Table of Contents:

General Site Information

History of LTV Steel

History of LTV Steel Site

Development Topics Considered

Rejected Developments

Master Plan of LTV site

Traffic Considerations

Current Status of the Site

Environmental Status

Conclusions


General Site Information

(Table of Contents)

Site: LTV South Side Works

Location: South Side, Pittsburgh, Pa; along East Carson Street and the Monongahela River (See Figure 1)

Date Built: First Developed by Monongahela Water Compnay 1893

Size: 130 Acres

Owner: Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA)


History of LTV Steel

(Table of Contents)

In 1947, James J. Ling started an electrical construction and engineering firm in Dallas, Texas. Through a number of takeovers and mergers, the company that Ling established eventually became known as Ling-Temco-Vought. Then, in May of 1971, Ling-Temco-Vought became the LTV Corporation. LTV acquired Jones and Laughlin Steel (J&L) in 1974. LTV had three main areas of business: steel (J&L), meat packing, and aerospace ("LTV Corporation.", 1988). In 1984, LTV took over Republic Steel and combined with J&L to form the subsidiary LTV Steel Co. These companies merged to form the second largest steel producer in the nation (Dallas AP, 1985). LTV Corp. also includes the subsidiaries LTV Energy Products Co. and LTV Aerospace and Defense Co. (Gaynor, 1986).

J&L was a Pittsburgh based company˙all three of its manufacturing facilities were located there. The three locations of the plants were: the north side of the Monongahela River along Second Avenue, the south side of the Monongahela River along East Carson Street, and along the Ohio River in Aliquippa, Pa., twenty miles south of Pittsburgh (81 Years of Iron and Steel, 1931). The plant (see Figure 2) located on East Carson Street had open hearth furnaces, blooming and billet mills (see Figure 3) and shops. The South Side plant was connected to the north side plant by a bridge, which had two regular railroad tracks and one hot metal train track (Ess, 1954).

Republic Steel Corporation was formed from a merger between the Interstate Iron and Steel Company and Central Alloy Steel Corporation. As a result of the merger, Republic Steel became the third largest steel producer in the nation. Republic Steel was one of the leading researchers and producers of stainless steel. At the time when stainless steel was a new product, they had the equipment and technology to place them among the top competitors in the steel market ("Republic Engineered Steel.", 1988).


History of LTV Steel Site

(Table of Contents)

J&L has been located on the South Side site since at least 1893. Below is a listing of other organizations which have been located on the site at some point during the past.

Recorded Year - 1893*