Archive for December 2025
Bottoms to tops
Wednesday
– photo by Mitch Waxman
Continuing today, with an introductory walk over the gargantuan McKees Rocks Bridge. The steel arch pictured above carries vehicular traffic, over a set of local streets and a rail yard, with the main span and arches of the bridge being found nearly a mile away at the crossing over the Ohio River. This is a major, NYC sized, bridge.
As described yesterday, I hitched a ride with Our Lady of the Pentacle and her friend Julie, who were going to be attending a pierogi festival at church here in McKees Rocks. They attended the feast, whereas I had a different sort of feast in mind.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
A long zoom shot of the rail yard, looking westerly, with out of focus fencing as a bonus. CSX has offices and other facilities thereabouts. There’s a rail industry company based here, one which manufactures the ‘trucks’ or wheels of rail cargo cars. There’s also all sorts of shipping businesses which are tangentially connected to the rail yard.
There’s supermarkets and strip clubs in McKees Rocks, it’s a regular community once you cross the bridge into ‘the town.’
– photo by Mitch Waxman
The pedestrian walkway of the bridge brings you back down to ground before ramping back up to the main section of the bridge. This was pretty good cardio, incidentally, a long and gentle slope that plays out over about forty vertical feet. Got my pump pumping.
High fencing only occludes the views from this bridge for short intervals, notably where it overflies rail tracks. There are multiple rights of way which the bridge passes over. The high fencing is of the ‘post 911’ type whose chain link squares are only about a half inch across and are ruinous for photographic pursuits.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
Up on the proper bridge, and heading towards the main arches of the thing. My plan for the day was to walk fairly close to other side of the thing, and then double back. I had about two hours to myself, and used every minute of it before I had to return and meet up with Our Lady and her friend for a ride back to HQ
I got busy.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
That’s the ‘bottoms’ neighborhood of McKees Rocks. One of those churches was where the pierogi event was occurring. The dynamics of the sky were a constant challenge, as far as exposure and light.
As mentioned in the past, McKees Rocks has a terrible reputation, including ‘murder capital of Pennsylvania.’ To my eyes, it reminded me a great deal of the 1980’s and quite Irish version of Rockaway I used to be familiar with, or of Brooklyn’s Gerritsen Beach area. An insular community of long held property owners in a somewhat distressed area, doing what they can with what they’ve got.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
Me? I was heading towards the crown of the bridge, where the double arches span the Ohio River.
More on all that tomorrow.
“follow” me on Twitter- @newtownpentacle
Buy a book!
“In the Shadows at Newtown Creek,” an 88 page softcover 8.5×11 magazine format photo book by Mitch Waxman, is now on sale at blurb.com for $30.
Bottoms and bridges
Tuesday
– photo by Mitch Waxman
To start – this location has been ‘on my list’ for a while – and despite that, it just hasn’t been convenient (from a time, getting there, atmospheric lighting) point of view for me to get to.
Serendipity recently struck when Our Lady of the Pentacle announced that she and a friend would be attending a pierogi festival held at a Ukrainian Church in the area during a recent Sunday afternoon. Her friend would be driving, so I asked if I could tag along and thereby be free of having to oblige and worry about the car. Positive affirmations followed.
I’ve executed a few drive throughs of this area and have tilted my lens here and there in the past, check past posts out here. Purely scouting, though.
Welcome to McKees Rocks’ Bottoms.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
It topically seems to be one of Pennsylvania’s many ‘used to be, once, long ago’ sort of places, old mill towns that persist after the mill has left, but the area seems to be very much alive and kicking. We walked around the neighborhood for a bit, prior to the start of Our Lady’s pierogi extravaganza.
I wasn’t there for the luncheon, at least not the kind you eat. My nutritionally needs could only be sated by walking upon that which I came here to see.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
The McKees Rocks Bridge is a major crossing of the Ohio River, and is the longest bridge in Allegheny County. It’s a massive structure.
