McKinley Park &
Haberman Corridor
McKinley Park Master Plan
Pittsburgh, PA
The McKinley Park Master Plan integrates sustainable stormwater management into open space improvements in McKinley Park. This historic site is a 79-acre Community Park in Pittsburgh that borders Bon Air, Beltzhoover, and Knoxville neighborhoods. The Haberman Avenue Corridor Master Plan leverages a public greenway to revitalize neighborhood housing and connect public park assets in McKinley Park with a transportation hub in Beltzhoover.
Partners
Pfaffman + Associates, Hilltop Alliance, Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy, Pittsburgh Water & Sewer Authority, Department of City Planning City of Pittsburgh, ALCOSAN, Saw Mill Run Watershed Association, National Recreation and Park Association, American Planning Association, Student Conservation Association
Project Role
Advisory Committee, contracting architecture firm, coordinating public outreach and neighborhood engagement, collecting neighborhood history
Fundraising
Design Documents
$3.5M+ from local foundations, National Recreation and Park Association, American Planning Association
Haberman Corridor Master Plan (2015), McKinley Park Master Plan (2015)
The McKinley Park Master Plan strives to improve neighborhood connections to the park and within the park, manage stormwater for the benefit of the community and water quality of the Saw Mill Run Watershed, to improve recreation opportunities, neighborhood safety, and spur community and residential revitalization. The Master Plan recommends new accessible entrances at Upper McKinley Park, to establish new trails that better connect the park to the adjoining neighborhoods, to reconfigure existing fields and recreation facilities, to turn park streets into ‘complete streets’, and to renovate the Community Center building.
The plan focuses on connectivity, diversity, and flexibility. The Master Plan was designed to implement city-wide recommendation of the Open Space PGH plan, the design for a green, open space network throughout Pittsburgh’s most diverse neighborhoods.
McKinley Park occupies a substantial area of open space within the Saw Mill Run Watershed, which Pittsburgh Water and Sewer Authority (PWSA) identified as a priority stormwater reduction target. The combined sanity-storm sewers traverse the park and discharge into the river, causing combined sewage overflow during nearly every rainstorm. The park has steep topography, is full of erosion, and has experienced flooded amenities.
Haberman Corridor Master Plan
The Haberman Corridor Master Plan aims to improve mobility in Beltzhoover, use open space innovation as a catalyst for future development and housing rehabilitation, create new recreation opportunities in the neighborhood, connect the neighborhood to existing transportation networks, and improve safety in the neighborhood. The Haberman Corridor is a patchwork of vacant lots, paths, steps, alleys, and streets.
The plan recommends establishing and defining a Warrington Avenue gateway, housing strategy, improvements along Haberman Corridor, restoring stairs and sidewalks, establish a McKinley Park connection, create transportation links with bikes and buses, establishing a formal pedestrian loop, and addressing stormwater and green infrastructure. The plan seeks to improve overall community walkability and health, facilitate the movement of people, wildlife and flora in order to reduce isolation, promote neighborhood health, improve biodiversity, and increase neighborhood resiliency. The flexible framework is designed for phased implementation.