PITTSBURGH, Pa. — After decades of demolition and construction, the rebirth of Pittsburgh’s confluence as Point State Park was announced with a geyser of spray from its new fountain on August 30, 1974.
Pittsburgh’s point has been of great regional importance since it was first surveyed by George Washington . Though the early military fortifications were all but gone by the turn of the 19th century (except for the Fort Pitt Blockhouse which still stands in the park as Pittsburgh’s oldest building ), the point remained a vital district as the city grew.
Downtown Pittsburgh before Point State Park Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. , . [No Date Recorded on Shelflist Card] [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2003681825/. (Library of Congress)
Downtown Pittsburgh before Point State Park Detroit Publishing Co, C. C. & Detroit Publishing Co, P. The Point, Pittsburgh, Pa. Monongahela River Monongahela River. Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Pittsburgh. United States, None. [Between 1900 and 1915] [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2016802438/. (Library of Congress)
Downtown Pittsburgh before Point State Park Detroit Publishing Co, C. C. & Detroit Publishing Co, P. The Point, Pittsburgh, Pa. Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Pittsburgh. United States, None. [Cbetween 1900 and 1910] [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2016815077/. (Library of Congress)
Pittburgh's Point A general view of the North Side Point Bridge from Mount Washington. The image shows the Manchester Bridge, Point Bridge, the Pittsburgh Exposition (Including Roller Coaster), the North Shore, Monument Hill and Exposition Field, June 8, 1916. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Exposition Buildings Exposition Building in Pittsburgh's Point Park. The last exhibition was held at the Exposition Building in 1916. In the years following, the buildings were used for various purposes, with the last remains being torn down in 1950 to accommodate the new Duquesne Way artery. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Downtown Pittsburgh before Point State Park Detroit Publishing Co, P. Confluence of Allegheny and Monongahela rivers, Pittsburgh, Pa. Allegheny River Allegheny River. Monongahela River Monongahela River. Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Pittsburgh. United States, None. [Between 1910 and 1920] [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2016814067/. (Library of Congress)
Downtown Pittsburgh before Point State Park Detroit Publishing Co, C. C. & Detroit Publishing Co, P. The Point, Pittsburgh, Pa. Allegheny River Allegheny River. Monongahela River Monongahela River. Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Pittsburgh. United States, None. [Cbetween 1910 and 1920] [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2016814086/. (Library of Congress)
Downtown Pittsburgh before Point State Park Rothstein, A., photographer. (1938) Junction of the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers to form the Ohio. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Allegheny County Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Pittsburgh. United States, 1938. July. [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2017776822/. (Library of Congress)
Downtown Pittsburgh before Point State Park Delano, J., photographer. (1941) Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in the evening. Allegheny County Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Pittsburgh. United States, 1941. Feb. [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2017793614/. (Library of Congress)
View of the Point General view of the Fort Pitt exploration area from Duquesne Heights, January 14, 1942. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Downtown Pittsburgh 1943 A view of the Golden Triangle, the North Side, and the Hill District, with the Cathedral of Learning in the background, 1943. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Golden Triangle, 1951. View from the top of 525 William Penn Place building, looking west to the Point and the Farmers Bank Building, January 23, 1951. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Pittsburgh's Point By 1954 a few of the old industrial buildings remained at the Point before demolition to make way for Point State Park began. To the left are the Point Bridge (background) spanning the Monongahela River from the South Side neighborhood of Pittsburgh to the Point, and the Manchester Bridge (behind the Point Bridge) spanning the Allegheny River from the Point to the North Side section of Pittsburgh. The tall white building on the opposite side of the Allegheny River (center right) is Allegheny General Hospital. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Pittsburgh's Point By 1954 a few of the old industrial buildings remained at the Point before demolition to make way for Point State Park began. To the left are the Point Bridge (background) spanning the Monongahela River from the South Side neighborhood of Pittsburgh to the Point, and the Manchester Bridge (behind the Point Bridge) spanning the Allegheny River from the Point to the North Side section of Pittsburgh. The tall white building on the opposite side of the Allegheny River (center right) is Allegheny General Hospital. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Home to businesses, churches and residential streets until it was devastated by the Great Fire of 1845 , the point’s reconstruction transformed it into a predominantly commercial and industrial district. By the turn of the 20th century, the point was largely occupied by the rail yards, warehouses and the newly constructed Wabash Pittsburgh Terminal with its massive complex reaching all the way to the Wabash Bridge .
