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Wednesday, October 8, 2025

‘Transformative senior housing development’ coming to Beltzhoover

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BELTZHOOVER RESIDENT MARTEL HEDGE, with 3-year-old Jabril James, during Beltzhoover Community Days, held July 12-13 at McKinley Park. (Photo by Rob Taylor Jr.)

News comes on the heels of successful Beltzhoover Community Days

On Thursday, July 24, the historic Beltzhoover neighborhood is breaking ground on what’s being called a “transformative senior housing develop­ment,” called the Dr. Louis A. Venson Senior Lofts.

The affordable hous­ing community for se­niors 55 and up will be housed at the former site of Beltzhoover Elementa­ry School, at Cedarhurst Street and Estella Ave­nue.

It’s just another way that Beltzhoover is shin­ing, according to many of the residents the New Pittsburgh Courier spoke to during the Beltzhoover Community Days, July 12-13, at McKinley Park.

“It’s a great community, it really is a community,” voiced Blythe Stephenson, who serves as president of the Beltzhoover Con­sensus Group. The orga­nization hosted the Belt­zhoover Community Days, of which hundreds attend­ed. “Some of the people have lived here all their lives and have no desire to leave; some of the people who have lived here and moved away are anxious to try to get back. We’re trying to develop more housing so we can have an opportunity for those to come back and pur­chase homes here.”

Beltzhoover is a major­ity-Black neighborhood that has the distinc­tion of being the pri­mary neighborhood for African Americans who lived on the South Side of Pittsburgh in the ear­ly-to-mid 1900s. Today, Beltzhoover is seeing more investment, from both the private and public sector.

“They’re making a comeback,” said Ash­ley Cabiness, program manager of the South Pittsburgh ACTES pro­gram. ACTES stands for Achieving Change Through Transitional Employment Services. “I think that Belt­zhoover is getting a lot of buzz. I think a lot of people are listening to their needs.”

TIERRA SIMMONS, HALIL BEY, KELLI SHAKUR AND HER SON, KAMAUDE, AND LAUREN SIMMONS.

During the Beltzhoover Community Days, you could find kids playing basketball and partici­pating in bounce hous­es; the adults were busy mingling and eating the food from the various vendors; some people hadn’t seen each oth­er in a while. Martel Hedge, a Beltzhoover resident and the exec­utive director of Dad­dy’s Hands, LLC, was seen playing catch with 3-year-old Jabril James.

“A lot of the communi­ty came out, and most importantly, the kids had fun,” Hedge told the Courier.

BELTZHOOVER REPRESENTIN’!

As for the senior lofts, they’re being developed in partnership with TREK Development Group, BCG and oth­er local stakeholders, according to a news re­lease. When it’s all said and done, there will be 39 1- and 2-bedroom modern apartments, “designed to support the well-being and dig­nity of older adults in a neighborhood many have long called home,” the release read.

The development hon­ors the legacy of Dr. Louis A. Venson, a dedi­cated educator, advocate and lifelong public ser­vant “whose contribu­tions to education and equity are deeply rooted in the school’s history,” the release read.

“This initiative rep­resents not just a hous­ing solution, but a step forward in honoring the past while investing in the future of Belt­zhoover and its resi­dents,” the release read.

GETTING HER FACE PAINTED IS 4-YEAR-OLD BRYNLEE LEE…

For Hedge, 43, a fa­ther of five, he is dedi­cated to strengthening relationships between fathers and their chil­dren through his Dad­dy’s Hands organiza­tion. He told the Courier that Beltzhoover is one of those communities that’s filled with tradi­tion…like the annual “Turkey Bowl,” where the younger teens play football in lower McKin­ley Park against the “old heads” each Thanksgiv­ing morning.

“I started playing when I was about 12, and I played all the way until I was playing against my sons when I was 40,” Hedge said.

Hedge talked about the teamwork that the young people learn during the game, be­cause even though the young ones are faster than the older guys, the older guys always seem to win.

Hedge told the Couri­er that his community, Beltzhoover, situated among the Hilltop neigh­borhoods next to Mt. Washington, Allentown and Knoxville, said that there’s some momentum now in the neighbor­hood, but still, “we got a lot to do. There’s whole blocks that people used to live on and now, there are maybe, 1 or 2 hous­es. There are possibili­ties for us to rise, with the right people in plac­es, in turning this back into what it used to be,” which was a neighbor­hood “full of families, and everybody had in­put.”

SOME OF THE LOCAL FOOD VENDORS AT BELTZHOOVER COMMUNITY DAYS…

JEANNE GROOMS, WITH RIAH AND JORDAN

WAMO RADIO’S BROTHER MARLON MARTIN, LEFT.

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