Saturday, May 15, 2010

YPA Counts Down the Top Ten: #7 Aaron's Building, Connellsville

For the next several days, until May 21, YPA will count down its 2010 list of the Top Ten Best Preservation Opportunities on its blog. On Friday, May 21, YPA will host a Historic Preservation Month Celebration, "Old is the New Green," at the Kelly-Strayhorn Theater in East Liberty, starting at 6:00 p.m.


Registration details are on YPA's website, http://www.youngpreservationists.org.


Since 2003, YPA has celebrated historic preservation with its annual list of the Top Ten Best Preservation Opportunities in the Pittsburgh Area. The list, compiled from nominations received from various individuals and organizations, is designed to encourage investment in historic sites throughout the nine-county southwestern Pennsylvania region. The list has been used by property owners to draw positive attention to their properties, raise investment funds, secure grants, and generate political goodwill for their historic sites.


The sites featured on YPA's list come from six different counties and include industrial structures, Main Street commercial buildings, schools, a train station, and a bridge. Main Street features prominently in the list, with four of the Top Ten sites being situated in an existing Main Street commercial district. The remaining six sites are within blocks of an existing Main Street community.


The criteria used to select the Top Ten List include the following:

1. 50-year Threshold (is it 50 years old or older);

2. Historic & Architectural Significance;

3. Threats to the Site;

4. Community Input; and

5. Feasibility of the Solution.





















#7 The Aaron’s Building, Connellsville


The Aaron’s Building is historically important for having once housed Connellsville’s greatest furniture retailer. The Aaron’s Furniture Store was founded in Connellsville by Myer Aaron, a Jewish immigrant merchant.


In a city where a considerable amount of historic building fabric has been lost or detrimentally altered, the Aaron Building is the last great remnant of a once thriving district of furniture retailers and, to a greater extent, a physical reminder of the once bustling commercial core of Connellsville. Among the tallest buildings in the city, the Aaron Building was one of several “skyscrapers” to be built at the opening of the 20th century in Connellsville. It is among the last to remain.


The building has been abandoned since the 1970s and has suffered from neglect. Absentee ownership and unfinished construction work on the building in the mid-2000s has caused the building to deteriorate further. Its roof is in need of immediate repair and a wall facing a vacant lot on Pittsburgh Street needs to be stabilized.


The Aaron Building would be a tremendous opportunity for the beginnings of a revitalized Connellsville. The building would be an ideal location for a boutique hotel, a restaurant, apartments, offices, or any number of other ventures that can complement the Great Allegheny Passage Hike and Bike Trail.

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