Like many of Pittsburgh’s postindustrial neighborhoods, the Strip District struggled to attract investment for decades after the collapse of the local shipping and manufacturing industries.

Today, with several hundred new apartments underway, companies like Facebook, Apple and Uber jockeying for office space and Smallman Street earning the nickname “Robotics Row,” it’s safe to say that attracting new business is no longer the issue.

On April 10, Oxford Development announced an expansion of their Stacks at 3 Crossings project, which will add 11 acres of mixed-use space to the existing offices along Railroad and Smallman streets. The project will now include approximately 600,000 square feet of office space in six buildings, 300 residential units in two buildings, 50,000 square feet of retail and a multimodal transportation facility on Smallman and Railroad between 28th and 29th streets.

Smith & Nephew, an international medical robotics company, has already signed on as the first tenant.

While many community leaders have celebrated this notable turnaround in the Strip District, several tell NEXTpittsburgh that the new prosperity has produced its own set of challenges.

According to data from the Urban Development Authority (URA), the population of the neighborhood has increased from 492 in 2010 to 688 in 2018, with 1,055 projected by 2023.

“The amount of people now living directly on the riverfront in the Strip District is a huge game changer,” says Stephan Bontrager, VP for communications and outreach for the nonprofit Riverlife. “When we first released the vision plan for the Strip riverfront in 2015, a lot of the new real estate development was hypothetical.”

While hundreds of apartments and townhomes are attracting new residents, there are growing concerns over the Strip’s larger infrastructure environment, such as safer access for pedestrians and bicyclists.

“We were a business-central community in the past,” says Matthew Napper, president of Strip District Neighbors, a nonprofit neighborhood development group. Now, with the influx of new offices and companies, his group is asking new questions about access and quality of life. “We have to take more of a residential focus,” he says.

While Napper and his organization are at the forefront of bringing new neighbors into the Strip, he says the group is equally concerned about maintaining the proud heritage of the community.“There’s been a lot of focus on keeping Penn Avenue as it is,” says Napper. “We want to keep it a historic district with all the mom-and-pop shops.”

Currently, the community organization is working with the city’s Department of Mobility and Infrastructure and other local stakeholders on a new multimodal transit plan to safely accommodate bike and foot traffic. And Riverlife continues to work with the city and corporate partners to make sure the newly available riverfront land is accessible to their neighborhood, and eventually the entire city, amid the building boom.

“We have a growing riverfront trail, but it’s often blocked and detoured because of new construction, and that’s a concern,” says Bontrager. “There’s a huge challenge to connect the Strip portion of the trail up into Lawrenceville.”

Riverlife’s Design Review Committee meets regularly with the various property owners and developers working in the Strip, and Bontrager compliments the Edge 1909 building, the Burns White Center at 26th, and Oxford’s 3 Crossings development for investing in landscape improvements and public access to their riverfronts.

“You see overall a greater effort to improve the riverfront experience and connect new development to the trail,” says Bontrager. “McCaffrey’s Produce Terminal redevelopment might not be right on the riverfront, but it’s exciting to see a huge project move forward with such an emphasis on pedestrian walkways through the building that will allow people much easier access to the riverfront. That’s exactly what we were hoping for in the vision plan.”

At the policy level, Department of Mobility and Infrastructure Executive Director Karina Ricks told NEXTpittsburgh in February that a master plan for a complete, citywide trail and bicycle network is currently in progress.

“Look for more meetings and a final report on that plan later this year,” says Ricks.

Such connectivity is only going to become more critical as more new businesses and development projects move up the river toward Lawrenceville in the near future.

Mayor Bill Peduto has signaled a wish to turn over all of the city property on the riverfront between 29th and 31st street for commercial development. Though Tim McNulty, a spokesperson for the Mayor, says no specific action has been taken on the proposal, “it’s just something we’d generally like to do.”

On the entertainment side, there’s the newly opened bar and event space Kingfly Spirits in the 2600 block of Smallman St. and next door, a second location for Cinderlands Beer Co. is opening soon.

And there’s plenty of construction coming, including Oxford Development’s Stacks at 3 Crossings project. Two buildings are under construction now, with completion expected in early 2020. Designs for a third office building, a public plaza and a parking garage are underway.

In an email to NEXTpittsburgh, Oxford Development President and CEO Steve Guy says the new project, among others, was a key factor in his company’s recent decision to move their own offices to the neighborhood, putting them in the same building as tenants like Argo AI and Serendipity Labs coworking space.

“We look at the innovation district and tech cluster that we, along with our tenant partners, have created in the Strip as an extension of our Central Business District,” says Guy. “It was important to me and my staff that we become a part of what we create.”

But more than any single project or high-profile tenant, Napper says the success of the neighborhood will depend most of all on engagement and input from every stakeholder in the community, whether they’re startups, tech giants or long-standing family businesses.

“We’ve got our finger on the pulse of the community,” he says. “We want to make sure we’re all moving in the right direction.”