Around Every Corner, A New Phenomenon: The Orbit at 10

weathered number 10 on glass door
Ten … and feeling the passage of time

The year was 2015—late summer/early fall, probably. Your author was at The Cooper Hewitt Design Museum in New York City[1]. The exhibit was one of those catch-all “items from the collection”-like things—no specific theme, but we’re going to put out a bunch interesting random stuff and, like Lou Pappan, you’re gonna like it.

From across a big gallery room, the voice of a fellow museum-goer was unmistakeable. I didn’t know the guy, but I sure as hell knew his accent. He was super hopped-up over a particular piece that I hadn’t made my way around to yet.

The chair, first introduced as part of the 1939 World’s Fair[2], was formed by a single curled piece of thick glass. With its clean, simple lines and modern industrial materials—somewhere between Bauhaus and The Jetsons—it was as perfect an example of midcentury future-gazing as you’re likely to find. The piece was manufactured by Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company in, as this man was proud to announce, “The card says Pittsburgh, but that was made in Ford City!”

Turchin/Dierra glass chair manufactured by Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company
Turchin/Dierra glass chair manufactured by Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company, Ford City, PA. [photo: Cooper-Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum]

The chair went on the list—and that list was already pretty long. Pittsburgh Orbit was in its first year, and we were still figuring out what we were doing. The buffet of things to write about seemed like an inexhaustible supply of unexplored (for me, at least) places, histories, oddball quirks, and un-pointed-out artifacts: Toynbee Tiles, city steps, fish fries, repurposed synagogues, dead malls, and weird pizza were all things that got covered early on. Around every corner, a new phenomenon; in any far-flung outpost, a connection to Pittsburgh.

At that point, I’d been around the metro Pittsburgh block—perhaps more than most—but still never set foot in many city neighborhoods. Towns up and down the river waited unexplored. I was out to change all that—go everywhere within arm’s reach, see everything I could, make this digital publication as deep an exploration of off-the-radar Pittsburgh as it could be.

Two sycamore trees trained and grafted together to form an archway over an entrance sidewalk
The twin sycamores of Sheraden—a city neighborhood I’d not been to previously

With the creation of Pittsburgh Orbit, that casual poking took on a more targeted, express purpose—look at the map, take the afternoon and go somewhere you’ve never been. Chase a story where it looks promising. Go to all those places you’ve heard about, but never actually been to. Always try the local pizza shop.

And when you open your eyes and really start looking, things appear like magic where a younger you would’ve walked right by them. Sure, Mary statues are everywhere, but so is mechanic art and karate art and sticker art. A reader hipped us to sidewalk stamps and finding them became an obsession. We found surprises in alleys and roadside thickets, under bridges and painted on street surfaces.

black and white photo of Andy Warhol lifting weights with Jean-Michel Basquiat looking on and a weight set in the background
Warhol, Basquiat, and a weight set, New York, 1983 (photo: Bart van Leeuwen)

Ten years ago, my friend John was still alive. Among his many kooky interests, he’d done a lot of research to document that a weight set he’d purchased at an estate sale had previously belonged to Andy Warhol. We’d planned to do a story to lay out all the evidence, complete with goofy staged photos of John pumping iron in some ridiculous location. Sadly, we never got to any of that.

Losing John was devastating—especially for his family and the friends who’d known him for decades. It also made the casual feel of much of the work seem very real. These stories, however goofy they can be, are of people and places, the times they lived in and businesses they relied on. They’re precious, delicate things that can disappear before we know it.

man holding open box of pizza with smoke stack and steel mill behind him
Pizza: Monessen style. Orbit pizza consultant Paul with full “tray” of Nuzzaci’s.

And they have. Eating the cloud/sponge pizza from Nuzzaci’s was one of the most extraordinary food experiences this low-budget gourmand has had the pleasure of expanding his waistline over. The basement-of-a-house pizzeria in the Monessen slopes closed in 2022 after 70 years in business.

