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A
I'm
Emily
juga
up
until
februari
I
was
the
executive
director
of
the
north
side,
industrial
development
company,
and
now
one
Garrard
one
are
you
he
will
fear
is
the
executive
director
and
during
our
tenure
we
have
been
a
big
partner
where
they
have
been
a
partner
of
ours
with
the
Environmental
Protection
Agency
and
in
fact,
over
seven
years
we
have
received
to
invest
in
small
municipalities
along
me.
Excuse
me,
along
the
rivers
in.
A
Brownfield
assessments
community-wide
brownfield
assessments.
In
fact,
we've
received
about
five
million
dollars
and
we
put
it
to
good
use.
We've
done
investments
in
twenty
five,
separate
municipalities,
all
down
the
Ohio,
all
the
way
up
to
Freeport,
and
we
there's
actually
done
a
few
in
neighboring
counties
as
well.
A
We
have
about
80
sites
in
our
inventory,
the
money
that
the
EPA
has
provided
and
that
we
have
used
effectively
has
provided
private
investment
in
the
amount
of
92
million.
That's
in
addition
to
40
million
in
additional
private
funds
as
well:
private
I'm,
sorry,
public
funds,
we've
created
about
2,800
jobs
and
we've
developed
a
plan
to
develop
about
1,800
units,
including
the
41
that
we
have
done
here
helped
with
here.
We
have
700
acres
in
our
inventory
and
we've
developed
about
five
over
five
hundred,
very,
very
pleased
that
we
have
such
dignitaries
here.
A
Hiding
behind
the
mayor
place
the
beast
at
a
lot
of
fire,
councilman
Burgess
secretary
to
quickly
make
sure
I
get
everybody
here
and,
of
course,
the
original
administrator,
John,
Sean,
Garvin
and
I
would
like,
because
we
have
been
working
on
this
for
so
long
and
so
hard
and
we're
very
proud
of
what
we've
been
able
to
accomplish.
Obviously,
the
EPA
has
been
has
been
not
displeased
with
us
are.
We
would
not
be
here
today
to
get
some
additional
funds,
but
I
did
want
to
kind
of
point
out
our
team.
B
Well,
it's
great
to
be
here
Emily.
Thank
you
very
much.
Thank
you
for
your
leadership.
We
would
not
be
here
today
if
it
not
for
you
congressman
Doyle,
always
a
pleasure
mayor,
Peduto,
county
executive
fitzgerald,
my
good
friend
and
colleague,
secretary
Quigley
and
council
members
Reverend,
it's
great
for
you
to
join
us,
I'm
here
to
announce
EPA
selected,
the
north
side,
industrial
development
company
with
a
four
hundred
thousand
dollar
brownfields
assessment
grants
that
goes
to
both
assessing
hazardous
contaminants
and
petroleum
contaminants
on
sites
in
and
around
the
pittsburgh
metropolitan
area.
B
Now
we
can't
do
any
of
this
without
the
leadership
of
Congressman,
Doyle
and
Senator
Casey
who's
represented
by
Jordan
ball.
Here
today,
when
I
present
big
checks,
it's
because
Congress
has
provided
us
with
the
funding
to
do
that
and
I
have
to
tell
you
that
that
congressman
Doyle
and
Senator
Casey
both
have
been
huge
supporters
of
brownfields
and
huge
supporters
of
making
sure
that
we
really
focused
on
our
communities,
and
what
we're
talking
about
here
really
is
about
quality
of
life.
B
It's
about
brownfields,
but
it
really
is
a
bit
about
making
visible
differences
in
our
communities,
which
is
a
huge
focus
of
Administrator,
Gina
McCarthy,
and
you
don't
really
make
visible
differences
in
our
communities
without
strong
partnerships
and
collaboration
amongst
governments,
nonprofit
organizations,
businesses
and
the
citizens
at
large,
and
that's
what
we're
really
talking
about
when
we're
talking
about
north
side
and
what
they
have
done
and
what
they
have
accomplished
now
you
know
the
mayor
and
the
county
executive.
Both
of
their
focus
really
is
on
economic
development,
but
it's
not
economic
development
for
economic
development
sake.
B
B
Since
1995,
the
brownfields
program
has
been
able
to
leverage
23
billion
dollars
for
the
investment
that
it's
put
in
so
in
almost
eighteen
dollars,
leverage
for
every
dollar
of
brownfields
that
dollars
that
have
been
expended.
It
also
has
led
to
clean
ups
of
1200
sites
in
almost
one
hundred
and
ten
thousand
jobs
as
part
of
it.
