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  • Three Houses on Station Street, Bridgeville

    245 Station Street

    Three fine houses in three different styles. We begin with a house in the fairy-tale style of the 1920s and 1930s, whose steeply pitched roof, open arch on the side of the house, and Jacobean entrance combine to give it a storybook picturesqueness.

    245 Station Street
    245 Station Street
    243

    A dignified version of Queen Anne style; some alterations have changed the original character a bit, but the house still leaves a strong impression of comfortable prosperity.

    243
    233

    It is a little hard to tell what this house was originally; it may have begun as a Queen Anne house similar to the previous one, but it seems to have been accumulating expensive renovations over the years, so that today it is an eclectic but tasteful mixture.

    233
    233
    Canon PowerShot SX20 IS.

    Comments
    February 2, 2026
  • A Few Houses on Berkshire Avenue, Brookline

    1001 Berkshire Avenue

    Brookline is a museum of early-twentieth-century middle-class housing. You can stop almost anywhere in the neighborhood and find an eclectic mixture of houses in interesting styles—many of them altered over the years, but usually a few in nearly original condition. Here are five quite different houses from half a block of Berkshire Avenue, beginning with a solid-looking brick bungalow.

    1001
    1001
    1003

    This stone Tudor is the most recent house in our collection; it probably dates from the late 1930s.

    1003
    1011

    A typical Pittsburgh Foursquare in form, but with the somewhat unusual variation of a shingled second floor.

    1011
    1023

    A Craftsman cottage that would have looked even more Craftsman with its original three-over-one windows.

    1025
    Kodak EasyShare Max Z990.

    A more unusual form of Craftsman cottage whose carved wooden brackets are well preserved. If the porch rail is not original, it is a well-chosen replacement that fits with the spirit of the house. Painting the aluminum awnings to match the trim makes them almost attractive.


    Comments
    One response
    February 1, 2026
  • Knoxville Christian Church

    Knoxville Christian Church

    Knoxville’s own Edwin V. Denick was the architect of this half-shingled corner-tower church,1 currently abandoned. Since it sits right next to the Knoxville Presbyterian Church that burned last month, and since it has been boarded up by the city, we have to assume that it could vanish at any time, so here are a few pictures to document it before it goes. We’ll put it it the Endangered category on our scale of Least Concern, Near Threatened, Vulnerable, Endangered, Critically Endangered, and Demolished.

    Tower
    Side entrances
    Side entrance
    Knoxville Christian Church
    Kodak EasyShare Max Z990.

    In the gables that face the street, the shingles have been replaced with artificial siding; but we can still see them on this gable in the back of the building.


    1. Source: Pittsburg Press, May 26, 1904, p. 2. “Foundations have been started on the buff brick stone and terra cotta church being built on Charles and Knox avenues, Knoxville, for the Knoxville Christian congregation from plans drawn by Architect E. V. Denick.” ↩︎
    One response
    February 1, 2026
  • Some Houses on Roycroft Avenue, Mount Lebanon

    45 Roycroft Avenue in the snow

    This side of Roycroft Avenue—which was the sunny side yesterday afternoon—is in the St. Clair Terrace plan (the other side is part of a different plan). As with many of the plans in the Mt. Lebanon Historic District, the lots were sold off to buyers who would hire their own architects to design their dream houses. The result is a pleasingly eclectic collection of houses whose designs are all of high quality. We’ve seen some of these houses before, but the deep snow added an irresistible picturesqueness.

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    55
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    73
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    Kodak EasyShare Max Z990.

    Comments
    January 31, 2026
  • Facing Banks in Bridgeville

    Bridgeville Trust Company

    George S. Orth, who lived in Bridgeville, designed this building,1 which was put up in two stages, beginning in 1903 or 1904, for the Bridgeville Trust Company. If you look very carefully, you can see the seam in the middle of the long side along Station Street, marking the line between the original square building on the corner and the later addition behind it. At some time in the middle twentieth century, the ground floor was entirely redesigned to look more like a modern bank, so that only on the second floor is Orth’s work visible today. The building was still a bank (a branch of PNC) until just a few years ago.

    Bridgeville Trust Company
    First National Bank of Bridgeville

    Across the street, the First National Bank of Bridgeville was going up at the same time. James E. Allison was the architect of this one.2 Soon—probably while this building was still going up—he would take his brother David on as a partner in the firm of Allison & Allison. In 1910 they moved to Los Angeles, and they flourished there as architects of some of the most notable buildings in the city.

    First National Bank
    Canon PowerShot SX20 IS.

    1. Philadelphia Real Estate Record & Builder’s Guide, September 30, 1903, p. 341 (641; pages are misnumbered): “Architects G. S. Orth & Bros., Stevenson Building, have completed revised plans for the erection of a two-story brick bank and office building to be erected for the Bridgeville Trust Company, of Bridgeville, Pa. The cost will be about $20,000.” ↩︎
    2. Record & Guide, November 18, 1903, p. 763. “At Bridgeville, Allegheny county, the First National Bank will erect a building two stories high, of stone and brick, all modern conveniences. The plans have been prepared by J. E. Allison, Westinghouse Building, Pittsburg, Pa.” The building ended up with three floors, but Hopkins maps show the First National Bank at this location. ↩︎
    Comments
    January 30, 2026
  • McNally Building

    McNally Building
    The perspective of this picture has been adjusted on two planes to make a more natural view of the building, at the cost of distorting some of the other things in the picture.

    Thomas D. Evans was the architect of this towering warehouse, built just as the age of skyscrapers was dawning in 1896. It has kept its Romanesque decorative details, and the ground floor has been restored and lightly modernized with sympathy for the original lines of the building.

    Ground floor of the McNally Building
    Capital
    Foliage ornament
    Entrance to the McNally Building
    McNally Building
    Sony Alpha 3000; Fujifilm FinePix HS20EXR; Canon PowerShot SX150 IS.

    The picture above was taken in September of 2023; we append it to show the strong impression the building makes from half a block away.


    Comments
    January 29, 2026
  • Fairy-Tale Apartment Building in Brookline

    Apartment building on Brookline Boulevard

    A little apartment building—with four apartments, judging by the number of buzzers—in what old Pa Pitt calls the fairy-tale style, the mark of which is exaggeratedly picturesque features that look like illustrations from a children’s book.

    Apartment building on Brookline Boulevard
    Entrance

    The entrance is so similar to the entrance to the Sholten Arms in Carrick that we have to suspect the same hand drew both. Father Pitt’s guess is that the decorative gable was originally carried all the way to its logical peak, but was truncated when the overhang was rebuilt.

    Decorative gable
    1149 Brookline Boulevard
    Entrance
    Kodak EasyShare Max Z990.

    Comments
    January 28, 2026
  • Mellon National Bank Building

    Mellon National Bank Building
    Canon PowerShot SX20 IS.

    Trowbridge & Livingston, Andrew Mellon’s favorite architects, designed this block-long palace of finance. The legendary interior was destroyed in the 1990s for a blink-and-you-missed-it department store, but the exterior is almost completely unchanged from the day the building opened in 1925.


    Comments
    January 27, 2026
  • Snowdrift

    Fence with mound of drifted snow.
    Kodak EasyShare Max Z990.

    Comments
    January 26, 2026
  • Snow in the Branches

    Tree with snow on its branches, backlit by late-afternoon sun
    Kodak EasyShare Max Z990.

    Comments
    January 26, 2026
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