Parks
Riverview Park Alliance

Riverview Park is a 287 acre park on Pittsburgh's North Side. The park is known for its wooded trails and hillsides. It features over eleven miles of hiking and walking trails, which are shared with horseback riders. There is also a two-mile loop road that is used by walkers, joggers and bikers.

 

Along with several picnic shelters and picnic areas, the park is home to the Allegheny Observatory. The park also has a large variety of wildlife including deer, squirrels, raccoons and many more as well as a large variety of birds. Riverview Park Alliance was founded in December 2000 as a 501C non profit Corporation. Our Mission Statement is: Conserve, protect, and enhance the natural resources and the historical and recreational assets of Riverview Park through the mobilization and coordination of the efforts of neighborhoods, community organizations,businesses and institutions. Riverview Park Alliance works in partnership with the Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy, Partners in the Parks and the Riverview Park Maintenance. Website: Riverview Park Alliance

 
Allegheny Observatory

The Allegheny Observatory is located on the Riverview Park grounds.

City Councilman William Peduto is the Executive Producer of a new documentary on the site, conceived by Pittsburgh Filmakers artist Dan Handley. 

Some amazing facts in the documentary about the observatory:
*  Standard time zones originated in Pittsburgh at the Allegheny Observatory in 1883
*  40% of all known star distances in the universe were determined by the Allegheny Observatory
*  The Allegheny Observatory maintains one of the world's largest and most accurate star measurement collections dating back to 1914. 
*  Allegheny Observatory director James Keeler proved in 1895 that Saturn's mysterious rings could not be solid but composed of smaller particles that orbit the planet - gaining him immediate world-wide fame among atronomers.
*  Two extrasolar planets were discovered at the Allegheny Observatory.
*  The first director of the Allegheny Observatory, Samuel Pierpont Langley, established the scientific discipline of astrophysics with the publication of his textbook, The New Astronomy.
*  The Allegheny Observatory is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.

The National Park Service Website describes it as follows: "The Allegheny Observatory represents an important site associated not only with significant men in the history of the science of astronomy, Samuel Pierpont Langley, Hames Edwatd Keeler, and John Brashear, but also represents an important research institution where the  instruments and data of the past are today coupled with the latest technologies, to continue the process of making new discoveries that are in the very forefront of astronomical research."

Further information about the movie can be found on the website at www.aothemovie.com

 
Riverview Park
Riverview Park Alliance Website :  This website has a beautiful photogallery with historical information about many of the architectural elements found in the park. 

 Riverview Park borders Brighton Heights on the North. It is nestled between Perrysville Avenue, Woods Run and Marshall Avenues. Vehicular traffic access to the park by way of the Davis Avenue Bridge is currently restricted until the bridge is rebuilt, but foot traffic on this bridge is still allowed at this time. 

Located in nearby Observatory Hill, this 287-acre park includes hiking and cycling trails, a large picnic pavilion, and picnic shelters. When Mary Schenley donated Schenley Park to the City of Pittsburgh in 1889, this triggered the now famous cross-town competition. Residents of the former City of Allegheny decided they also wanted a park to call their own and solicited the help of City of Allegheny Mayor and nature lover, William M Kennedy. Under his guidance, the residents pooled their money and bought the Watson property in 1894. They donated it to the City of Allegheny, which became part of Pittsburgh in 1907. In its early years, the park had an amphitheater, merry-go-round, and a small zoo with a flying cage, a bear pit, and elk paddock.

During the late 1930’s and early 1940’s, Works Progress Administration workers built several rugged buildings and stone walls that still define the park’s architectural character, including the park office, the Valley Refuge Shelter, and two bus shelters.

An interesting landmark in the park is the Watson Cabin built in 1894. This 75-year-old cabin, once known as the Watson Presbyterian Church, is a lasting reminder of the park’s earlier days as a dairy farm. The Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy and the City have plans to restore Riverview’s Chapel shelter to its historical design.

In Riverview Park, you can also visit the landmark Allegheny Observatory. Built in 1912, this intriguing building houses two telescopes and an astronomical laboratory, which are still used today for, research by the University of Pittsburgh. It is open to the public for tours.

 
Brighton Heights Park
This park is located off of Benton Ave, across from the Little Sisters of the Poor facility. Softball and Baseball programs are offered at this park by the Brighton Heights Athletic Association During the summer, swimming is available at the Jack Stack Pool in this park.
 
Marmaduke Park

Marmaduke Park is located at the end of Bonaventure Street, off of California Avenue. It has a state of the art playground with an active fountain in the summer. It had a dek hockey rink with league play organized by the Brighton Heights Athletic Association.

 

 
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