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The new terminal would replace the Allegheny County Airport which opened in 1926 in West Mifflin. Ground was broken on the new airport on July 18, 1946. The new terminal building would eventually cost $33 million to build and was built exclusively by Pittsburgh-area companies. The Greater Pittsburgh Airport opened on May 31, 1952.
The new terminal would eventually cost $33 million ($391 million present day dollars) and was built entirely by Pittsburgh-area companies. The new airport, christened as Greater Pittsburgh Airport (renamed Greater Pittsburgh International Airport in 1972 upon the opening of the International Arrivals Building) opened on 31 May 1952.
It comprises two separately designated City of Pittsburgh historic districts: the Oakland Civic Center Historic District [2] consisting of publicly and privately owned institutional buildings, and the adjacent Schenley Farms Historic District [1] consisting mainly of a planned residential development of the early 20th Century.
Read more The post 29 Photos That Capture the Golden Age of Air Travel (1950s – 1970s) appeared first on Wealth Gang. 29 Photos That Capture the Golden Age of Air Travel (1950s – 1970s) Skip ...
Oakland 2001 Pittsburgh Children's Museum (Allegheny [Old] Post Office) 1897 William Martin Aiken: 10 Children's Way Allegheny Center 1971 Pittsburgh Engineer's Building (Union Trust Company) 1898 D. H. Burnham & Company: 337 Fourth Avenue Downtown 1974 Pittsburgh Gifted Center (McKelvy School) 1911
One day, Matt was gazing at some photos taken of him when he was 3 or 4 years old at a Southern California beach house that his father would rent for the family during the summer. One picture in ...
He controlled much real estate in Pittsburgh until the 1920s, selling of eight houses on North Oakland Square and five houses on South Oakland Square between 1919 and 1922. Some of his holdings were not liquidated until the 1940s (e.g. 3728-32 Dawson Street) and his estate was not completely settled until the mid-1950s.
5th Avenue & Bigelow Boulevard, at Wm. Pitt Union by bus stop, Oakland, Pittsburgh: City Military, Military Post-Civil War Victor Herbert (1859-1924) August 28, 2010: 4400 Forbes Avenue, at Carnegie Mus. near Shakespeare statue, Oakland (Pittsburgh)