The industrialization of the point didn’t sit comfortably with many Pittsburghers and talks about reclaiming it for a park, or at least attempting to improve and beautify it, gained momentum in the early 1910s. Despite several proposals, the effort stalled until October 1940, when Mayor Cornelius Scully announced plans to reclaim the area as a state park, following the recommendations of Robert Moses . Moses, who had transformed New York City , was hired by Pittsburgh to develop a long-term plan for reshaping the city and its road network.
The park’s three key planners, landscape architect Ralph E. Griswold, architect Charles Morse Stotz and bridge and highway engineer George S. Richardson , were all from the Pittsburgh area and already had national reputations when they started the project.
Trilon Description of this Point Park concept drawing reads, “Trilon proposed by David A. Wallace, City Planner and Architect, Baltimore, Md. at PRPA annual dinner meeting January 23, 1961.” The trilon was never built; instead city planners placed a fountain at Point State Park. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
1913 Plan for Point State Park A view of a 1913 architectural rendering for suggested structural improvements to Point State Park. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Point Improvement View of proposed Point improvement plans, January 27, 1915. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Point Improvements Drawing of the proposed Point improvement, April 5, 1916. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Point State Park and Gateway Center Aerial view of planned redevelopment area for Point State Park and Gateway Center, January 1, 1940. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Gateway to the West An image of a proposed redevelopment plan of the Point in downtown Pittsburgh, featuring a "Gateway to the West" monument. (Mel Seidenberg Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Gateway to the West An image of a proposed redevelopment plan of the Point in downtown Pittsburgh, featuring a "Gateway to the West" monument. (Mel Seidenberg Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Trilon Description of this Point Park concept drawing reads, “Trilon proposed by David A. Wallace, City Planner and Architect, Baltimore, Md. at PRPA annual dinner meeting January 23, 1961.” The trilon was never built; instead city planners placed a fountain at Point State Park. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
While many of the proposed designs for a park at the point had worked with the existing bridges, Frank Lloyd Wright was the first to suggest installing a fountain at the point itself and pushing the highway interchange back closer to the city. While his fantastical plans for the imposing Point Park Civic Center were not popular nor fiscally realistic, the ideas of a fountain and relocating the bridges deeper into the triangle were embraced.
Furthering the dramatic vista, the designers envisioned a broad lawn lined with trees to pull visitors’ eyes to the towering fountain at the point and the rivers beyond. The only structure to remain would be the Fort Pitt Blockhouse , with the outlines of both Fort Pitt and Fort Duquesne commemorated in new bastions (flattened on the city side in a later park renovation) and outlines on the large lawns.
Both of the bridges that connected at the point itself were scheduled for removal to make way for the fountain. The Manchester Bridge and Point Bridge were dismantled in 1970, after their replacements, the Fort Pitt and Fort Duquesne Bridges were completed.
Construction of Point State Park On May 18, 1950, a demolition ceremony was held at the future location of Point State Park to kickoff the beginning of the Renaissance program aimed at reviving the City of Pittsburgh. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Construction of Point State Park On May 18, 1950, a demolition ceremony was held at the future location of Point State Park to kickoff the beginning of the Renaissance program aimed at reviving the City of Pittsburgh. During the mid-1940s the Point was in an extreme state of deterioration. The area included freight yards, a terminal, largely unused railroad tracks, riverbanks littered with debris, and the grand Exhibition Hall that had held its last show in 1918. The Allegheny Conference on Community Development brokered pollution-control program in the 1940s explicitly influenced the decision of the Equitable Life Assurance Society to invest in planning the Gateway Center project, which led to the development of Point State Park. The park was completed in 1974. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Demolition of Exposition Buildings Demolition of the Exposition buildings at the point to make room for Point State Park, 1949. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Demolition of Exposition Buildings Demolition of the Exposition buildings at the point to make room for Point State Park, 1949. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Construction of Point State Park Caption on the back of the photograph reads, “River Wall and Wharf on left bank of Allegheny River under construction. Next contract to call for construction of Step Wall.” Today, visitors can walk along paved promenades on the riverfront and to overlooks for dramatic views of Pittsburgh, its busy waterways, scenic hillsides, and many bridges. A stepped wall (pictured under construction) or stone bleacher along the Allegheny River section of Point State Park provides seating for outdoor events. The fountain at the headwaters of the Ohio River was dedicated by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on August 30, 1974, marking the completion of the 36-acre Point State Park, which was 29 years in planning and construction. Point State Park is operated by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, Bureau of State Parks. The park is managed and maintained by the City of Pittsburgh under a reimbursable arrangement. