The Newtown Pentacle

Altissima quaeque flumina minimo sono labi

Posts Tagged ‘Lawrenceville

Turty Turd st. bridge, and such

with 4 comments

Friday

– photo by Mitch Waxman

The 33rd street rail bridge isn’t just a bridge, it’s a complex of ramps and trestles which sprawls along both sides of the Allegheny River, between Herr’s Island and Millvale on the northern shore, and Lawrenceville on the southern. It was erected in 1921 by the B&O RR people, which replaced an earlier rail bridge here that was built in 1884. It’s massive.

Would love to see a train moving on this thing, but it’s serviced by the Allegheny Valley Rail Road (AVRR), a Class 3 railroad which moves and switches rail cars around in service to the Class 1 railroads (CSX, Norfolk Southern, Wheeling & Lake Erie) here in the Pittsburgh region. AVRR doesn’t have many train sets operating at any given time, so spotting one is like spotting ‘a white whale’ ala Melville.

If I do get a shot of a train on this bridge, ever, it’s going to be a lucky stroke and pure serendipity for me.

– photo by Mitch Waxman

As mentioned, the structure is massive. To the right of the roadway pictured above is a Restaurant Depot warehouse, and yeah – I was having serious ‘memberberries’ while walking through their parking lot to get a few shots of a gigantic bridge. To the left of the shot is a complex of theatrical studios (TV and Movies) set up in former warehouses, which are dubbed as the ‘31st street studios.’ Made me think about Broadway Stages back in Brooklyn. Lots of tv and movies film hereabouts. ‘Mayor of Kingstown’ keeps them busy these days.

One continued on with the scuttling. Walking involves a lot of conscious thought for me at the moment. ‘Don’t protect the ankle,’ ‘don’t waddle like a penguin,’ ‘keep your eyes on where your next heel strike is going to land,’ ‘stride, don’t step.’ All of this used to be simply autonomic, but for the late recovery stage of this horrific injury, it’s required.

I’ve relearned how to walk, now I need to relearn ‘walking with a purpose’ and ‘Brooklyn strut.’

– photo by Mitch Waxman

Saying all that, the path I ended up walking was an incredibly difficult one. Torn up pavement, potholes filled with six inches of street runoff, gravel and rock ballast everywhere, all sorts of obstacles. Not ankle friendly at all, but the goal is ‘stretch and strengthen’ so that means I need to challenge myself by not walking solely on flat pavement. As mentioned in prior posts, the end goal for this walk would involve getting a ride on the ‘T’ light rail back to HQ. The station I was heading for was underneath that orange colored building in the distance, the one with the ‘KL Gates’ logo on it, as that’s where the T’s ‘Wood Street’ station awaited.

Back next week with more, from the Paris of Appalachia – at this – your Newtown Pentacle.


“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.

Written by Mitch Waxman

April 18, 2025 at 11:00 am

Scuttling, the dream

with one comment

Thursday

– photo by Mitch Waxman

Glorious! Believe it or not, places like this are what I was dreaming about during all of those months of medical downtime. This post continues with photos captured on a recent walk which started in Pittsburgh’s Lawrenceville. This part of the city is located on the triangular peninsula formed by the confluence of Monongahela and Allegheny Rivers. Downtown, where the big office buildings are, is found at the very tippy tip of that triangle. The area I was walking through in these posts is about six to seven miles east of there, and found along the northern side of the ‘golden triangle,’ where the Allegheny River flows.

One scuttled back a few blocks from the waterfront as it became increasingly difficult to get past a series of ‘No Trespassing’ warnings and ubiquitous fence lines. I found a set of train tracks, which seemed to be at least semi active, as evidenced by shiny metal wear patterns breaking through layers of corrosion and rust. I’m informed that these are all Allegheny Valley Rail Road (AVRR) rights of way in modernity.

Saying all that, didn’t see a train at all moving through. Like I said the other day about AVRR: ‘white whale.’

– photo by Mitch Waxman

Your humble narrator is really trying to ‘lean into it’ at the moment. Rebuilding strength and endurance in my legs and hips after suffering the long hermitage caused by the shattered ankle is my priority. Status on that situation is as follows – I’m walking a LOT slower than I used to, need to have a quick sit down periodically, and fatigue sets in a lot quicker than formerly. This walk ultimately blew open my outer distance range, clocking in at about six and half miles. Given that two weeks ago I was jumping with joy at having conquered five miles… progress.

