Klein Hannah Diehl Harley Nester Harold Smoliar Heather Slack Heidi Bartholomew Helen Gerhardt Henry Doherty Hobart Webster Holly Eve Howard Seltman Ian Oman Ian Riggins Jacob Bacharach Jade Artherhults James Heinrich James Kiley James Morgan James Saal James Santelli Jamie Piotrowski Janet Lunde Jared Pollock Jasiri X Jason Meer Jay Aronson Jay Walker Jean McClung Jeanne Cobetto Jeff Betten Jeffrey Benzing Jeffrey Brooks Jeffrey Bigham Jeffrey Zahren Jenni Easton Jennie Sweet-Cushman Jennifer Handke Jennifer Reigler Jennifer Shumar Jennifer Strang Jenny Ladd Jeremy Kimmel Jess Williams Jessica Benham Jessica Bevan Jessica Manack Jessica Priselac Jessica Prom Jessica Prucnal Jill Bodnar Jill Harmon JoAnn Zindren Joanne Gilligan Jocelyn Codner Jodi Hirsh Joe D’Alessandro Joe Pasqualetti Joe Wagner John Bechtold John Berry John Meyer John Oliver John Riggs John Ryan John Wise John Yackovich Jonathan Salmans Jordan Bender Joseph Corrigan Joseph Morrison Joseph Rubenstein Josephine Ulrich Josh Nygaard Joshua Axelrod Joshua Kiley Joshua Pinter Joshua Pirl Joshua Smith Jude Vachon
Judith Hartung Judith Koch Judith Lenz Juli Wright Julia Lee Julia Posteraro Julia Scanlon Julian Routh Julie & Nick Futules Justin Dandoy Justin Krane Justin Matase Justin Nodes Justin Pekular Justin Romano Justin Rossini Kai Gutschow Kara Holsopple Karen Brown Karen Hodes Karen Shepherd Karen Van Dusen Kate Jones Kate Roberts Kate Rosenzweig Katharine Kelleman Katherine Kennedy Katherine Oltmanns Kathleen Heuer Kathryn Feeney Kathy Dax Kathy Woll Katie Damico Katie Hudson Katie Markowski Katie Urich Katy Greulich Kay Brink Kayla Cline Keegan Gibson Keith Bare Keith Recker Kelly Burgess Kelly Hiser Kendra Ross Kenneth Mostern Kenneth Zenkevich Kevin Gallagher Kevin Marpoe Kevin Vickey Khris & Tom McGarity Kim Lyons Kimberly Ressler Kimberly Taylor Krista Wright Kristin Ebert-Wagner Kristin Komazec Kristopher Olson Kyle Cunningham Kyle Gracey Kyle Zboran Lady MacBonald Lara Putnam Larry Lynn Laura Adams Laura Dickey Laura Drogowski Laura Everhart Laura Heberton-Shlomchik Laura Hershel Laura Myers Lauren Banka Lauren Lief Lazar Palnick Leah Hoechstetter Leo Hsu Lesley Carlin Lesley Rains Leslie Cooley Leslie Harman Levon Ritter Liam Lowe Linda Schott
Lindsay Forman Lindsay Hagerty Lindsay Wright Lisa Saks Lisa Steinfeld Liz Dewar Liz Hrenda Liz Reid Lois Apple Loretta Deto Lori Delale-O’Connor Lori Flynn Lorie Milich Lucas Miller Luke Rifugiato Lynn Cullen Lynne Cherepko Lynne Frank Lynne Hughes Lyudmila Sanina Mackenzie Moylan Madelyn Glymour Madison Stubblefield Magda Gangwar Mahita Gajanan Mandy Kivowitz-Delfaver Margaret Buckley Margaret Krauss Margaret Prescott Marjorie Waters Maria Sensi Sellner Marianne Donley Marilyn McCarty Marina Fang Mark Goodman Mark Solomon Mark Westbrook Mark Winer Marlee Brown Mary Briles Mary Guzzetta Mary Russell Maryellen Lammel Matt Adams Matt Malarich Matt Moret Matthew Buchholz Matthew Cartier Matthew Demers Matthew Griffin Matthew Kroen Matthew Lamberti Maureen Byko Max Garber Max Moclock Megan Brady Megan Fair Megan Winters Melissa Kohr Melissa Melewsky Micaela Corn Michael Colaresi Michael Damico Michael Donovan Michael Lamb Michael McKinney Michael Wasson Mike Beattie Mike Kutilek Mike Weis Mimi Forester MJ Holmes Moira Egler Molly Kasperek Molly Toth Morgan Jenkins Nan Alexander Nancy Dubensky Nancy Latimer Nate Good Nathan Thompson-Amato Nathaniel Feuerstein Neil Bhaerman
Neil Owen Newspaper Guild of Pittsburgh Nicholas Gliozzi Nichole Remmert Nicole Connor Nikki Walton Noah Theriault Norine Minion Norma Bronder Office of Public Art Olie Bennett Guarino Olivia Enders Olivia Tucker Olivia Zane Ollie Gratzinger Paolo Pedercini Patricia DeMarco Patricia Oliver Patrick Conneely Patrick Kelley Patty Delaney Paul Hertneky Paul McGowan Paula Majersky Peter McKay Peter Mudge Peter Reichl Rachael Hopkins Rachel Belloma Bonnet Rachel Busch Rachel Dalton Rachel Tiche Rachelle Haynik Rainy Sinclair Randall Baumann Randy Gowat Randy Sargent Raymond Kozlowski Raymond Leech Raymond Martin Rebecca Boyer Rebecca Ciez Rebecca Seibel Regina Connolly Regina Yankie Rich Lord Richard Kress Richelle Meer Rick D’Loss Rob Rossi Robert & Erin Blussick Robert Baird Robert Davis Robert Jauquet Robert Lang Robert McKnight Robert Nishikawa Robert Raczka Robert Sage Robin Bolea Ron Vodenichar Rosemary Mendel Ross Reilly Rossilynne Culgan Ruth Craig Ryan Rydzewski Ryan Warsing Samantha Mudrinich Samantha Ritzer Samantha Wire Sam Barrett Samuel Boswell Sara Innamorato Sara Simon Sara Zullo Francart Sarah Birmingham Sarah Cassella Sarah Flaherty Sarah Paul Sarah Pearman Sarah Peterson Sarah Sewall