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Construction of Point State Park Caption on the back of the photograph reads, “River Wall and Wharf on left bank of Allegheny River under construction. Next contract to call for construction of Step Wall.” Today, visitors can walk along paved promenades on the riverfront and to overlooks for dramatic views of Pittsburgh, its busy waterways, scenic hillsides, and many bridges. A stepped wall (pictured under construction) or stone bleacher along the Allegheny River section of Point State Park provides seating for outdoor events. The fountain at the headwaters of the Ohio River was dedicated by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on August 30, 1974, marking the completion of the 36-acre Point State Park, which was 29 years in planning and construction. Point State Park is operated by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, Bureau of State Parks. The park is managed and maintained by the City of Pittsburgh under a reimbursable arrangement. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Construction of Point State Park Point State Park in its early stages of development. In the right center of the photograph, surrounded by trees, is the Fort Pitt Blockhouse. The Blockhouse was built in 1764 by Colonel Henry Bouquet and is Pittsburgh’s oldest structure. The small building to the right of the trees is the Caretaker’s House, which was maintained by the Daughters of the American Revolution and demolished in 1966 to make way for the development of a museum devoted to early Pittsburgh history and the story of Fort Pitt. In the foreground spanning the Monongahela River is the Point Bridge and in the far left center is the Manchester Bridge spanning the Allegheny River. Both bridges were demolished in 1970. Point State Park was completed in 1974. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Construction of Point State Park By the late 1960s Point State Park was in the final stages of development. The outline of the original Fort Pitt can be seen at the center of the park. Above it, just below the highway development and near the evergreen trees is the original Fort Pitt Blockhouse. Top left, just visible, are the Gateway Towers and Hilton Hotel. In the foreground are the Manchester Bridge (left) spanning the Allegheny River and the Point Bridge (right) spanning the Monongahela River. Both bridges were demolished in 1970. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Construction of Point State Park By the late 1960s Point State Park was in the final stages of development. The outline of the original Fort Pitt can be seen at the center of the park. Above it, just below the highway development and near the evergreen trees is the original Fort Pitt Blockhouse. Top left, just visible, are the Gateway Towers and Hilton Hotel. In the foreground are the Manchester Bridge (left) spanning the Allegheny River and the Point Bridge (right) spanning the Monongahela River. Both bridges were demolished in 1970. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Construction of Point State Park An aerial view of the Point and the Point Bridge (being dismantled) spanning the Monongahela River. On the left is the Manchester Bridge spanning the Allegheny River, which was demolished in 1970. At the center of Point State Park is the outline for the original Fort Pitt and located directly above it is a small cluster of trees obscuring the Fort Pitt Blockhouse. The Fort Pitt Bridge (far right) opened on June 19, 1959. The Fort Duquesne Bridge (upper left), or known locally as “The Bridge to Nowhere,” went nowhere because of difficulties in locating a suitable site to place its northern ramps. The main span of this bridge was finished in 1963, and it wasn’t until 1969 when it was finally opened to traffic. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Construction of Point State Park An aerial view of the Point and the Point Bridge (being dismantled) spanning the Monongahela River. On the left is the Manchester Bridge spanning the Allegheny River, which was demolished in 1970. At the center of Point State Park is the outline for the original Fort Pitt and located directly above it is a small cluster of trees obscuring the Fort Pitt Blockhouse. The Fort Pitt Bridge (far right) opened on June 19, 1959. The Fort Duquesne Bridge (upper left), or known locally as “The Bridge to Nowhere,” went nowhere because of difficulties in locating a suitable site to place its northern ramps. The main span of this bridge was finished in 1963, and it wasn’t until 1969 when it was finally opened to traffic. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Fort Pitt Bridge View of the Fort Pitt Bridge (Built in 1956, replacing the Point Bridge), looking south east from Point State Park during redevelopment. Officially opened to the public in 1974, the Point State Park area was purchased by the City of Pittsburgh in 1949. Picture taken on March 26, 1971. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Construction of Point State Park The Point State Park Bridge, also known as the Portal Bridge, was designed by the Pittsburgh architects Stotz, Hess and McLachlan. Construction on the bridge began in 1961 and was completed in 1963. The general contractor for this project was the Joseph J. Graciano Company of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The reinforced concrete bridge is located between the Fort Pitt Bridge and Fort Duquesne Bridge, and spans 182 feet and services Interstate 279. There is also a pedestrian access to Point State Park and a pedestrian arch bridge over a reflecting pool located below the bridge. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
Construction of Point State Park The Allegheny Conference on Community Development brokered pollution-control program in the 1940s explicitly influenced the decision of the Equitable Life Assurance Society to invest in planning the Gateway Center project, which led to the development of Point State Park. The park was completed in 1974 and today, the fifty-nine acre Point, bounded by Stanwix Street and the Allegheny and Monongahela riverbanks, includes twelve office and residential towers, four bridges over land and water, and one of the world’s tallest fountains. (Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center)
The key to relocating the highways and ramps to flow with the Fort Duquesne and Fort Pitt Bridges, without creating an excessive or gloomy barrier in the middle of the park, was the 182-foot long and low arc of the Portal Bridge . Underneath the bridge, a reflecting pool shines below another gracefully sloped pedestrian bridge nested perpendicularly to the highway above. The design was a collaboration between Richardson and architect Gordon Bunshaft, the well-known modernist referred by H.J. Heinz II.