It carries three lanes of vehicle traffic, which first crosses over a set of busy Norfolk Southern rail tracks and then a gargantuan sewer plant to the north, then the Ohio River, whereupon it overlands into the town after overflying a rail yard on the south side.
When figuring in the ramp approaches to this monster, the bridge is 7,300 feet long. Roughly 1.5 miles, that. 100 feet high at deck level over the river. The stairs pictured above are on the McKees Rocks Bottoms, or southern, side.
Check out all its statistics at pghbridges.com. Additionally, there’s a great document from the HAER (Historic American Engineering Record) people which can be accessed here that will fill you in on all the ‘nitty gritty’ revolving around why and how this monster bridge was erected and funded in Pittsburgh, all the way back in 1929.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
The stairs lead up to this arched section, where it overflies the rail yard and tracks. Those CSX trains which I often photograph down river, nearby that brewery, are all heading this way when I describe them as ‘heading towards Ohio.’ The train pictured above, #866, is heading ‘away from Ohio.’
There were no fences, you can just walk right up to the tracks. That’s very progressive, if you ask me.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
It has been a minor goal of mine to walk this bridge when opportunity struck, but who could have guessed it would be a pierogi festival I wouldn’t be attending that would bring me here?
Up the stairs hurtled I, the filthy black raincoat flapping about in the wind like some obscene membrane. Storms were moving through the vault of the sky, and the dynamic cloud systems surrounding the periodic bursts of rain were causing the light to change minute by minute. I was ready for the rain, just in case, with an umbrella attached to my camera bag, but it wasn’t needed in the end.
Up and at ‘em.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
That’s the main arch of the bridge, as seen in the distance. There really isn’t too much worth seeing after exiting the bridge on the other side, which places you on a narrow sidewalk, set against a de facto highway. Not exactly ‘pedestrian friendly’ over there, so I decided that my first walk over this span was going to be a ‘there and back again’ sort of affair.
This was practically a religious experience for me, scuttling over the McKees Rocks Bridge, something which I could only compare to a walk over the Kosciuszcko Bridge back home, as far as offering the camera a unique point of view.
Back tomorrow.
“follow” me on Twitter- @newtownpentacle
Buy a book!
“In the Shadows at Newtown Creek,” an 88 page softcover 8.5×11 magazine format photo book by Mitch Waxman, is now on sale at blurb.com for $30.
Homestead trio
Monday
– photo by Mitch Waxman
Occasion found me driving through the ragged and unmarked border between Pittsburgh’s ‘Duquesne’ and neighboring ‘Homestead.’ Both communities were once mill towns, in the age of steel. When the mills left, economic devastation and demographic collapse occurred.
That’s a Norfolk Southern locomotive pictured above, #4305. I’m led to believe it’s a rebuilt GE AC44C6M model, and originally christened as ‘NS #9171 (C40-9W)’ when it was built back in 1998.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
While ‘up in the hills’ in neighboring Homestead, a series of abandoned homes caught my eye. It’s madness, how many of these there are in the greater metro area here in Pittsburgh. Good news is that the price of non abandoned homes continues to be dragged down by all of this housing stock that’s just sitting inert. There’s spots less than hour’s drive from the dead bang center of Pittsburgh where you can buy a home for under six figures. In the center of all things, it’s a bit more pricey, as you’d imagine.
Saying that, I don’t want to live in Homestead, Duquesne, or even Munhall. Too close to the still functioning steel plants, which pollute the air with sulfur dioxide (related to burning coke/coal) and it often smells like rotten eggs around these parts.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
There are so many of these. Reminds me of the outer edges of Brooklyn and Queens back in the 1980’s, and of the Bronx too.
Back tomorrow with the start of an ultramundane adventure.
“follow” me on Twitter- @newtownpentacle
Buy a book!
“In the Shadows at Newtown Creek,” an 88 page softcover 8.5×11 magazine format photo book by Mitch Waxman, is now on sale at blurb.com for $30.