And
now
this
is
an
extremely
competitive
fund.
This
grant
program
is
highly
competitive
and,
as
you
heard,
Emily
talk
about
Doug
and
others
Joe
Nowak
from
EPA.
B
My
staff
really
put
a
lot
of
time
and
effort
into
this
and
I
have
to
tell
you
I
want
to
congratulate
north
side,
Industrial
Development
Corporation
with
this
forty
thousand
dollars.
Their
total
now
comes
to
five
million
dollars
in
brownfields
assessment
grants
at
the
every
C,
which
is
more
than
any
other
location
in
the
mid-atlantic
region.
They
have
assessed
more
than
155
properties
in
20
to
25
municipalities,
for
more
than
500
acres
of
brownfields
that
have
been
really
redeveloped
and
and
I
think
that.
B
There's
so
many
examples
that
I
could
point
to
talk
about
Carnegie
robotics.
You
can
talk
about
where
we
stand
here
today,
but
they
go
on
and
on
and
on
the
funding
that
we're
providing
here
will
continue
to
allow
them
to
do
that
assessment.
So
really
focus
on
what
I
said
is
the
overall
quality
of
life.
What
brownfields
really
does
is
really
help
with
community
health,
environment
and
really
creating
an
economic
engine,
and
you
look
at
SNA
homes
and
the
work
that
they
did
here.
B
They
put
large
investments
into
bringing
in
local
people
to
work
on
their
projects,
and
that's
really
what
brownfields
is
all
about,
and
you
know
I
can't
really
stand
here
without
talking
about
kind
of
leveraging
of
benefits
where
you
know
fixing
a
brown
feel
that
you're
taking
care
of
the
contamination
but
you're
also
dealing
with
water
quality
and
you're
dealing
with
runoff
you're,
also
helping
to
deal
with
with
climate
change.
The
president
came
out
with
his
as
climate
action
plan.
Epa
recently
came
out
with
our
clean
power
plan
to
look
to
cut
the
largest.
B
A
We're
going
to
move
on,
but
for
those
of
you
who
have
stood
in
my
shoes
here
as
the
so-called
MC.
You
immediately
remember
what
you
forgot
and
I
forgot
to
mention
Jonah
whack,
who
drove
from
Philadelphia
with
the
check.
So
we
always
want
to
be
nice
to
Joe
who
we
could
not
have
accomplished
these
things
with
it
without
his
efforts
and
his
help,
and
also
that
Andy
Haynes
is
Andy
here,
I'm
sorry,
Andy
I've
never
met
you,
so
you've
done
it.
I've
got
a
very,
very
nice
job
here.
D
Emily,
thank
you
very
much
and
nah.
It's
good
to
have
Shawn
Garvin
here
and
secretary
Quigley,
and
our
colleagues
and
city
and
county
government
Cummings
ecumene
Fitzgerald
mayor
Peduto,
City,
Councilman
Burgess.
It's
really
my
job
is
so
much
easier
when
you
have
a
team
of
local
people
that
share
the
same
vision
for
our
city
for
a
region.
We
all
work
together
to
try
to
move
this
up
this,
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
that
we
all
love
and
want
to
see
our
kids
and
grandkids
stay
here,
move
forward,
and
it's
it's
a
lot
easier.
D
When
you
have
a
team
to
work
with
and
I
want
to
say
something
about:
secretary
car,
Sean,
Garvin
and
secretary
Quigley
to
I
want
to
thank
you
both
on
another
subject
for
working
with
us
on
our
combined
sewer
overflows
and
sanitary
sewer
overflows.
That's
a
big
big
project
here
in
Allegheny
County.
For
those
who
do
that
aren't
aware.
D
83
of
our
communities
are
under
a
federal
consent
decree
to
take
care
of
what
is
a
serious
health
issue,
and-
and
we
here
in
the
city
of
pittsburgh
in
allegheny
county,
are
looking
forward
to
working
with
you
in
a
way
that
utilizes
some
of
the
state-of-the-art
kinds
of
technologies
that
are
coming
online.
Looking
for
a
lot
of
green
solutions
and
coming
up
with
a
plan
that
our
ratepayers
and
our
citizens
here
now
and
Connie
can
afford.
So
we
want
to
say
up
front.
D
D
But
anyways
I
want
to
thank
you
from
coming
up
all
the
way
from
Philadelphia
to
make
this
presentation
I
want
to
say,
without
fear
of
contradiction,
that
this
assistance
that
you've
given
today
is
going
to
be
put
to
good
use.
