Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


St. Mary’s Academy, Lawrenceville

St. Mary’s Academy

This building was put up in about 1854, well before the adjacent church, making it one of the very few surviving public buildings in Pittsburgh from before the Civil War, and one of the small number of buildings in the Greek Revival style. It is stable but vacant, and its future is questionable. The rising value of Lawrenceville real estate might make it profitable to convert it into a house or a duplex, but that same rising value would make it much more profitable to replace it with a few townhouses or a small apartment building.

St. Mary’s Academy
Porch

The ornate metalwork support for the porch roof is a later addition, we assume, but it ought to be preserved as well. The stock wrought-iron railing on top of the porch roof can go to the recycling plant.

Vine-pattern metalwork

A good summary of the history of the parish, including this building, is in James Wudarczyk’s Faith of Our Fathers: Religion in Lawrenceville.

Academy Building
Fujifilm FinePix HS10.

Map.


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