Search Results for: our 50 years
The Downtown restaurant will double as a training facility where interns learn the business, as well as life skills.
Susheela Nemani-Stanger takes on thorny problems with a mostly new team at the Urban Redevelopment Authority.
This smart girl will do anything for a snack! Meet her at Animal Friends
If the Golden Triangle wants to thrive again, it needs to add neighbors, not office spaces.
The modernized, three-bedroom home still contains all its original 1950s-era touches.
The latest M. Night Shyamalan thriller is better than some of his duds, but the director can't stay out of his own way.
Gari Shoyu Sando Co. offers traditional Japanese tastes in a pop-up at Scratch & Co. in Troy Hill.
Known for its curated selection of host gifts, candles and decor, House15143 closed in January after more than a decade in business.
This shy guy is looking for a loving home to enjoy his treats and naps in. Meet him at Animal Friends!
The Hollow Oak Land Trust, a conservation nonprofit, purchased Vinegar Hollow in December 2022, furthering its mission to “protect and connect” green spaces in Allegheny and Beaver counties.
The conveniently located, two-unit building is filled with original details.
The extremely rare ‘cosmic snowball’ — which last passed by Earth during the Ice Age — will be reaching its closest point here between Feb. 1 and 2.
Officials had to stop the game when the delivery person walked onto the court with a bag of food and a drink from McDonald's.
The Olmo Ling Bon Center and Institute, a nonprofit and the only temple of the Bon Religion in Pittsburgh, recently purchased the building it’s been renting since 2009.
This playful, wiggly boy has a lot of love to give. Come meet him at Animal Friends.
The updated, three-bedroom Cape Cod features an arched red front door alongside a stone chimney.
In government, higher ed, nonprofits and economic development, a slew of new CEOs, presidents and directors face new challenges with fresh perspectives — and their success could hinge on the chemistry among them.
As experienced government leaders move on, their replacements will have to leverage existing relationships and build new ones.
After decades of postindustrial progress, a cadre of new civic leaders looks to add fairness to the development punch list.
Social pressures, pandemic exhaustion and declining enrollment take their toll, but new leaders look toward fresh ideas and innovation.
New leaders struggle to build teams and to make them more like the populations they serve.
“For most of my career, I have had to learn to be adaptable and make trade-offs to get everything done.”
“I think being a businesswoman is something that’s in my blood. Entrepreneurship is definitely not for everyone and not for the weak at heart.”
“We have every right to know we have the right answer, a better solution, a new way of doing things and to express it. If we are in the room, we deserve to be there.”