We
still
have
many
brownfield
sites
to
clean
up
and
repurpose
and
I
think
here
in
Pittsburgh,
we've
got
a
strong
track
record
of
successfully
redeveloping
these
vacant,
often
polluted
old
industrial
sites
and
transforming
them
into
economic
assets
for
our
community's
future.
The
city
of
Pittsburgh
really
has
been
a
leader
in
revitalization
and
sustainability.
D
In
the
north
side,
industrial
development
company
has
earned
a
place
among
many
the
many
contributors
of
that
success.
This
organization
has
really
done
a
great
job.
They
have
been
an
effective
catalyst
for
economic
and
Community
Development
and
the
redevelopment
of
brownfields
throughout
our
region.
D
Thus
far-
and
I
think
sean
has
mentioned
this-
northside
industrial
development
company
has
an
impact
on
22
municipalities
in
our
region
and
over
500
47
acres
they've
received
a
number
of
similar
grants
from
the
EPA
in
the
past
and,
as
you
John
told
you,
these
are
very
very
competitive
programs,
we're
competing
with
organizations
all
over
the
United
States
of
America.
It
speaks
very
highly
of
this
organization
that
they've
received
multiple
awards.
Now.
Why
are
we
making
this
announcement
here
in
Homewood
at
these
stations
where
apartments
today?
The
reason
we're
doing
it
is.
D
This
is
a
good
example
of
the
important
work
that
North
Side
industrial
development
companies
been
doing.
This
property
here
that
we
stand
on
was
once
an
abandoned
brownfield
site,
but
thanks
to
the
redevelopment
projects
that
North
Side
industrial
development
corporation
does
today
provides
decent,
affordable
homes
for
older
members
of
our
community.
These
apartments
that
we
see
are
tangible
proof
of
the
success
of
these
programs.
Their
redevelopment
efforts
alone
in
this
area
have
helped
to
support
more
than
1,500
jobs,
created
much
needed,
affordable
housing
and
leverage
millions
of
dollars
in
private
investment.
D
I
think
that's
the
key
that
a
lot
of
people
need
to
understand
that
that
this
money,
that
comes
from
the
federal
government
from
your
tax
dollars,
leverages
lots
of
private
investment
in
our
communities,
and
that's
why
you
can
see
that
we
can
transform
some
of
these
old
industrial
sites
into
viable
community
projects
where
people
can
grow
and
prosper.
The
grant
that
Shawn
announced
today
is
going
to
allow
them
to
continue
with
this
important
work.
This
is
a
model.
D
This
northside
industrial
development
company
is
a
model
for
redevelopment
organizations
everywhere,
so
I
just
want
to
say
one
and
and
for
all
the
hard
work
that
all
of
you
have
done,
Emily
for
all
the
hard
work
you've
done
over
the
many
years,
two
and
all
the
positive
attention
that
you
continue
to
breathe,
bring
on
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
We
want
to
commend
you
and
thank
you
for
bringing
jobs,
homes,
economic
growth
for
our
local
communities.
D
We
want
to
wish
you
continued
success
as
you
go
forward
with
this
work
and
I
know
you're,
going
to
do
a
great
job
and
taking
care
of
this
money
and
turning
it
into
something
productive
for
Pittsburgh.
In
the
community
for
all
of
the
residents
here,
thank
you
for
allowing
us
to
host
this
event
today
and
and
for
being
here
today
and
I
hope
your
summer
is
going
well
and
we
look
forward
to
being
back
with
you
soon.
A
Well,
thank
you,
representative
Doyle.
Without
all
your
support
in
Washington,
this
money
would
not
flow
very
quickly.
Mr.
Quigley
secretary
Quigley,
but
before
I
forget
I
forgot
to
be
another
thing,
your
money,
the
EPA
money
we
have
a
does.
You
know
how
much
I
mean
it's
at
least
seven.
Eight
hundred
thousand
dollars
worth
of
industrial
site,
reuse,
money,
which
requires
a
twenty-five
percent
match.
So
we've
used
our
EPA
money
for
the
twenty
five
percent
match
and
the
state's
money.
So
you
can
have
every
right
to
be
up
here
as
well.
E
Thank
You
Emily
for
those
bona
fides
I
appreciate
it.
It's
a
privilege
to
be
here
this
afternoon
on
behalf
of
governor
wolf.
He
sends
his
greetings
and
his
congratulations
for
this.