It’s not alone. In its mere ten years of existence—a pinprick in the tapestry of time—the site has covered businesses and people, ghost signs and art projects that are now gone forever. Chiodo’s was razed to become a Walgreen’s before we started publishing—so we can be excused from that one—but D&G Pizza in Beaver Falls closed just last fall and we never even got to try it. Your author will never forgive himself for missing this opportunity.

colorful abstract designs painted on metal shed panels
One of a kind. Coker art shed (detail), Perry South

While there will always be people doing interesting things—at least, we sure hope so—the number of Nuzzacis or Cokers or Central Parks out there is a finite number. We’ll not be so bold as to assume we’ve reported on everything Orbit-worthy, but after ten years of raking the region, we can say well enough that we’ve exhausted all the easy, medium, and even harder-to-get-to stories. Really juicy features like these don’t come along every day.

Do people want a survey of great men’s room signs?

So where does that leave us? The list—that same list that still has Turchin/Dierra’s glass chair waiting to be reported-on—has a slew of random ideas. We’re sitting on 50 “draft” stories in the hopper. But I’m telling you, they’re either playing to an increasingly obscure set of interests or vastly more difficult to act on. Only Orbit super-fans are going to hang with us through Great Mens Room Signs or Sketchy Law Offices.

exterior of windowless offices of Apple and Apple, Attorneys at Law, Pittsburgh, PA
… how about sketchy law offices?

I’m no less-inclined to go wandering or take pictures, but also pulled in many other directions—responsibilities, sure, but also other creative pursuits. So we’ll see where that takes us.

For now, it’s not goodbye, but more so long. (Is there a difference?) We’ll be back, but with no expectation that it’ll be next week or even next month. Until then, to anyone who read and enjoyed, commented or shared, sent an idea or chuckled at one of our dumb music references, thank you for participating. Now get out there and order some weird pizza before they take that away from us too.


  1. The museum itself has a Pittsburgh connection as it’s situated in the former home of Andrew Carnegie, a mansion on 91st Street, Upper East Side.
  2. https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2015/07/29/the-miracle-of-glass/

6 thoughts on “Around Every Corner, A New Phenomenon: The Orbit at 10

  1. Paul says:
    Paul's avatar

    GREAT WORK thru the years. I was always happy tag along and help out when needed. He’s to more pizza outings in 2026!!!

    xoxoxoxox,

    Paul (Peculiar Pizza Purveyer)

    Like

  2. Claudia McGill says:
    Claudia McGill's avatar

    Your work means and has meant a lot to me. This is one wacky planet we’re on and I think most people are missing the best part of it-the layers of detail in every moment and every square inch, a delight just there for some digging or some serendipity or some magic wand. So for me finding the Orbit felt like one of those moments. Thank you.

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  3. rogerbeal47 says:
    Roger Beal's avatar

    This native-but-moved-away yinzer looks forward to your articles, showing me stuff I remember from years past, places I never knew about … and pizzas *purportedly* as good as pies from Vincent’s. I understand your need to stick a toe in different waters, but please consider finding a way to include future stories about the stuff that makes Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh. Many thanks, and best wishes for future ink and pixels!

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  4. Christian says:
    Christian's avatar

    This is my first time commenting, but I have been a long-time lurker. As a southwestern PA native who has since moved away from home, thank you for allowing me to explore vicariously with you. 

    I stumbled across your writing somewhat serendipitously — while searching on Google, attempting to find out more information about the neighborhoods of our city that I had never explored, as well as the many city steps that connect them. What I came to find from your writing was so much more than just informative, but witty and insightful as well. You brought attention to the many quirks and unusual traditions that make Pittsburgh so unique; I smiled since my adopted grandmother had a ceramic grotto of Mary on the side of her house in Greensburg. I paused to think back on the number of ghost signs that I passed on a regular basis, but never thought twice about. I chuckled about how houses – identical in architecture could still have unique personalities of their owners shine through in their unique paint jobs and window decor. 

    While grappling with the sickness and death that I was being exposed to on a day-to-day basis as a fresh faced 23-year-old, I confronted my own mortality, looking at the faces of the young men and women of the gravestone pictures and the roadside teddy bears. I cried when listening to, “All The Way” after learning about the unusual story of the Antignanis. I daydreamed of exploring the many pizza places that dotted the city and the valley, and all of the places in between — though I still have yet to do so, and now I’ll never get to try that little place in Monessen (even more tragic, as I grew up only 15 minutes away from there). 

    Every so often, when I was missing Pittsburgh, I’d come back to read The Orbit, and home wouldn’t feel so far away. 

    This is all to say, your writing has been cathartic for me, and I have immensely enjoyed it over the last 5 years. 

    See you later, and thank you again! 

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