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Keystone Crossroads: Rust or Revival? explores the urgent challenges pressing upon Pennsylvania's cities. Four public media newsrooms are collaborating to report in depth on the root causes of our state's urban crisis -- and on possible solutions. Keystone Crossroads offers reports on radio, web, social media, television and newspapers, and through public events.Our partner stations are WHYY in Philadelphia, WPSU in State College and witf in Harrisburg. Read all of the partner stories here.Pittsburgh’s WQED joins the collaboration as an associate partner. Support for this project comes from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Pittsburgh Evaluates Its Hundreds Of Staircases For The First Time

Irina Zhorov
/
90.5 WESA
The intersection of Romeo and Frazier streets in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh.

On Oct. 3, Pittsburghers will walk up and down the formidable stairways of the hilly South Side Slopes neighborhood with maps in hand. The StepTrek, which started more than a decade ago, raises awareness and funds for the Slopes’ aging stairs.

The StepTrek is organized by the South Side Slopes Neighborhood Association, which has been taking care of local steps for years.

But now the city is stepping up — no pun intended — to look at the issue of stairs throughout the entire city.

The whole of Pittsburgh is a crinkled jumble of hills sloping down into the flats that flank its rivers. Long, sometimes zigzagging, sets of steps have helped people navigate the vertical maze of neighborhoods since the late 19th century, when the steps started going up.

But the stairways — there are about 700, more than in any other U.S. city — have never been a particularly well-managed asset.

In fact, until 1999, when a relative newcomer to the city named Bob Regan became a bit obsessed with the stairways and took a few months to catalogue them, the city didn’t even know how many there were or where they were.

Using Regan’s geo-tagged catalogue of steps, the city is conducting the first-ever comprehensive survey of its vertical infrastructure.

The effort largely relies on volunteer surveyors, who are trained to look for cracks, rust, chipping and other signs of deterioration on the steps and rails. So far more than 300 volunteers have signed up.

For now, Pittsburgh just wants to know what it’s dealing with.

Read more of this report at the website of our partner Keystone Crossroads.