The Newtown Pentacle

Altissima quaeque flumina minimo sono labi

Rising Main, part 2

with 5 comments

Tuesday

– photo by Mitch Waxman

Gargantuan, the Rising Main City Steps on Pittsburgh’s North Side, in today’s post.

These are the fourth longest ‘City Steps’ in the city, and they are in a deleterious state of repair. The ground which their foundations rest within is subsiding, sliding, and pulling the staircase to and fro. I tried to illustrate this a few times by looking back up at where I started, so you can see the almost serpentine footprint of the things.

As longtime readers will tell you, I’ve endlessly talked about this weird mental condition regarding stairs that has taken root in my mind, ever since shattering my ankle on a set of steps at home. I freeze up, grasp for dear life at the bannister, and mistrust both my sense of walking balance and the purely mechanical propensity of walking down stairs.

It’s a kind of PTSD, and I’ve been self medicating for the last year with exposure therapy, forcing myself to seek out and expose the senses to this stimuli. It’s working, in terms of ‘normalizing,’ but still quite present.

– photo by Mitch Waxman

My phobic intuitions were tantalized, thereby, by this.

At one point, the bannisters on Rising Main are literally fallen away. Some civic minded person seems to have attempted an impromptu repair, using a garden hose.

I really do wish that this was AI.

– photo by Mitch Waxman

There you go. Securely attached.

The Rising Main steps connect the Fineview community at their apex to what used to be a thriving neighborhood at the bottom.

More on that is inbound.

– photo by Mitch Waxman

The Rising Main path is parallel to what looks like an entirely condemned and abandoned roadway called Toboggan Street, which also has its own set of stairs which seem to be in the process of being reclaimed by nature. Several fairly picturesque abandoned houses were seen along the way.

As mentioned above, it’s going to be a while before – or if – I come back here. These steps were causing me no end of anxiety.

– photo by Mitch Waxman

What a shame.

Now, as mentioned yesterday, my puzzlement over this situation led to me ringing up my pal Tim Fabian, who casually threw out the phrase ‘East Street Valley’ during our conversation about my visit to the area.

I then looked that term up, and as it turns out, it refers to a generational road building project that saw an extension of I-79 (locally – I-579) rammed through this neighborhood. This ‘zone,’ as it turns out, used to be a densely populated section of the City of Pittsburgh.

The highway project played out between 1966 and 1989. Here’s that story. A bit of depth to the East Street Valley project will be offered in a subsequent post this week.

As a point of trivia, when discussing the ‘Interstate System,’ an odd numbered road is north/south whereas an even one is east/west. There’s an exception or two to this rule, in various spots around the country, but otherwise…

– photo by Mitch Waxman

Y’know, sights like this abandoned building are just candy for wandering photographers. You could draw us in, trapping shutterbugs like moths attracted to a flame. Get enough of us, you’ve got a baseball team.

Saying all that, the devastation and abandonment witnessed in this section of Pittsburgh is – at it turned out – a feature, not a bug.

Back tomorrow.


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Written by Mitch Waxman

April 14, 2026 at 11:00 am

5 Responses

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  1. What do the local elected officials have to say about these dilapidated stairs and abandoned houses? And who owns these things now? You break your leg on the steps because of their unmaintained condition, who do you sue?

    george the atheist . . . lex fiat's avatar

    george the atheist . . . lex fiat

    April 14, 2026 at 5:56 pm

  2. This is sad reading. Here in Connecticut, vulnerable neighborhoods – ie lacking political influence – were eviscerated by highway projects like Pittsburgh’s and surrounding neighborhoods left to wither.

    dbarms8878's avatar

    dbarms8878

    April 14, 2026 at 8:54 pm

  3. I went back to read my blog post from 2012 on the Fineview Step Challenge (then called the Step-a-thon): https://franklinchen.com/blog/2012/10/06/the-fineview-stepathon-2012-pittsburghs-grueling-urban-trail-race/It reminded me of how scary the event was. Not just the garden hose, but actually loose steps. I didn’t say it in the blog post at the time, but my foot actually went through a hole in one of the steps on the course, and I was saved only by using the handrails, but like I said, the handrails were not to be trusted either.

    Franklin Chen's avatar

    Franklin Chen

    April 15, 2026 at 3:19 pm

    • Cool post. 27th is impressive.
      As endlessly mentioned, after busting my ankle in September of 24 on a set of steps at home, my brain has been rendered disobedient when confronted by stairs. Weird racing thoughts abound – obvious ptsd – so I’ve been exposing myself to as many of these scary courses as I can to normalize. There’s been a couple of them I didn’t want to ‘eff with, mind you. They just rebuilt the big ones at south 18th, haven’t walked them yet.

      Mitch Waxman's avatar

      Mitch Waxman

      April 15, 2026 at 6:44 pm


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