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I've applied for a promotion that will require a move from the Los Angeles area to Pittsburgh. I know that I'm looking forward to many advantages with the move: lower crime rates and housing prices, not to mention the promotion itself. Any other reasons I should pick up my little family and haul them across country?

2006-06-29 18:17:52 · 4 answers · asked by knitting wounded 3 in Travel United States Other - United States

4 answers

I lived in Pittsburgh my whole life until last year. It is a good city to raise a family and has rich history. Many people live in the suburbs and unfortunately stay in these areas, not taking advantage of what the city offers.The downtown is only busy with people during the day and part of the weekends.
Pittsburgh does not have as much ethnic diversity as LA, there is barely any Hispanic culture and the city is not always tourist friendly to foreigners.
Pittsburgh is a great town for football as well as other sporting events. It has all the benefits of a 1st class city without being too overwhelming. Pittsburgh has a small town feel even though it is PA's 2nd largest city. The weather is best during the early fall and late spring. Summers are quite humid and winter tends to stay until mid/late April. Pittsburgh has less sunny days than LA and this can be depressing during the cold months. Pittsburgh is cheaper than LA and people are generally friendlier when approached.
I love Pittsburgh and miss the city often. I also love LA and would like to live there one day. The cities are both very different and unique in their own ways. Good Luck!

2006-06-30 04:21:42 · answer #1 · answered by Kwaz 2 · 11 1

"The vibrant ten-block district known as the Golden Triangle, at the heart of downtown PITTSBURGH, stands at the confluence of the Monongahela, Allegheny and Ohio rivers, once bitterly fought over as the gateway to the West. The French built Fort Duquesne on the site in 1754, only for it to be destroyed four years later by the British, who replaced it with Fort Pitt. Industry began with the development of iron foundries in the early 1800s, and by the time of the Civil War, Pittsburgh was producing half of the iron and one third of the glass in the US. Soon after, the city became the world's leading producer of steel, thanks to the vigorous expansion programs of Andrew Carnegie, who, by 1870, was the richest man in the world. Present-day Pittsburgh is dotted with his cultural bequests, along with those of other wealthy forefathers including the Mellon bankers, the Frick coal merchants and the Heinz food producers.

Though saddled with a Victorian reputation for dirt and pollution, the city experienced a transformation after the 1950s. A face-lift involved large-scale demolition of abandoned steel mills, which freed up much of the downtown waterfront, but all-out yuppification has been kept in check by the student population and the small-town feel of the older ethnic neighborhoods to the north and south. Pittsburgh today is one of America's most attractive and most liveable cities; resilience and enthusiasm rather than coal fumes fill the air, and sleek architecture and green parks supplant smokestacks and slums. The popular Andy Warhol Museum, opened in 1994, has bolstered Pittsburgh's image as a destination city, while an enormous new Convention Center will bring in major conferences, which is sure to add to the influx of visitors.

Each of Pittsburgh's close-knit neighborhoods – the South Side and Mount Washington, across the Monongahela River from the Golden Triangle, the North Side across the Allegheny River, and Oakland, the university area in the east – attests in its own way to the city's history and its resurgence. Easily accessible from each other, they retain individual identities while remaining part of a proud whole."

-Introduction to Pittsburgh, PA; Yahoo! Travel

There are many good things around Pittsburgh. Who knows? Maybe my programmer who lives nearby will bump into you someday. Oh, don't forget to check out Primanti Bros. Restaurant or The Incline.

Sites to visit:

http://www.city.pittsburgh.pa.us/
http://www.pittsburghchannel.com/

Good luck on your move!

2006-06-30 01:30:37 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You are leaving a city with no NFL teams and
moving to the home of the
Reigning Super Bowl Champions.

2006-06-30 01:26:09 · answer #3 · answered by billhill1066 6 · 0 0

If it means more pay and better life go for it. And your kids get to enjoy winter. They'll get to make snowmen, snow angels and go sledding.

2006-06-30 01:21:30 · answer #4 · answered by deltazeta_mary 5 · 0 0

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