Driving in the 'Burgh
© copyright 1998, 1999, 2001
Gregg Podnar
Driving in Pittsburgh has many unique qualities. Some say this is due
to the fact that Pittsburgh is built on a small black hole. Barring
loose reference to the local coal mines, this fact has not yet been
firmly
established. Nevertheless, it is a useful model for explaining some
of the features inherent in getting around around here. There is no
direct route between any two points.
Pittsburgh is the only place I've lived where you can look out your
living room window and be looking down on the roof of your next-door
neighbor. Some streets are so steep they can't get the paving
equipment up them; but people still drive on them. Some are so steep
that the sidewalk is concrete steps with handrail. Some streets are not
even streets, but are only a staircase (with a street sign to identify it)!
It's fun to find one of these on a map thinking you can drive along that
line but discover the reality when you get there.
Directions
There's the Northside, the Southside, the East End, and the West End.
However, when someone tells you how to get somewhere, they never mention
the points of the compass.
There are really only two directions in Pittsburgh: there's
"Towards Town" and "Away From Town". No matter where you go, people
know which way to go to get to town (maybe because they can find their way home
from there).
When you first drive in Pittsburgh, you learn how to get home from
downtown (dahn'tahn). When you drive around, you get lost and end up
on Penn Avenue. You drive for a while, and if you don't start to see
downtown, you turn around, go downtown, and go home from downtown.
Once you learn this, you are nearly as proficient as anyone at getting
around.
It has been pointed out that most directions will not include street
names. This is because until recently about 99.873% of the streets
did not have signs. People have learned to give directions another
way. When they say, "Go about a half mile and turn right..." they
mean anywhere from 200 yards to a mile. If you ask after the street
name, they'll tell you they "don't know it, just turn right." One
clue that you are not lost is that other cars will be turning right
there too, even if it looks like a side street, it will be a major
route.
From Point-A to Point-B
Pittsburgh is the only place you can go from Point-A to Point-B,
making fifteen consecutive lefts, and never cross your path. On the
other hand, there are a few roads which manage to cross themselves.
It is unwise to attempt to go around the block to get back to a turn
you missed; you may end up in Pottsville.
You know how to get from Point-A to Point-B, and you know
how to get from Point-A to Point-C. But to go from
Point-B to Point-C, you have to go home first.
Every now and then, you are on the route from Point-A to
Point-B, and you need to find a drug store. You make a left, and
all of a sudden find yourself on the route from Point-A to
Point-C. You've just folded space in the fourth dimension.
Everybody gets from Point-A to Point-B a different way. This may be
why, when a major route is closed for repairs, it doesn't seem to
affect traffic much (except a tunnel). If you go to the mall with a
friend, the conversation often goes like this:
"Where are you going?"
"To the mall."
"How do you get to the mall this way?"
You will find that you go from Point-A to Point-B using one route, and
from Point-B back to Point-A using a different route. Further, on
the first route, you will drive along a piece of road going one
direction, and on the way home, you will drive along the same piece of
road, going the same direction, and it will make sense to you.
Going Home
Wherever you go, when you decide to go home, you know your route from
there. Interestingly enough, you can often see another spot, like that other end
of a bridge, or that intersection off to the left; and had you been there,
you would
go home following an entirely different route. But you wouldn't think
of driving over there to go home from there. Sometimes, if you're just
parked facing town, you take one route, but if you're parked facing away
from town you take a different one. It just isn't worth trying to turn
around to take the other route.
It's fun when people come to visit from out of town. You'll take
them, say, to the store. On the way home, they are completely lost,
you turn a corner, and you're home. Then you go out to a restaurant.
On the way home, they are lost again (a different route), you turn a
different corner, and, your home. This goes on for the whole visit.
One fun activity with visitors is to take them up Mount Washington,
or the West End Overlook. After identifying some interesting
landmarks, choose one, and try to get there. If you make it, look
back from whence you came. Choose another spot, and try to get there.
You won't get home 'till after dark.
If your visiting friends drive you around, you'll invariably come to an
intersection where they have to turn left, or right. When you tell
them: "Turn either way, it doesn't matter." they get perplexed. But
you can get them there either way, and it's about the same; there's no
direct route between any two points.
Drivers
It is difficult to drive a large vehicle in Pittsburgh. Truck drivers
have to be real pros to maneuver around some of the turns.
