The Newtown Pentacle

Altissima quaeque flumina minimo sono labi

Pinion point, Pittsburgh

with 2 comments

Tuesday

– photo by Mitch Waxman

On the south shore of the Monongahela River, beneath Pittsburgh’s ‘Fort Pitt Bridge,’ you’ll notice two locomotives transiting through the shot above, in the lower section of the photo above.

A CSX unit is moving eastwards directly on the shoreline, and up on a raised berm on the hill, a Norfolk Southern unit was heading west. Neat, and this one got a ‘hey now.’

This is the latest in a series of astoundingly short walks which endemic ice and snow conditions have boxed me into. Essentially, all within reach of mass transit, so I didn’t have to dig the car out of the driveway again.

– photo by Mitch Waxman

I’d be heading along one of the waterfront trails for the remainder of this walk, through an area referred to colloquially as ‘the bath tub.’ It got that nickname due to its certain tendency to flood during the spring melts, which raises the water level of the Monongahela.

I’ve got a weird relationship with driving, I’d mention. Love having the freedom it offers, but hate having to ‘mind the car’ and detest having to loop back to wherever I parked it on a walk.

Serendipity is mentioned a lot around here, as a descriptor for those random concurrencies which sometimes assemble before the camera while scuttling. Having the car along with me tends to cancel out any chance of such random events occurring, as I have to mind the vehicle rather than my surroundings. Also, you can’t ‘see’ anything from a car as you’re moving too quickly.

– photo by Mitch Waxman

I’ve got a lot of rules. No conscious trespass for instance. I operate within the sure knowledge (and experience) that eventually I’ll be invited in, and like a vampire, I need that invite to properly ‘do my thing.’

This part of the waterfront trail has recently undergone a cycle of repairs, and it was blocked off by construction equipment for most of the first year I’ve was out here in Pittsburgh, and just as it opened to the public – that’s when I shattered my ankle.

Back on all of my feet now, and I’m glad to have this pathway available, especially so on rainy days when you’re pretty much walking under the elevated ramps of an interstate and using it as a concrete umbrella..

– photo by Mitch Waxman

As mentioned in the first post of this series, this was during the initial ‘melt days’ after several weeks of sub freezing temperatures. Everything was dripping and oozing with some sort of latent horror. I had worn the leather fedora as a prophylactic for this day, anticipating that ice and snow might be crashing down on me from on high. It ain’t a hard hat, but it does offer a half inch of thick cow hide as a buffer twixt the outside world and ‘me gulliver.’

Yes, ‘A Clockwork Orange’s’ made up ‘future slang’ is a core part of my brain. Hear me, my dear droogie?

– photo by Mitch Waxman

A series of interesting compositions are available under the on-ramp of the Fort Pitt bridge, for the itineraries of visiting photographers to the Paris of Appalachia. Lots of interesting massing shapes, all crushing up against other, while transferring massive amounts of weight and ‘load’ just all over the place. I spent a little time down here, and resolved to add this spot to my growing list of ‘come back with a tripod’ for night time or low light shots in the future.

There’s multiple ‘to-do’ lists at this stage.

– photo by Mitch Waxman

Wasn’t walking on the highway, despite appearances. The trail threads along in parallel to the ‘parkway east,’ aka I-376.

Back tomorrow with boids.


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Written by Mitch Waxman

March 17, 2026 at 11:00 am

2 Responses

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  1. Attractive compositions of concrete and steel, very nice. The second pic is especially lovely. Looks like care was taken there by the builders to be something special – the handrails, walkway lights and sloping brick and concrete segments. And the river apparently touching the sidewalk’s edge without the usual fencing.

    The last photo has what looks like playful fencing, also handrails where I wouldn’t think any are needed. Why is your walkway divided from the bigger one adjacent the water?

    dbarms8878's avatar

    dbarms8878

    March 17, 2026 at 9:18 pm

    • Where I was standing in the last one was alongside the jersey barriers on the highway, whereas the ornamental fencing indicates where the riverfront trail is.

      Mitch Waxman's avatar

      Mitch Waxman

      March 18, 2026 at 5:46 am


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