Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Highland Building

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Built
  
1909

Architectural style
  
Chicago

Opened
  
1909

Added to NRHP
  
6 September 1991

Architect
  
Burnham,D.H.,Co.

NRHP Reference #
  
91001123

Area
  
800 m²

Highland Building

Location
  
121 S. Highland Ave, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Similar
  
Motor Square Garden, Cathedral of Hope, Bakery Square, Frick Building, Union Station

First crash at the highland building supplies 100 at riverside international speedway


The Highland Building is a 13-story building in the East Liberty neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Construction on the a building was completed in 1909, with Daniel Burnham being the principal designer. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.

Henry Clay Frick originally commissioned the building. Following the Chicago school of architecture, the building features a granite base and terracotta exterior. Beginning around the 1960s, however, the building gradually fell into disrepair coinciding with the decline of East Liberty. Classical ornament on the roof was replaced with substandard material and water entered the basement. Over time, the interior would essentially become destroyed.

Prior to 2012, the Highland Building experienced twenty years of complete dormancy. With assistance from the state of Pennsylvania and the Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh, construction began in 2012 to restore the exterior and reconstruct the interior of the Highland Building, join it with the adjacent three-story Wallace Building, and convert the entire complex into 127 apartments. The project, now completed, is described as, "Walnut on Highland" and is mostly leased. Recently, the last of the retail space in the Wallace Building was filled by a Mexican Restaurant.

References

Highland Building Wikipedia