Busses are rude: if a bus driver can catch your eye, the bus will cut
you off. Also, busses don't pull to the curb to pick-up or discharge
passengers, so you can't get by while they are stopped.
Most people in cars are pretty much asleep (except when they let someone
turn left in front of them (see below)). Car drivers never see
bicycles. There are some who try to hit bicycles, but most of
them just don't notice bicycles (wear a helmet).
The Pittsburgh Turn Signal is not to signal until just starting to make the
turn (unless they are at the head of the line turning left (see
below)). You can sit behind someone for two minutes at a light, and
not until the light turns green, and they start to roll, will you see
their blinker. It has been suggested this custom originated with
thrifty drivers trying to save the turn signal lamps.
The Parkway
All multi-lane, limited access roads around Pittsburgh are called "the
Parkway". No one knows why. The Parkway East, the Parkway West,
the Parkway North (that's new).
When they build the southerly bypass to the Parkway
East around the Squirrel Hill tunnels it will probably be named the
Parkway South.
Pittsburghers are not prolific at changing lanes or merging.
So they tend to get into the lane they want to end up in as early
as possible (maybe so they can sleep most of the way home).
When there's roadwork ahead, they will get into the open lane at the
first warning, leaving the other lane empty for miles (they'll be mad
at you if you use it to the merge point). Signs have to be erected which
order: "Merge at Merge Point". Pittsburghers then politely take turns
merging. But not at parkway entrances.
Pittsburgh is the only place where the bottom of the parkway entrance
acceleration ramp can have a stop sign (the Squirrel Hill on-ramp is a
riot: 1)stop, 2)foot-to-the-floor, 3)through the exit ramp
chicane, 4)then into the tunnel).
Many people go to the end of a normal accelleration ramp and
stop anyway, waiting for a long gap in their rear-view mirrors.
Left Turns
Because most streets are filled with parked cars, there is generally
only one lane of traffic in each direction. When you are at the front
of the line, waiting for a light, and the person facing you has their
left turn signal on, you are set up for the Pittsburgh Left.
You wave them on, or flash your lights, and they shoot across just as
the light begins to change. If you don't, they wait for the whole
light, as does everyone behind them.
Parking
Pittsburgh developed greatly near the beginning of the Industrial
Revolution, before all the cars were built. Hence, there are few
driveways; most everyone parks on the street. This makes most streets
fairly narrow for driving purposes.
Parking in town or near the universities is so lucrative an endeavor,
that it is suggested this is the reason there is less gambling and
prostitution in Pittsburgh.
If the snows of winter are deep, the plow (if it comes), builds a wall
of snow between the driving lane, and your car. Digging out a 'slip'
is enough effort that people place old chairs in the empty spot when
they go away. This reserves the spot so they have a place to park
on their return home. Most people respect this custom. But some will
move your chair. (Others will steal your chair.)
Orbiting for a parking place is not uncommon. Otherwise, you have to
park a few blocks away to carry all the groceries home.
If you see someone
heading for a parked car with keys-in-hand, it is customary to put on
your turn signal. This claims the spot as yours. Only newcomers
choose to ignore this message and try to zip in and steal the spot.
Tunnels
They say it's because of the hills, but this may be too simple an
explanation. The Fort Pitt tunnels, the Squirrel Hill tunnels, and
the Liberty Tubes are the primary thoroughfares. There is also the
transit tunnel, the tunnel-to-nowhere, and extra points if you
actually manage to use the Armstrong tunnels (they curve) to get
somewhere rather than when hopelessly lost near down town.
You may also notice that going through a tunnel
transports you from one kind of place to an entirely different kind
of place, not unlike Dorothy in Oz. The best one is entering the city
from the Airport where you leave a verdant undeveloped area and come
out to a spectacular view of down town.
There is a kind of warping that happens in the tunnels. As people
drive through them, it has been pointed out that they go slower and slower.
Before a tunnel, traffic may be backed up for miles, but once through
it's clear and fast. Same two lanes.
It has been conjectured that this is a time-space compression
due the accelleration not of the drivers, but of the small black holes
which the tunnels represent. Compressing space through that seeming
void in a hillside suggests that there may be something more in those
hills than coal.
Another view from another 'burgh driver.
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