This
great
announcement
to
northside
to
this
wonderful
facility
here
at
homewood,
it's
an
honor
to
be
with
my
colleagues,
County
Executive,
mayor
councilman,
congressman
my
colleague
and
friend
Sean.
This
is
a
great
day
for
pittsburgh,
and
pittsburgh
has
many
of
these
great
days.
Pittsburgh
is
a
leader
in
brownfield
development.
E
You
know
the
residents
of
this
community
that
are
benefiting
from
a
beautiful
new
facility
which,
by
the
way,
has
geothermal
heating
and
is
going
for
LEED
certification.
So
talk
about
making
a
statement
on
climate
change
and
healthier
communities.
The
facility
that
we're
in
is
doing
that,
but
the
transformative
power
brown
sugar
development,
the
work
that
one
and
Emily
have
done.
It
is
just
tremendously
motivated
I
speak
as
a
former
mayor.
I
was
too
long
ago.
27
years
ago,
I
took
office
as
the
youngest
mayor
in
Pennsylvania.
E
I
was
eight
years
old
and
we
didn't
have
a
brownfield
program
in
my
town
and
I
think
about
now
how
important
this
tool
is
for
community
leaders
to
really
provide
the
vision
and
the
tools
and
the
resources
to
make
these
kinds
of
transformative
investments.
It's
a
tremendous
positive
statement
in
the
future.
It's
all
about
the
vision
and
I
just
want
to
congratulate
all
of
you
for
your
commitment
to
your
communities,
your
commitment
to
each
other
and
your
vision
for
a
better
community.
Congratulations.
A
F
Well,
thanks
Emily
and
thanks
Juan
for
the
work
that
the
northside
industrial
development
company
does
I
want
to
thanks,
minna
straighter,
Garvin
and
secretary
Quigley
for
their
continued
support.
I'll,
be
you
know,
probably
echoing
a
lot
of
what
congressman
Doyle
said,
but
you
know
congressman
Doyle
deserves
an
awful
lot
of
credit.
I
mean
he
talks
about
the
local
folks,
but
for
bill
and
I
to
be
able
to
go
to
Washington
and
have
someone
like
congressman,
Doyle
and
Senator
Casey,
who
support
so
many
of
the
initiatives
that
we're
doing
here
locally.
F
It's
so
important
that
we
have
that
we
had
that
leadership
and
Mike
does
that
he
just
is
such
a
great
partner
for
us
to
be
able
to
to
reach
out
and
help-
and
he
said
also,
you
know
paraphrasing
you
know,
but
the
partnership,
because
it
really
is
the
partnership
of
all
of
us
coming
together.
The
city
can't
do
it
by
themselves.
You
know
councilman,
Burgess
and
mayor
Peduto
certainly
have
a
lot
of
great
ideas,
and
we
think
we
do
too,
but
we
don't
have
the
resources
to
be
able
to
do
it
by
ourselves.
F
It's
a
partnership
that
we're
able
to
do,
and
now
with,
what's
going
on
in
this
city
and
what's
going
on
in
this
region,
all
we
need
is
a
little
bit
of
the
leverage
to
be
able
to
move
it
forward.
When
we
clean
up
the
brownfield
sites,
the
private
sector
comes
really
comes,
rushing
in
because
the
market
is
there.
The
market
is
there
to
want
to
build
in
this
neighborhood,
whether
it
be
housing,
whether
it
be
commercial
development,
but
we
need
this
help
from
from
the
EPA,
so
cigarettes.
Mr.
F
Gorman,
thank
you
so
much
because
it
really
does
help
and
thank
mr.
secretary
governor
wolf,
your
administration.
What
you
guys
are
doing
is
terrific
stuff
and
again
the
partnership
that
we
have
with
our
state
leaders
as
well.
Senator
Causton,
representative
Gainey,
who
represent
this
area
in
Harrisburg,
also
a
great
partnership
that
we
were
able
to
work
with.
So
it's
all
of
us,
working
together
with
the
community
groups
who
come
to
us
with
with
a
lot
of
the
good
ideas
and
a
lot
of
good
partnership
that
we
have
is
tremendous.
F
You
know
our
industrial
past
is
something
we're
very
proud
of,
but
the
legacy
son
and
sometimes
has
left
us
with
things
that
they
may
not
have
known
about
you
know
decades
ago
when
they
were
developing
on
the
site,
but
we're
dealing
with
now
so
building
these
sites
now,
with
LEED
certified,
with
geothermal
with
sustainability
that
the
mayor
and
I
continue
to
work
on
together,
you
know
with
the
councilman
is
something
we
can
be
very,
very
proud
of.
