Reuse the Igloo (Pittsburgh CIvic Arena)

The Issue

Throughout the first half of the 20th century Pittsburgh was known for its industrial innovation. This often came at a cost in terms of destruction our environment. In 1958, as part of the 200th Anniversary of Pittsburgh, ground was broken for this icon of modern design and engineering. It was a symbol of our recovery with its innovative movable domed roof showing off the clean air and skyline. 

The Arena was designed as part of a visionary but misguided “Cultural Acropolis” for the Symphony akin to New York’s Lincoln Center, edged by then-trendy modern high rise residential towers offering clean new housing with the promise of light, space and views. Of course, there is another side of that story, the failure of urban renewal that still haunts residents of the Hill today. (See Chris Moore’s Wiley Avenue Days). 

Our Vision:
Keys to our future competitiveness will be about conservation, local job creation, and rebuilding green. So let’s imagine that the stainless steel-clad Igloo could become unique and a destination for visitors to learn of our innovative ways. It could become our answer to Chicago’s Millennium Park or New York's High Line. 


In order to visualize this transformation, imagine that we would remove most of the interior seating “bowl” and all of the non-structural stuff of the old arena. Now, stripped to its structural elegance, we would have the ability to build new uses within it (imagine a hermit crab!) and still have room for the coolest park around with a roof that opens in summer and closes in winter! 


Imagine this circular park with lush landscape in summer and the recycled Pen’s rink in winter. It could have a small amphitheater next to the rink for jazz, Cirque du Soleil, Squonk Opera—all complementing the business for the new Arena. Imagine a hip “destination hotel,” retail, restaurants and a surrounding residential neighborhood with views every bit as dramatic as Mt. Washington. A key feature would be a reconnected Wiley Avenue connecting the City to the Hill once again.

This would not be an isolated place like it is today, but a truly “civic” space fully integrated with surrounding new development as a NEW symbol befitting Pittsburgh’s rebirth as a place of innovation.

go to www.reusetheigloo.org to learn more!

This petition had 287 supporters

The Issue

Throughout the first half of the 20th century Pittsburgh was known for its industrial innovation. This often came at a cost in terms of destruction our environment. In 1958, as part of the 200th Anniversary of Pittsburgh, ground was broken for this icon of modern design and engineering. It was a symbol of our recovery with its innovative movable domed roof showing off the clean air and skyline. 

The Arena was designed as part of a visionary but misguided “Cultural Acropolis” for the Symphony akin to New York’s Lincoln Center, edged by then-trendy modern high rise residential towers offering clean new housing with the promise of light, space and views. Of course, there is another side of that story, the failure of urban renewal that still haunts residents of the Hill today. (See Chris Moore’s Wiley Avenue Days). 

Our Vision:
Keys to our future competitiveness will be about conservation, local job creation, and rebuilding green. So let’s imagine that the stainless steel-clad Igloo could become unique and a destination for visitors to learn of our innovative ways. It could become our answer to Chicago’s Millennium Park or New York's High Line. 


In order to visualize this transformation, imagine that we would remove most of the interior seating “bowl” and all of the non-structural stuff of the old arena. Now, stripped to its structural elegance, we would have the ability to build new uses within it (imagine a hermit crab!) and still have room for the coolest park around with a roof that opens in summer and closes in winter! 


Imagine this circular park with lush landscape in summer and the recycled Pen’s rink in winter. It could have a small amphitheater next to the rink for jazz, Cirque du Soleil, Squonk Opera—all complementing the business for the new Arena. Imagine a hip “destination hotel,” retail, restaurants and a surrounding residential neighborhood with views every bit as dramatic as Mt. Washington. A key feature would be a reconnected Wiley Avenue connecting the City to the Hill once again.

This would not be an isolated place like it is today, but a truly “civic” space fully integrated with surrounding new development as a NEW symbol befitting Pittsburgh’s rebirth as a place of innovation.

go to www.reusetheigloo.org to learn more!

The Decision Makers

Former U.S. Senate
2 Members
Patrick J. Toomey
Former US Senate - Pennsylvania
Bob Casey
Former U.S. Senate - Pennsylvania
Thomas Corbett
Former Governor - Pennsylvania
Jake Wheatley
Former State House of Representatives - Pennsylvania-19
Mike Doyle
Former US House of Representatives - Pennsylvania-14
Wayne Fontana
Pennsylvania State Senate - District 42

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Petition created on March 27, 2011