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  2. Dozen Bake Shop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dozen_Bake_Shop

    During 2007, the bakery made $340,000 in sales. [2] By the end of 2007, the Pittsburgh City Paper named Dozen the "Best place to indulge your sweet tooth." [11] In January 2008, 1,300 sq ft (120 m 2) bakery was opened in Lawrenceville, allowing Dozen to expand into catering. [7] By then, the bakery had 9 employees. [9]

  3. Enrico Biscotti Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enrico_Biscotti_Company

    Enrico Biscotti Company is a bakery and restaurant in Pittsburgh.The main location is in the Strip District neighborhood. [2] The main product is biscotti. [2] It was featured in the film The Bread, My Sweet, a film by the then-wife of owner Larry Lagattuta [1] and also on Food Network.

  4. Bakery Square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakery_Square

    Sign commemorating the visit of President Barack Obama.. The main Bakery Square building was built as a Nabisco factory in 1918 and operated until 1998. [2] Regional Industrial Development Corporation of Southwest Pennsylvania bought the building in 1999 and leased it to the Atlantic Baking Company, [3] [4] which was subsequently merged with Bake-Line Group and then went bankrupt in 2004. [5]

  5. Continental Baking Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continental_Baking_Company

    In 1849, James Ward and his son, Hugh Ward, who came from Belfast, Ireland, opened a small bakery on Broome Street in New York City. In 1884, Hugh Ward and his son Robert Boyd Ward moved to Allegheny city (now, Pittsburgh) and opened a new bakery there. [3] The Ward Bread Company was organized by Robert B. Ward in New York, Brooklyn and Newark ...

  6. The Block Northway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Block_Northway

    The Block Northway is a shopping mall in Ross Township, north of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States.It is located at the corner of McKnight Road and Babcock Boulevard, just north of Ross Park Mall.

  7. Strip District, Pittsburgh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strip_District,_Pittsburgh

    By the 1920s, the Strip District was the economic center of Pittsburgh. By the mid-to-late 20th century, fewer of the Strip's products were being shipped by rail and boat, causing many produce sellers and wholesalers to leave the area for other space with easier access to highways, or where there was more land available for expansion.

  8. The Waterfront - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Waterfront

    The site still has the smokestacks of the 19th-century steel works that helped make Pittsburgh the greatest Steel City in America. In 2005, Industrial Workers of the World celebrated their 100th Anniversary, having formed in there in 1905. The local celebration included events held at the Pump House on the site of The Waterfront. [6]

  9. Market Square (Pittsburgh) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_Square_(Pittsburgh)

    Market Square is a public space located in Downtown Pittsburgh at the intersection of Forbes Avenue (originally named Diamond Way in colonial times) and Market Street. The square was home to the first courthouse and first jail (both in 1795), and the first newspaper west of the Allegheny Mountains, the Pittsburgh Gazette (1786).