Sarah Sprague Sarah Vernau Sarah Wiggin Scott Bricker Sean Bailey Sean Collier Sean Mahan Sean ODonnell Selene Wartell Shanna Carrick Shannon Kelly Sharee Stout Shawn Cooke Shawn Melvin Sherri Suppa Shirlie Mae Choe Siena Kane Slava Starikov Smitha Prasadh Stacey Campbell Stacey Federoff Stephanie Sedor Stephanie Wein Stephen Riccardi Stephen Wagner Steve Felix Steve Holz Steven Haines Steven Thomas Stuart Strickland Sue D’Nihm Susan Caplan Susan Hawkins Susan Jackson Susan Rogers Susan Smith Susan Speicher Suzanne Kafantaris Sylvain Goyette Taia Pandolfi Tammy Schuey Tara Spence Tara Zeigler Tasha Eakin Ted Schroeder Tereneh Idia Terry Bicehouse Terry Peters Thomas Bartnik Timons Esaias Tina Shackleford Todd Derr Tom Samuel Toni Haraldsen Tracy Certo Tracy Travaglio Travis Hefner Trenton Tabor Trevor Baumel Trey Mason Tyler Bickford Tyler Gellasch Tyler McAndrew Uwe Stender Valerie Moore Vicki Cunningham Virginia Alvino Young Will Bernstein Will Halim Will Simmons William Doran William Fulmer William J Schoy IV William Lovas William Maruca William O’Driscoll Yonatan Bisk Zack Tanner
NO NEWS IS BAD NEWS
If you value City Paper’s news reporting and arts and entertainment coverage, please consider becoming a member. More info — including perks! — can be found at pghcitypaper.com PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER JULY 7-14, 2021
17
BREAKING NEW GROUND, CONTINUED FROM PG. 16
CP PHOTO: AMANDA WALTZ
“The Grand Interior” by MAIO, part of Fabricated Landscape at CMOA
German architect Anna Heringer’s hutlike, ready-to-assemble kits, designed as an easy and familiar housing alternative for people in remote parts of Africa. The color pink makes more than a few appearances, particularly in “The Grand Interior” by the Spanish firm MAIO. What at first looks like a random selection of Pepto-Bismol tinted miniatures sprawled across a mirrored tabletop actually investigates the role of private versus public space, and how they can co-exist, an idea conveyed by the many tiny doors. In MAIO’s print Public Space Systems, connected outdoor spaces are populated with clip art people playing out various narratives, as well as touches like a spaceship or the Nyan Cat meme. The firm’s apparent penchant for whimsy succeeds in making architecture less intimidating and more accessible to a general audience. The mission of Fabricated Landscape expands beyond the built environment into nature with sustainable projects aimed at connecting with the surrounding environment. The puzzle-like work Shapes of the Forest by LCLA Office depicts ways to create unobtrusive civic spaces in an Oslo forest, all of which are carved out in an ivory-colored carpet sample. Series of photos show Pilotis in a Forest by
THE FIRM’S APPARENT PENCHANT FOR WHIMSY SUCCEEDS IN MAKING ARCHITECTURE LESS INTIMIDATING AND MORE ACCESSIBLE. Japanese architect Go Hasegawa and Ballen Houses, another LCLA Office project. The former — an elevated structure located three hours outside of Tokyo — features slatted floors and walls of windows meant to keep inhabitants close to the surrounding wilderness, its stilted legs mimicking the towering trees. The latter chronicles an ongoing project in El Retiro, Colombia, where small, custom houses are built to fit into the topography. While architecture may seem disparate from other art forms, Fabricated Landscape sets out to show how it informs and is informed by other media. Everything from literature (a house by Office KGDVS was inspired by the Franz Kafka story “Der Bau”) to fine art (“The Grand Interior” takes cues from Marcel Duchamp) to photography (a series by Luisa Lamberi captures the finer details of Go Hasegawa’s Chapel in Guastalla)
