Pittsburgh and the Appalachians: Cultural and Natural Resources in a Postindustrial Age

Pittsburgh and the Appalachians: Cultural and Natural Resources in a Postindustrial Age

Pittsburgh and the Appalachians: Cultural and Natural Resources in a Postindustrial Age

Pittsburgh and the Appalachians: Cultural and Natural Resources in a Postindustrial Age

Hardcover(1)

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Overview

Few American cities reflect the challenges and promise of a twenty-first-century economy better than Pittsburgh and its surrounding region. Once a titan of the industrial age, Pittsburgh flourished from the benefits of its waterways, central location, and natural resources-bituminous coal to fire steel furnaces; salt and sand for glass making; gas, oil, and just enough ore to spark an early iron industry. Today, like many cities located in the manufacturing triangle that stretches from Boston to Duluth to St. Louis, Pittsburgh has made the transition to a service-based economy.

Pittsburgh and the Appalachians presents a collection of eighteen essays that explore the advantages and disadvantages that Pittsburgh and its surrounding region face in the new global economy, from the perspectives of technology, natural resources, workforce, and geography.  It offers an extensive examination of the processes and factors that have transformed much of industrial America during the past half-century, and shows how other cities can learn from the steps Pittsburgh has taken through redevelopment, green space acquisition, air and water quality improvement, cultural revival, and public-private partnerships to create a more livable, economically viable region for future populations.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780822942825
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Publication date: 06/30/2006
Edition description: 1
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Joseph L. Scarpaci is professor of geography at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University and author of Barrios and Plazas: Heritage Tourism and Globalization in the Spanish Amiercan Centro Histórico.

Kevin J. Patrick is associate professor of geography and planning at Indiana University of Pennsylvania.

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