So
congratulations
to
everybody
and
it's
keep
working
together.
Thank.
A
Thank
you
rich
mayor.
The
only
man.
G
G
They
call
home
and
that's
really
a
win
and
that
type
of
stuff
doesn't
happen.
Unless
you
got
the
partnership
these
guys
were
talking
about.
It
has
to
be
a
commitment
from
the
federal
government,
saying
we're,
ready
and
willing
to
invest
in
environment
and
in
people.
It
has
to
be
administered
and
come
through
the
state,
and
then
it
needs
the
local
leadership
on
the
county
and
the
city
level
to
be
able
to
do
it.
So,
yes,
we
have
a
lot
of
brownfields.
We
have
a
lot
of
old
industrial
sites
along
rivers.
We
have
acres
and
acres.
G
We
also
have
it
in
our
neighborhoods.
We
have
places
like
my
dad's
uncle
Lou
at
the
Texaco
station
down
at
Frank's,
town
and
wheeler.
It
sits
there
because
it
used
to
have
gas
tanks
under
it
and
we
can
clean
it
up
and
we
can
make
it
a
place
where
there
will
be
a
new
business.
Will
there
be
new
homes
or
we
can
see
that
development
happen
in
cranberry
and
in
places
where
there
are
cornfields
and
what
happens
when
that
happens?
G
When
you
don't
invest,
as
you
see
what
happened
over
the
past
40
years
of
this
city,
where
we
declined
in
this
area
sprawled
further
and
further
out,
what
we're
doing
is
we're
saying
we're
going
to
invest
back
in
our
neighborhoods
we're
going
to
invest
back
into
making
the
areas
that
have
been
the
center's
40
50
years
ago.
The
center
of
action
once
again,
yeah
we're
gonna
watch
people
into
the
community.
Congressman
talked
about
the
sewer
overflow.
G
G
You
know
you're
gonna,
see
in
next
few
years,
somebody
restoring
that
and
it's
gonna
continue
and
continue,
and
you
already
see
it
up
and
down
Susquehanna
we
can
soon
up
and
down
Homewood
Avenue
as
well
and
right
in
the
heart
is
the
example
how
a
program
it
starts
at
the
federal
level
become
successful,
and
so
thank
you
for
hosting
us.
Thank
you
for
being
that
example
of
how
this
can
work,
and
thank
you
for
being
you,
the
leaders
and
seeing
this
new
part
of
Homewood
come
back.
C
So
mr.
secretary
on
the
federal
and
state
level,
I
want
to
welcome
you
to
homewood.
We
are
one
block
from
the
church.
I
have
passed
it
for
last
30
years.
We
got
three
blocks
from
the
house.
I
live
in,
and
two
blocks
from
the
house.
I
grew
up
in
so
I
think
I'm.
I
think
I
think,
as
moves
to
poke
you
in
the
room.
No
I'm
I
think
I'm
well
qualified
to
welcome
you
to
this
community.
C
It
is
certainly
we're
going
to
congratulate
north
side
on
the
grand
and
on
all
the
work
they
have
done,
but
really
I've
come
here.
To
really
echo.
I
am
just
grateful
to
be
part
of
the
partnership,
we're
grateful
for
a
congressman
oil
and
all
of
his
great
work
and
for
his
friendship
over
a
long
stretch
of
years.
C
Although
you
see
us
here
in
this
low
rise
phase,
two
has
already
been
funded:
there'll
be
40,
new
houses
built
all
up
and
down
Susquehanna
tioga
right
around
here,
that's
already
been
funded
by
Oxford
I
saw
Oxford
represented
somewhere
in
the
back
and
that's
going
to
be
funded,
and
so
we
want
to
just
continue.
It
I
believe
that
Pittsburgh
needs
more
affordable,
housing,
I
think
the
place
that
has
the
most
land
as
this
area
homewood.
C
H
Farkin
built
this
thing,
but
first
off
two
things:
one
is
mayor:
I
think
we've
exceeded
the
occupancy
here
in
the
room.
So
if
you
get
a
waiver
for
that,
I
really
appreciate
that.
The
the
second
thing
is
dpa
officials,
especially
don't
scare
one
been
calling
me
for
months
to
set
something
up
and
and
we're
really
little
reluctant
only
because
we're
still
trying
to
finish
the
first
floor,
commercial
space,
which
I'll
talk
about
in
a
minute.