are represented here. The most memorable of these are the textiles provided by Heringer, notable less for how they look than where they came from, as they were produced by Bangladeshi women and Rohingya refugees. These refugees are a systemically persecuted Muslim group in Myanmar devastated by genocide and displacement. The textiles demonstrate the architect’s role as not only an artist, but as an activist. The pieces providing income and a voice to those who produced them. While conceptually dense and farreaching, Fabricated Landscape highlights a more promising future for architecture defined by harmony in both the built and natural world. The museum will also release three consecutive publications — the first one, Domestic, is now available at the exhibition entrance — to assist visitors on their journey into this new frontier.
Follow a&e editor Amanda Waltz on Twitter @AWaltzCP
18
PGHCITYPAPER.COM
•
LOVE COLORING? Love supporting local artists? Purchasing this coloring book supports Pittsburgh City Paper journalism and 50% of the proceeds are split among the 35 Pittsburgh artists who have illustrated for this coloring book:
Only
$25 +shipping & taxes
Also available as a DIGITAL DOWNLOAD for $20
• Howard Bender
• Christina Lee
• Berry Meat
• Pat Lewis
• Jeff Brunner
• Nathan Mazur
• Jerome “Chu” Charles
• Emily McGaughey
• D.J. Coffman
• Maggie Lynn Negrete
• Cathy Connor
• Angela Oddling
• David Coulson
• Ashley Olinger
• Vince Dorse
• Sophia Marie Pappas
• Lucy Engelman
• Jayla Patton
• Kirsten Ervin
• David Pohl
• Trenita Finney
• Harley Skibicki
• Kim Fox / workerbird
• strawberryluna
• Amy Garbark / garbella • Joyce Swope • Brian Gonnella
• Emily Traynor
• Nils Hanczar
• Marcel Walker
• John Hinderliter
• Wayno
• Natiq Jalil
• Joe Wos
• Xiola Jensen
Visit pghcitypaperstore.com to get your copy today! PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER JULY 7-14, 2021
19
SEVEN DAYS IN PITTSBURGH
^ Rishi Sethi’s Nut Boys at Film Kitchen
THU., JULY 8 ART • VIRTUAL Curators’ Lecture: Fashioning an Exhibition at the Frick Art Museum will ing offer insight into the process of creating the Sporting Fashion: Outdoor Girls e of 1800 to 1960 exhibit. Fashion Institute rator Design & Merchandising Museum curator Christina Johnson will share her experiences, and curators from the Frick will join her to discuss women’s sports fashion in the Western world. 7 p.m. Free. Registration required. thefrickpittsburgh.org/exhibitions
FRI., JULY 9 COMEDY • IRL Stand-up comedian, actor, and writerr Fortune Feimster takes the stage at the he Pittsburgh Improv. She has appeared on TV shows like Conan and Late Night ght with Seth Meyers, and has an hour-long ong special out on Netflix. In addition to appearing on the big and small screens, ns, she’s done voiceover work for animated ted TV shows. Some seating may be sold out,
20
PGHCITYPAPER.COM
PHOTO: MATT MISISCO
< Fortune Feimster at Pittsburgh Improv
so make sure to visit the Pittsburgh Improv w website for full showtimes and availability. 7: 7:30 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. Continues through Sa Sat., July 10. 166 E. Bridge St., Homestead. $3 $35-85. improv.com/pittsburgh
the street, and will occur rain or shine. A full list of vendors will be announced. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 3533 Butler St., Lawrenceville. Free. sanctuarypittsburgh.com
ART • IRL A
SUN., JULY 11
Pi Pittsburgh Society of Artists, an organization representing more than or 300 members, hosts their 55th Annual 30 Juried Exhibition at Brew House Art Ju Gallery. The event will showcase 29 Ga artists and their work, and awards will ar be given based on a juried selection. The T opening reception will be held on Friday for members of the organization, F and a is available to the public Thursdays through Saturdays. 6 p.m. Continues t through Aug. 28. 711 S. 21st St., South th Side. Free. pittsburghsocietyofartists.org Si
