Just in time for summer, Pittsburg will soon unveil a new city sign spelling out its name in giant orange-and-black block letters – a perfect photo op for visitors and residents alike.
“It is going to be illuminated and it’s gorgeous,” Kolette Simonton, the city’s director of recreation, said of the city block-letter sign. “Just to see the word ‘Pittsburg,’ it means a lot. For Pittsburg people, we stand tall and proud.”
Interactive 3D signs bearing city names have long been common in tourist destinations, but in the age of social media, smaller cities like Pittsburg also are beginning to see the branding value of such signs to inspire civic pride. City leaders are hoping people will take photos by the sign and post them, helping to spread the word about their town.
“It’s gonna be one of those monuments that’s going to be here forever,” Simonton said. “It’s going to be the one where each graduating class is probably going to go there to take pictures.”
They also might want to take photos at the city’s new “Old Town Pittsburg” gateway sign being installed this week in the downtown, the first such sign since the 1950s.
Funding for the $3.3 million beautification and sign projects comes from a $2.9 million Caltrans’ Clean California Local Grant Program, which will also cover the costs of the parklet where the block-letter sign is being mounted, street landscaping and other beautification work. The grant, awarded in 2022, required a match of $413,137, which the city got from American Rescue Plan funds.
The awards are part of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Clean California Initiative, a $1.1 billion multi-year cleanup effort led by Caltrans that aims to remove trash, create jobs and transform public spaces.
Dubbed “The Reviving the Heart of Pittsburg Pride,” the Pittsburg beautification project aims to revitalize “the pride of people to take ownership and to stop littering,” project manager Zuna Barker Portillo said.
“The goal is for us to care about the surrounding areas,” she said.
Nearly complete, the block-letter sign and base, which cost $325,000, is located on what was long an empty lot at 1595 Railroad Ave., where a new pocket park with walkways and benches is now being built. Barker Portillo said the city chose the location because of its proximity to the high school, which is only a block away.
Gates and Associates of Walnut Creek designed both signs, the parklet and some dry-creek landscaping along Railroad Avenue after getting input through surveys of residents on the beautification projects.
Designed after the Pismo Beach seaside block-letter sign, the 3D Pittsburg sign with 6-foot-tall letters will be illuminated at night, though the silhouette of the letters will be orange and black, same as the high school’s colors, according to Barker Portillo.
City staff will have the ability to change the colors of the lights depending on the season or occasion, she said.
“The idea of the entire project is just taking ownership and pride of the city,” she said.
Down the road at Railroad Avenue and Eighth Street, the new $350,000 gateway sign also offers photo opportunities. Nearly completed, the sign features white “Old Town Pittsburg” letters set on an orange metal archway stretching across Railroad Avenue with colorful ceramic panels attached to concrete columns at each side. The panels, inspired by images from the Pittsburg Historical Society Museum, show the former U.S. Steel plant – once the city’s largest private employer, the marina, Mt. Diablo and the award-winning Pittsburg High School Marching Band.
“The design was inspired by the community,” the project manager said, noting the city sought input at events and on social media.
The city is planning a ribbon-cutting ceremony at the gateway sign at 5:30 p.m. on June 13 to celebrate the entire beautification project. A car show with live music by Bob Kinney and the Livin’ Daylites will follow.
An “Old Town Pittsburg” gateway was completed on Wednesday, June 4, 2024, on Railroad Avenue at Eighth Street in downtown Pittsburg. Designed by Gates & Associates, the sign is part of a Railroad Avenue beautification program and has four panels depicting the city’s history. It was paid for mainly through a Caltrans’ Clean California Local Grant Program. (Zuna Barker Portillo/City of Pittsburg).
The city of Pittsburg installed a gateway sign on Railroad Avenue, complete with panels depicting important areas of the city’s history, such as the marina shown here on Monday, June 3, 2024. The city also erected a large block Pittsburg sign on Railroad Avenue. Both were paid for mostly with grant monies. (Judith Prieve/Bay Area News Group)
The city of Pittsburg once had a gateway sign on Railroad Avenue and East 10th Street to direct customers to the business district as shown in this undated postcard. The city has installed a new gateway in early June, 2024, complete with ceramic panels depicting important areas of the city’s history. (Courtesy city of Pittsburg)
As part of a Railroad Avenue beautification project, construction workers for the city of Pittsburg completed installing a giant block-letter sign spelling the city’s name on June 3, 2024. The sign was funded through grant monies as was the pocket park being built at the site on Railroad Avenue a block from Pittsburg High School (Zuna Barker Portillo/City of Pittsburg).