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300 Halket Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States Coordinates 40°26′13″N 79°57′39″W / 40.436985°N 79.960741°W / 40.436985; -79.
PA 885 west (Boulevard of the Allies) to I-376 west: Exit ramp; no access to PA 885 east or from PA 885: Craft Avenue east to I-376 / I-579 – Monroeville: Halket Street – UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital: Oakland Avenue / De Soto Street – University of Pittsburgh, UPMC Presbyterian, UPMC Western Psychiatric Hospital: Bellefield Avenue
The remainder was named Forbes Street in honor of John Forbes (1707–1759), [1] whose expedition recaptured Fort Duquesne and who renamed the place Pittsburgh in 1758. In 1958 during the administration of Mayor David L. Lawrence , Diamond Street and Forbes Street were renamed and combined as Forbes Avenue.
Oakland is the academic and healthcare center of Pittsburgh and one of the city's major cultural centers. Home to three universities, museums, hospitals, shopping venues, restaurants, and recreational activities, this section of the city also includes two city-designated historic districts: the mostly residential Schenley Farms Historic District and the predominantly institutional Oakland ...
Wesley W. Posvar Hall (WWPH), formerly known as Forbes Quadrangle, is a landmark building on the campus of the University of Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. At 744,695 square feet (69,184.4 m 2 ) it is the largest academic-use building on campus, providing administrative offices, classrooms, lecture halls, a food court ...
From 1999 to 2001, Heinz built a 70,000-square-foot (6,500 m 2) warehouse on the east side and moved its headquarters to downtown Pittsburgh. [10] By 2001, many of the historic buildings had been vacant for five to eight years. Heinz had no long-term plans for the buildings and sold them to a residential developer. [11]
Fort Pitt Boulevard is a road in Pittsburgh on the southern area of Downtown, connecting Fort Pitt Bridge and Interstate 376.Fort Pitt poses a particular challenge to both mapmaker and navigator—along its entire half-mile length, up to six separate roadways making up the Boulevard, the Penn-Lincoln Parkway, and ramps between the latter and various Downtown streets are woven together in a ...
There the old highway went onto First Avenue and State Street, rejoining PA 65 in Baden. Further into Baden, the old highway left PA 65 again, onto State Street, becoming Duss Avenue in Harmony Township. At the Ambridge limits, this becomes PA 989, but the old highway turned west at 14th Street and then south on Merchant Street. [9]