SAT., JULY 10 S MARKET • IRL M O the second Saturday of every On month, tattoo shop and gallery Sanctuary m Pittsburgh hosts local artists and artisans Pi for a pop-up vendor market. The market fo will take place at the parklet across w
KIDS • IRL Bring the kids to Schenley Plaza for a free afternoon of fun. Kid’s Day will feature a balloon artist, crafts, performers, free rides on the PNC Carousel, and more. When you’re in need of a cooling refreshment, get ice cream from Millie’s Ice Cream Truck, which will also be on site for the August, September, and October Kid’s Days. 12-4 p.m. 4100 Forbes Ave., Oakland. Free. pittsburghparks.org/event/ kids-day-in-schenley-plaza
MARKET • IRL The Carnegie Farmers Market celebrates the conservation of monarch butterflies with the Butterfly Festival. The festival is held at the market with numerous activities, including crafting butterfly masks and artwork, educational materials, chalk drawing, butterfly hopscotch and more. Mayor Stacie Riley of the Carnegie
FRESH CONTENT Every Day. pghcitypaper.com
FEATURED ON INK MASTER :ANGELS
PYRAMID
TATTOO & Body Piercing
PHOTO: MIKE FAIX
^ Hooded vultures at the National Aviary
Borough signed the National Wildlife Federation’s Monarch Pledge in March with a promise to participate in actions like planting monarch-friendly gardens around the area to help expand and conserve the monarch butterfly species. 12-3 p.m. E. Main St., Carnegie. Free. carnegieborough.com/monarch
EVENT • IRL The Irwin Business & Professional Association hosts C.A.R.L.Con - Collectables & Cosplay Show, a small convention for collectors at Shidle Hall. The event will feature various categories of collectibles to buy, sell, or admire, including vintage baseball cards, Golden Age comic books, Star Wars, local beer cans, and more. C.A.R.L.Con will also include activities such as basket auctions and a cosplay contest, where guests are encouraged to dress up as their favorite characters. Food from local vendors will be available as well. 12-5 p.m. 417 Main St., Irwin. $6. downtownirwin.com
MON., JULY 12 ANIMALS • IRL Explore the biodiversity of Africa’s wildlife during African Adventure at the National Aviary. The immersive show presents birds from the grasslands, savannahs, deserts, and tropical forests, including an African Penguin, a Grey Crowned-crane, and a Red-billed Hornbill. The ongoing show, presented by AAA Travel, will also teach viewers about how they can support conservation efforts in Africa. 11-11:30 a.m. Continues through Sept. 6. 700 Arch St., North Side. $5. aviary.org/calendar
TUE., JULY 13
PYRAMIDTATTOO.COM
BRIDGEVILLE, PA
FILM • VIRTUAL Jump Cut Theater presents its monthly edition of Film Kitchen, featuring a selection of short films created by local artists Brooke Schooles and Rishi Sethi. Schooles collaborated with musicians Heather Kropf, Emay, and Mast, resulting in three music-related shorts “that beautifully match sound and image.” Sethi presents two documentaries: Contours - a story of First Waves, documenting river surfing, and Nut Boys, the story of a frat bro with a nut allergy. Streaming on Twitch. 7 p.m. Free. jumpcuttheater.org
WED., JULY 14 FILM • IRL Southside Works continues their summer long series, Movies On The Mon, with an outdoor screening of the 2009 romantic comedy Adventureland starring Kristen Stewart and Jesse Eisenberg. The plot follows young amusement park workers in summer 1987 and was shot in Pittsburgh’s very own Kennywood. The event begins with a live performance by Pittsburgh musician John Gresh. 7 p.m. 424 S. 27th St., South Side. Free. southsideworks.com/featured-events
•
IRL = IN REAL LIFE EVENT VIRTUAL = STREAMING OR ONLINE-ONLY EVENT HYBRID = MIX OF IN REAL LIFE AND ONLINE EVENT
PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER JULY 7-14, 2021
21
THINK FAST
BY BRENDAN EMMETT QUIGLEY // BRENDANEMMETTQUIGLEY.COM
Pittsburgh City Paper has gathered 50 home recipes from 412 legends for you to try at home, like DiAnoia’s Eatery, Superior Motors, Millie’s Homemade Ice Cream and more! Flex your knife skills, learn a few new tricks, and support 412 Food Rescue by ordering today!
