Comment

Detroit Goes Bankrupt, Wingnuts Celebrate

477
Decatur Deb7/19/2013 7:39:50 am PDT

re: #473 Feline Fearless Leader

Pittsburgh’s recovery took decades and also benefited from the seeds already being there like the top-flight medical facilities already there around the University of Pittsburgh. Plus non-steel industries that were hi-tech oriented and survived the downturn (PPG, ALCOA*, etc.)

Beyond that there are satellite steel industry towns up and down the valley that still are heavily boarded up and depressed like Braddock. Some have been recovering with their former mill sites going over to retail or other uses like Homestead.

* - ALCOA doesn’t have any active operations there. But their HQ is in Pittsburgh and their main research center is about 20 miles outside the city. The closest operation they had to the city was a small aluminum powder plant near New Kensington, but that was sold off in the early 90s.

Pittsburgh also had an early start, in the 1950’s. A government-industry coalition under mayor Davy Lawrence launched the ‘Renaissance’ effort in the face of problems that could no longer be ignored (‘smoke control’). it wasn’t just a figleaf, producing the new Point Park and the 3 signature aluminum skyscrapers downtown.