Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


Granite Building

Granite Building (German National Bank), Pittsburgh

The Wood Street end of the Granite Building in a composite photograph that gets a little fuzzy toward the top, but otherwise gives us a good notion of the design of the Romanesque extravaganza. It was built in 1889 as the German National Bank; the architects were Bickel & Brennan—the Bickel being Charles Bickel, who would go one to become Pittsburgh’s most prolific architect of commercial buildings.

We also have pictures of some of Achille Giammartini’s carvings on the building, and of the German National Bank ghost signs still visible on the side that faces Liberty Avenue.


2 responses to “Granite Building”

  1. Carson

    A pipe just burst in that building today – there was water streaming down a vent in the back, down the windows on the higher-up floors and through the windows near the street. Really worried about this building now. It’s beautiful and should be treated better!

  2. janet m edwards

    Where do i go to find a picture of a 1915 house in Brighton Heights. I would like to find the original design of the house before all the modifications

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