Fr
u
rs !
om
c he n s t o Y t i K r i e th o
ACROSS
pghcitypaperstore.com PURCHASE OF THIS COOKBOOK BENEFITS 412 FOOD RESCUE & PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER 22
PGHCITYPAPER.COM
1. Group activity with many cycles 10. Type of colony 15. Maker of the self-titled Cube, Magic, and Snake puzzles 16. Relating to the flock? 17. Drainage system component 18. Country music pioneer Martell 19. Symbol used by the Illuminati 20. Sparkling ___ 21. Substantially fewer 23. Start a new chapter? 25. Pilot’s posttakeoff directive 27. Enemy 28. Key with two sharps: Abbr. 30. Kid’s construction with bedsheets and chairs 31. Doesn’t know when to say when 32. Gobbles up 34. Princess who says “I knew there was more to you than money” 36. Charger’s spot 37. Place where many people get shot 42. In such fashion 43. Malik formerly of One Direction 44. Rhyme spitters rock one 45. Texting disclaimer
46. Things you need a scrip for 48. Hgt. 51. Apple Maps line: Abbr. 52. “This is awesome” 54. “If I could wake all of the women of ___, India could be won in a day” (Gandhi) 56. River on South Africa’s boundary with Botswana and Zimbabwe 58. Bent-over row target 60. Silent Sunday Nights channel 61. “No, let me explain ...” 62. “We already started!” 65. Money Doesn’t Grow on Trees coauthor ___ Godfrey 66. Added to Excel 67. Hungarian mathematician Paul 68. Modern day conference centers, or a jokey way to describe 1-Across and 37-Across
DOWN 1. Where a 17-Across is directed 2. Spoke up? 3. Alterations measurement 4. Canceling word 5. The whole gang
6. Netflix show starring Omar Sy 7. Some 8. Nurse 9. Teased mercilessly 10. Sea anemone 11. Like a sadistic puzzle maker 12. Like Supreme Court members 13. “Me too!” 14. Serves as a landlord, e.g. 22. Condition whose awareness symbols often involve jigsaw pieces 24. Danny, the Champion of the World author 26. Happiness director Todd 29. First living solo rapper inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
33. Reached, as to the side of the pool, with “to” 35. Force ___ (even things) 37. One that gets wiped out during a recession 38. Fogy 39. Reservoir formed by the Hoover Dam 40. Hearing words? 41. The Bruins of the NCAA 47. Greeting, in Genoa 49. Misisipí or Hawai 50. Sting target 52. Perfects 53. Eunuch’s milieu 55. Words of agreement 57. ___ Alto 59. USVI, e.g. 63. Ceiling Painting/ Yes Painting artist 64. Fixed fire sign LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS
FINANCIAL SAVE BIG on HOME INSURANCE! Compare 20 A-rated insurances companies. Get a quote within minutes. Average savings of $444/ year! Call 844-712-6153! (M-F 8am-8pm Central) (AAN CAN)
FINANCIAL
MARKETPLACE
SAVE YOUR HOME! Are you behind paying your MORTGAGE? Denied a Loan Modification? Is the bank threatening foreclosure? CALL Homeowners Relief Line NOW for Help 1-855-4395853 Mon-Fri : 8:00 am to 8:00 pm Sat: 8:00 am to 1:00 pm(all times Pacific) (AAN CAN)
MASSAGE M2M Massage by Lee 24/7 • 412-628-1269
PERSONALS Female Companion wanted 30-40 y.o. Waist length hair and/or cornrows a PLUS PLUS! Permanent Position 724-223-0939 Wash. Co
To place a Classified ad in Pittsburgh City Paper, call 412-685-9009 to speak to one of our representatives.