The goal is to be able to reliably walk twenty miles by June. May is going to hurt a bit, I think. I’m already planning the ten mile threshold’s walk. By August, I plan on resuming the full schedule of one long walk of 10-15 miles and two short walks of about 5 miles each per week.

There was quite a bit of activity going on just out of frame, but it mainly involved utility workers, auto mechanics, and various warehouse operations. Most of the buildings in this ‘IBZ’ seemed occupied, but other than a few cars in the parking lots it was just me, all alone and wandering about on foot. It all seemed quite apocalyptic, but there was a feature rich environment.

Lots of ‘what’s that thing over there’ going on while scuttling along.

– photo by Mitch Waxman

My path through this area followed the rail tracks, and this route would eventually lead me to a named street called ‘Railroad Street.’ I’m of the opinion, which was formed along Newtown Creek’s ‘Railroad Avenue’ in Blissville, that every city in America worth a damn has a ‘Railroad Avenue’ or ‘street’ in it. Here’s the one in Vermont’s Burlington.

One continued on in a generally westerly direction back towards downtown. The plan for the rest of the day was to make it downtown and then catch the ‘T’ light rail back to HQ. Saying that, I still had a couple of hours of walking ahead of me. Given that I’m moving as slowly as I do now, that meant I was just getting started on this walk.

What? You don’t dream about experiencing perfect solitude in a fairly post apocalyptic landscape? To one such as myself, it’s nepenthe.

Come with, see more? 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.

Written by Mitch Waxman

April 17, 2025 at 11:00 am

Scuttlebug

with 3 comments

Wednesday

– photo by Mitch Waxman

Intriguing is how I’d describe this section of Pittsburgh, found along the Allegheny River. There’s a lovely industrial zone there, complete with railroad tracks, shattered dreams, and that particular shaping of desolating loneliness which I so enjoy. Don’t get me wrong, there was all sorts of activity going on all over the place, but there was a real sense of ‘under utilized’ in this ‘IBZ’ if you know what I mean. The gentrification furnaces glow quite brightly in nearby sections of this and neighboring areas. I’ll show you some of that in upcoming posts.

This scuttle started at the corner of 40th and Willow, in Pittsburgh’s Lawrenceville. It was temperate out, but breezy and dry. I was wearing the filthy black raincoat and a flash orange baseball cap, along with my usual ensemble.

It reminds me a lot of Philadelphia, this section, in terms of the sort of built environment you encounter. Row houses with narrow sidewalks, basically. When I’m told by the locals that this is ‘Pittsburgh’s Williamsburg,’ I smirk a bit, remembering when Grand Avenue was a hooker’s stroll and Radiac was storing nuclear waste right across the street from Domino. Just like Brooklyn’s Williamsburg, this neighborhood has seen rents skyrocket, and lots of new construction occurring. Basically – this is where the Cool kids want to live – or so I’m told.

– photo by Mitch Waxman

First thing which I wanted to check out hereabouts was Lawrenceville’s River Trail.

It’s truncated, and didn’t seem to join up with other rail trails in the area according to the ‘pre gaming’ I had done in Google maps, but you never know what’s what until you take a look for yourself.

The bridge spanning the entrance to the trail is the Fortieth Street or Washington Crossing Bridge. As it turned out, the Lawrenceville section of the river front ‘rail trails’ is indeed isolated from the rest of the network and you’re meant to walk back out the way you came in, but I opted to just scuttle over the railroad tracks and regain the street grid via a former homeless camp’s ‘desire path.’

There’s around 3-4 blocks worth of scuttling to enjoy back there, and a dog park, whereupon you have to return to the streets the way you came in.

After returning to the streets in a less than legal manner, and heading in the general direction of downtown Pittsburgh, the streets run into a giant chunk of railroad infrastructure called the 33rd street rail bridge. We’ll get there in a subsequent post later this week or beginning of next. I visited the opposite shoreline of the river in Millvale last year, you can check that out here.

– photo by Mitch Waxman

The terminus of the trail is actually a spot I’ll return to in the future, and where I’ll vaingloriously await a locomotive that never arrives in pursuit of a photo. Experience suggests bringing something to sit on, and a sandwich. These tracks are used by the Allegheny Valley Rail Road – or ‘AVRR’ – which I sometimes refer to as the ‘White Whale’ as spotting them is pretty rare, compared to other rail services in Pittsburgh like CSX or Norfolk Southern.

More 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.

Written by Mitch Waxman

April 16, 2025 at 11:00 am