Crowds gathered at the point on August 30, 1974, for the official grand opening of Point State Park. Culminating the ceremonies and speeches was the turning on of the fountain’s three pumps, sending 6,000 gallons of water a minute 150-feet up into the sunny sky.
The fountain’s water is supplied by the famous “fourth river” that runs underneath the Golden Triangle. The Wisconsin Glacial Flow is located about 55 feet underground, and at the time of its completion, the fountain was the tallest in the United States .
The park was an immediate success with the public, and a year later the 36-acre park was designated as a National Historic Landmark .
Point State Park Picture by: Ruben A. Campos, Chopper 11 Pilot
Point State Park Fountain at The Point, a landmark location in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Here, the smaller Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers converge to form the mighty Ohio, which will flow west to meet the even mightier Mississippi in the American heartland. (Photographer: Carol M. Highsmith/Library of Congress)
Point State Park Picture by: Ruben A. Campos, Chopper 11 Pilot
Point State Park Picture by: Ruben A. Campos, Chopper 11 Pilot
Point State Park A view of downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania with a focus on the Point, where the Allegheny (left) and Monongahela Rivers converge to form the Ohio River -- from the upper station of one of two remaining inclines that (as of 2019) descend from here atop Mount Washington. One car (shown in this image) is just departing as another leaves the station below, heading upward on an adjacent track. (Photographer: Carol M. Highsmith/Library of Congress)
Point State Park Fountain at The Point, a landmark location in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Here, the smaller Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers converge to form the mighty Ohio, which will flow west to meet the even mightier Mississippi in the American heartland. (Photographer: Carol M. Highsmith/Library of Congress)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Point State Park Aerial view of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, with a focus on the Point, the place where the Allegheny River (left) and the Monongahela River come together to form the Ohio River. The Ohio, in turn, will flow 981 miles mostly southwestward, where it will empty into the even larger Mississippi River that nearly bisects the American Midwest. (Photographer: Carol M. Highsmith/Library of Congress)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Aerial View of Downtown Aerial view of downtown Pittsburgh showing Three Rivers Stadium and Point State Park among other landmarks, August 1994. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Three Rivers Regatta Aerial view of the Three Rivers Regatta, one of Pittsburgh's largest annual events, showing boats gathering around the Point State Park fountain. Looking north east towards the Allegheny River. The festival has been annually held since 1977. Picture taken in August 1994. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Escaping the Heat Two people relaxing in the Point State Park fountain with the Fort Pitt Bridge in the background, 1993. (Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Point State Park (Tony Ruffolo)
Point State Park Picture by: Ruben A. Campos, Chopper 11 Pilot
Point State Park Picture by: Ruben A. Campos, Chopper 11 Pilot
Point State Park Picture by: Ruben A. Campos, Chopper 11 Pilot
The fountain at the head of the three rivers and the Golden Triangle became a beacon for further downtown redevelopment. Renaissance I soon rolled into Renaissance II , and the park took its place as the center of Pittsburgh’s great civic celebrations.
Point State Park received its first major renovation beginning in 2007. The $35 million project was the largest park project in Pennsylvania history at the time of its completion in 2013.
The fountain, which had been turned off in April 2009 , received new pumps and controls along with a new “disappearing edge” and dynamic LED lighting around the reflecting pool below it. When the fountain was turned back on in 2013, the column of water was more easily able to sustain its original height of 150 feet.
The riverfront promenades, woodland areas and lawns were all reconstructed to better accommodate crowded festivals and events, restroom facilities for the public were refurbished and the Café at the Point opened.
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