Are you a service industry worker who does not have health insurance? Metro Community Health Center is here for you. Metro offers a complete set of health care services to everyone, regardless of identity, insurance status, income or the ability to pay. Make an appointment by calling 412-247-2310 and visit our website, www.metrocommunityhealthcenter.org, to learn more.
FOR INFORMATION ON HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISEMENT, CALL 412-685-9009 ext. 106 HELP WANTED
REHEARSAL
WANTED! 36 PEOPLE
Rehearsal Space
to Lose Weight. 30-day money back guarantee. Herbal Program. Also opportunity to earn up to $1,000 monthly. 1-800-492-4437 www.myherbalife.com
starting @ $150/mo. Many sizes available, no sec deposit, play @ the original and largest practice facility, 24/7 access.
412-403-6069
NAME CHANGE
MISCELLANEOUS
IN The Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania: No. GD-21-5162. In re petition of Jamal Wade and Monica Johnson for change of name to Nahum-Isaac Israel and Nina Israel. To all persons interested: Notice is hereby given that an order of said Court authorized the filing of said petition and fixed the 21st day of July, 2021, at 9:30 a.m., as the time and the Motions Room, City-County Building, Pittsburgh, PA, as the place for a hearing, when and where all persons may show cause, if any they have, why said name should not be changed as prayed for
Guaranteed Life Insurance! (Ages 50 to 80). No medical exam. Affordable premiums never increase. Benefits never decrease. Policy will only be cancelled for non-payment. HOURS: M-F 9a-10p & Sat 11a-2p EST 1-888-386-0113 (Void NY) (AAN CAN)
DENTAL INSURANCE DENTAL INSURANCE from Physicians Mutual Insurance Company. Coverage for 350 plus procedures. Real dental insurance - NOT just a discount plan. Do not wait! Call now! Get your FREE Dental Information Kit with all the details! 1-855-385-3879 www.dental50plus.com/ citypaper #6258
CREDIT REPAIR Denied Credit?? Work to Repair Your Credit Report With The Trusted Leader in Credit Repair. Call Lexington Law for a FREE credit report summary & credit repair consultation. 855-620-9426. John C. Heath, Attorney at Law, PLLC, dba Lexington Law Firm. (AAN CAN)
1789 S. Braddock Ave, #410 Pittsburgh, PA 15218 To make an appointment: (412) 247-2310
Need Help Getting Social Security Disability Benefits?
Free confidential testing HIV • stD • hep c
We Can Help!
Dr. Stacy Lane, D.O. • 412-515-0000
HELP HEal all WITH NO JUDGEMENT
FIGHTING FOR YOUR
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS FOR OVER 25 YEARS!
You Could Be Eligible To Receive:
$ Steady monthly income depending on your paid in amount
A lump sum payment of benefits owed from back-pay
Annual cost of living increases
• We simplify the process & strive for quick claim approval • Starting the process is easy and takes only minutes to complete
855-447-5891 Helping thousands get the benefits they deserve
Bill Gordon & Associates, a nationwide practice, represents clients before the Social Security Administration. Member of the TX & NM Bar Associations. Mail: 1420 NW St Washington D.C. Office: Broward County Florida. Services may be provided by associated attorneys licensed in other states.
your body & soul
are welcome
• ALL INSURANCES ACCEPTED • WALK INS WELCOME • tRANSPORATION PROGRAM • NO INSURANCE? WE CAN HELP North Shore - 127 Anderson Street - Suite 101 Timber Court Building, PIttsburgh, PA 15212 Phone: (412) 322-4151 washington, pa - 95 Leonard Avenue Suite 203, Washington PA 15301 Phone: (724) 249-2517 beaver county - 2360 hospital drive Suite 1, aliquippa, pa 15001 Phone: (724)707-1155 Erie - 3104 State Street, Erie, PA 16508 PHONE: (814) 619-4009 PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER JULY 7-14, 2021
23