H
We
really
wanted
to
showcase
what
this
building
really
looked
like
when
it
finally
comes
to
completion
and
somebody
from
my
staff
said
it
don't
be
stupid.
The
building
looks
great,
have
them
and
let's
move
forward
and
the
first
floor.
Space
which
is
over
here,
is
actually
a
business
incubator
that
we're
working
with
operation,
better
block
one
there
they're
releasing
the
business
spaces
and
then
going
to
bring
in
local
businesses
for
that
first
commercial
space.
We
I
think
we
have
insurance
company
coming
in
a
home
health
care
and
they're
still
working
on
the
other
ones.
H
So
it's
not
only
we're
not
only
providing
affordable
housing
for
seniors
from
the
Homewood
area,
we're
also
providing
a
space
where
businesses
can
get
their
start
and
hopefully
stay
in
the
Homewood
area
and
develop
more
jobs
and
economic
development
and
as
a
developer
without
the
EPA's
involvement.
Without
the
mayor,
the
county,
executive
and
councilman
Burgess
I
couldn't
do
my
job.
H
Yes,
we
did
build
this
building,
but
we
build
this
building
because
of
help
of
a
lot
of
people
and
especially
those
gentlemen
who
work
at
the
federal
and
state
levels
to
provide
funding
that
I
can
leverage
to
develop,
affordable
housing
and
economic
development.
It
couldn't
be
done
on
this
development.
We
actually
use
federal,
low-income
housing,
tax
credits
that
I
know
congressman
Doyle's
involved
in
retaining
we
use
them
and
brought
in
a
private
investor,
RBC
capital
and
the
bank
of
new
york
mellon,
who
are
both
here
today.
H
They
made
a
substantial
equity
investment
into
this
development,
but
then
we
also
had
to
go
out
because
they
only
provide
about
eighty
percent
of
the
financing.
Then
we
had
to
go
out
and
secure
other
sources
of
financing
with
the
Urban
Redevelopment
Authority,
who
actually
helped
clean
up
the
site
and
sell
it
to
us
at
a
nominal
fee.
They
helped
provide
financing
bridgeway
capital,
which
is
a
local
Bank
investment
company
that
produces
starting
loans
for
companies
and
also
economic
development
projects.
Without
them,
this
wouldn't
be
done.
H
Community
empowerment,
Association
operation,
better
block,
has
mentioned
before
the
homeland
community
collaborative
all
helped
us
work
on
swaging
community
concerns
about
employment
and
job
opportunities
for
local
residents.
We
had
a
fantastic
section:
three
hiring
process
with
community
empowerment,
Association
Rashad
birdsong.
There
were
40
50
guys
working
on
this
site
at
different
points
in
time
who
then
got
full
time
employment
through
their
subcontractors.
H
It's
part
of
it.
The
minority
and
women
business
enterprise
participation
was
thirty-seven
percent
on
this
project.
We
really
work
extra
hard
with
community
empowerment,
which
operation
better
block,
to
make
sure
that
people
who
live
in
Homewood
could
work
here
and
give
them
an
opportunity
to
remain
working
in
their
neighborhood.
This
beautiful
building
was
designed
by
Raja,
do
I
know
collaborative
they
are
a
city-based
architectural
firm.
H
They
work
on
a
lot
of
studies
and
in
neighborhoods
on
what
they
can
do
and
think
creatively
they're
very
creative,
as
you
can
see,
from
our
building
they're
also
pretty
expensive,
but
other
than
that
they
do
a
really
good
job.
I'm
kidding,
I'm
skating,
also
Gateway
engineers,
the
local
civil
engineer,
pittsburgh-based
civil
engineer,
had
to
really
deal
with
the
old
water
and
sewer
lines
that
we
have
here.
That's
a
challenge
in
itself.
When
you
build
on
an
urban
core
fabric,
you
run
into
a
lot
of
things.
H
You
don't
expect
most
of
all,
I'd
like
to
thank
PHF,
a
Pennsylvania
Housing
Finance
Agency,
which
is
the
allocation
of
attachments.
Carla
Falkenstein
is
here,
Brian
Hudson
runs
phf
a
and
not
only
do
we
have
some
of
the
best
mayors
and
county
executives
and
congressmen
and
EPA
secretaries.
Here
we
have
a
fantastic
director
of
phf,
a
Brian
Hudson
who
does
a
lot
of
investment
into
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
and
also
finally
senator
Kosta
and
representative
Gainey,
without
their
support
at
the
local
level.
We
again
we
want
to
be
able
to
do
this
project
and
I.